Cloudhus central authentication, cloud service for Project-Hus which provides various features for lots of fields.
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├── makefile <-- Make to automate build
├── README.md <-- This instructions file
├── services <-- Microservices
│ └── hus-auth <-- Auth service
└── template.yaml <-- SAM template
1. Before you visit any of our services, visit "SSO demo page" above.
and you're gonna see the page below.
2. Now click the link and visit "Lifthus", and then come back immediately to SSO demo.
if you refresh the page, you're gonna see this page.
Which means that your sessions are established and that they are connected to each other.
3. Go to Lifthus, and sign in. you will see this, when you come back and refresh.
Which means that you signed in to two different domains at the same time.
4. Finally, try signing out from Lifthus. you will see the 2nd pic again.
Which means that you are signed out from two different domains at the same time.
CASE 1: when user connects without any valid tokens.
CASE 2: when user connects with a valid token.
CASE 3: when user signs in.
CASE 4: when user signs out.
- Docker
- AWS CLI with Administrator permission
- SAM CLI - Install the SAM CLI
- Golang
- Makefile
- "swag init" from hus-auth
- "make build" from root
Invoking function locally through local API Gateway
sam local start-api
If the previous command ran successfully you should now be able to hit the following local endpoint to invoke your function http://localhost:3000/
make start
If the previous command ran successfully you should now be able to hit the following local endpoint to invke your function 'http://localhost:9090'
Running in native language runtime
# hus-auth
make go
Every build and packaging is done by SAM CLI but NestJS must be transpiled to JS before packaging. Currently this job is done by Makefile. We are migrating to esbuild transpiling which SAM supports natively.
To deploy your application for the first time, run the following in your shell:
sam deploy --guided
The command will package and deploy your application to AWS, with a series of prompts:
- Stack Name: The name of the stack to deploy to CloudFormation. This should be unique to your account and region, and a good starting point would be something matching your project name.
- AWS Region: The AWS region you want to deploy your app to.
- Confirm changes before deploy: If set to yes, any change sets will be shown to you before execution for manual review. If set to no, the AWS SAM CLI will automatically deploy application changes.
- Allow SAM CLI IAM role creation: Many AWS SAM templates, including this example, create AWS IAM roles required for the AWS Lambda function(s) included to access AWS services. By default, these are scoped down to minimum required permissions. To deploy an AWS CloudFormation stack which creates or modifies IAM roles, the
CAPABILITY_IAM
value forcapabilities
must be provided. If permission isn't provided through this prompt, to deploy this example you must explicitly pass--capabilities CAPABILITY_IAM
to thesam deploy
command. - Save arguments to samconfig.toml: If set to yes, your choices will be saved to a configuration file inside the project, so that in the future you can just re-run
sam deploy
without parameters to deploy changes to your application.
You can find your API Gateway Endpoint URL in the output values displayed after deployment.
No tests yet.