This repo is home to the Gluu Agama-SMTP project. This Agama project provides email-based authentication for user registration and verification.
The project can be deployed to any IAM server that runs an implementation of the Agama Framework like Janssen Server and Gluu Flex.
Different IAM servers may provide different methods and user interfaces from where an Agama project can be deployed on that server. The steps below show how the Agama-SMTP project can be deployed on the Janssen Server.
Deployment of an Agama project involves three steps.
- Downloading the
.gama
package from the project repository - Adding the
.gama
package to the IAM server - Configure the project
To send email messages, ensure you have the Jans Auth Server with SMTP service configured
Tip
Skip this step if you use the Janssen Server TUI tool to
configure this project. The TUI tool enables the download and adding of this
project directly from the tool, as part of the community projects
listing.
The project is bundled as
.gama package.
Visit the Assets
section of the
Releases to download the .gama
package.
The Janssen Server provides multiple ways an Agama project can be deployed and configured. Either use the command-line tool, REST API, or a To send email messages, ensure you have the Jans Auth Server set up. It includes an SMTP service for sending emails, but you need to configure it before use. TUI (text-based UI). Refer to Agama project configuration page in the Janssen Server documentation for more details.
The Agama project accepts configuration parameters in the JSON format. Every Agama project comes with a basic sample configuration file for reference.
Below is a typical configuration of the Agama-SMTP project. As shown, it contains configuration parameters for the flows contained in it:
{
"org.gluu.agama.smtp.main": {
"minCredsRequired": 2,
"captureLocation": true
},
"org.gluu.agama.smtp.emailVerification": {},
"org.gluu.agama.smtp.registration": {}
}
Use any relying party implementation (like jans-tarp) to send an authentication request that triggers the flow.
From the incoming authentication request, the Janssen Server reads the ACR
parameter value to identify which authentication method should be used.
To invoke the org.gluu.agama.smtp.main
flow contained in the Agama-SMTP project,
specify the ACR value as agama_<qualified-name-of-the-top-level-flow>
,
i.e agama_org.gluu.agama.smtp.main
.
Fork this repo to start customizing the Agama-SMTP project. It is possible to customize the user interface provided by the flow to suit your organization's branding guidelines. Or customize the overall flow behavior. Follow the best practices and steps listed here to achieve these customizations in the best possible way. This project can be reused in other Agama projects to create more complex authentication journeys. To reuse, trigger the org.gluu.agama.smtp.main flow from other Agama projects.
To make it easier to visualize and customize the Agama Project, use Agama Lab.
List of the flows:
The main flow of this project is org.gluu.agama.smtp.main . In step one, the person enters their email address, to which the IDP sends an OTP code. After OTP verification, if the email address is known, the flow is successful. If the email address is new, the IDP displays a registration form.
A basic diagram to understand how the agama-SMTP
works.
sequenceDiagram
title Agama-SMTP Sequence Diagram
actor User
participant Browser
participant jans-auth
participant SMTP Server
participant Email Client
User->>Browser: Authz url with acr_values=agama & agama_flow=io.jans.agamaSmtp.main
Browser->>jans-auth: Connect
jans-auth->>Browser: Submit email form
User->>Browser: Enter and submit email
Browser->>jans-auth: Submit inputs
jans-auth->>jans-auth: check if user with same email already exists
alt user exists - authenticate user
jans-auth->>jans-auth: Generate OTP
jans-auth->>jans-auth: Sign OTP email using keys in SMTP keystore
jans-auth->>SMTP Server: Send email
SMTP Server->>Email Client: Forward email
Email Client->>User: OTP
User->>Browser: Enter OTP
Browser->>jans-auth: Sending OTP (POST form)
jans-auth->>jans-auth: Validate OTP
alt OTP correct
jans-auth->>Browser: Continue with OpenID code flow
else OTP incorrect
jans-auth->>Browser: Ask for OTP until reaching the maximum attempts
jans-auth->>Browser: Terminate the flow with message - You have reached max allowed attempts
end
else user does not exist - Register new User
jans-auth->>jans-auth: Generate OTP
jans-auth->>jans-auth: Sign OTP email using keys in SMTP keystore
jans-auth->>SMTP Server: Send email
SMTP Server->>Email Client: Forward email
Email Client->>User: OTP
User->>Browser: Enter OTP
Browser->>jans-auth: Sending OTP (POST form)
jans-auth->>jans-auth: Validate OTP
alt OTP correct
jans-auth->>Browser: Display registration form
User->>Browser: Submit FN, MN, LN, email, password
Browser->>jans-auth: POST user details
jans-auth->>jans-auth: Create user
jans-auth->>Browser: Continue with OpenID code flow
else OTP incorrect
jans-auth->>Browser: Ask for OTP until reaching the maximum attempts
jans-auth->>Browser: Terminate the flow with message - You have reached max allowed attempts
end
end
Check out this video to see the agama-SMTP authentication flow in action. Also check the Agama Project Of The Week video series for a quick demo on this flow.
Note: While the video shows how the flow works overall, it may be dated. Do check the Test the Flow section to understand the current method of passing the ACR parameter when invoking the flow.