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An OpenID Connect iOS demo app showing how to use the HAAPI UI SDK and hardened mobile security

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Demo iOS Application with HAAPI UI SDK Integration

Quality Availability

This is an example iOS app that uses the Curity Identity Server's Hypermedia API to perform an OIDC flow. The authentication is done within the app, usually without the need for an external browser (depends on the authentication methods used).

Code Organization

This is a trivial app that only authenticates the user, then displays the tokens obtained from the authorization server. Some source files worth checking out:

  • The Configuration object contains all of the OpenID Connect settings. You should tailor these to reflect your installation of the Curity Identity Server.
  • The DemoAppDelegate shows how to configure the HAAPI UI SDK so that it can be used with the app.
  • The UnauthenticatedView shows the code needed to integrate with the HAAPI UI SDK. The HaapiFlow.start operations is invoked and a callback receives tokens once the authentication workflow completes.
  • The AuthenticatedView class shows how to handle other lifecycle events once the user is authenticated. This displays the received tokens and obtains information about the user from the user info endpoint. It also shows how to manage token refresh and logout.

Getting started

Docker Automated Setup

The required Curity Identity Server setup is provided through a script. To run the setup, follow these steps.
First run docker pull curity.azurecr.io/curity/idsvr to ensure that your Curity Identity Server instance is up to date.
The example configuration requires version 8.7 or higher of the Curity Identity Server.

  1. Copy a Curity Identity Server license file to license.json in the code example root folder.
  2. Run the ./start-idsvr.sh script to deploy a preconfigured Curity Identity Server via Docker.
  3. Build and run the mobile app from Xcode using a simulator of your choice.
  4. There is a preconfigured user account you can sign-in with: demouser / Password1. Feel free to create additional accounts.
  5. Run the ./stop-idsvr.sh script to free Docker resources.

By default the Curity Identity Server instance is contacted from the iOS simulator using the default host IP of localhost.

Passkey Logins

To login with native passkeys you must configure associated domains for the app, according to the Configure Native Passkeys for Mobile Logins tutorial. The Docker automated setup provides working passkey logins if you install the ngrok tool as described in the Mobile Setup tutorial, then set the USE_NGROK=true variable at the top of the start-server.sh script, before running it. Using ngrok exposes the docker instance of the Curity Identity Server on the internet at a trusted SSL URL, so that associated domain registration works.

Using ngrok also enables testing with real devices, and enables you to run Android and iOS HAAPI code examples side by side.

Running the App

Simulator

  1. Make sure that the Curity Identity Server is running and configured.
  2. Start the demo application on a simulator running iOS 14 or higger
  3. Tap the button Start Authentication on the home screen to start the authentication flow.

Physical Device

  1. Make sure that the Curity Identity Server is running and reachable on the Internet (e.g., by using ngrok).
  2. Adjust the settings in the Configuration module to reflect the instance of your Curity Identity Server.
  3. Build then install and start the demo application on your physical device.
  4. Tap the button Start Authentication on the home screen to start the authentication flow.

Configuring the App

The application needs a few configuration options set to be able to call the instance of the Curity Identity Server. Default configuration is set to work with the dockerized version of the Curity Identity Server which is run with the start-idsvr.sh script. Should you need to make the app work with a different environment (e.g., you have your own instance of the Curity Identity Server already working online), then you should adjust settings, by editing the Configuration module.

Customizing the Look and Feel

The UI SDK allows for a simple change of the styles used by the view components. Have a look at the XXX files to see the techniques used in the demo app to change the default theme. Have a look at the customization tutorial to learn more about changing the look and feel of your authentication flow.

Resources

  • HAAPI UI SDK Guide that shows all the aspects of working with the Curity's HAAPI UI SDK.
  • A tutorial that shows how to properly configure the Curity Identity Server and a client to use the Hypermedia API from an iOS app.
  • An article that explains the Hypermedia Authentication API.

More information

Please visit curity.io for more information about the Curity Identity Server.

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