Creating your own OpenID Connect server with ASOS: testing your authorization server with PostmanIn this post, discover how to test your authorization server and how to query your token-protected API endpoints using Postman. 2016 Jul 13
Creating your own OpenID Connect server with ASOS: adding custom claims and granting scopesIn this post, discover why attaching a destination to your claims is necessary to allow ASOS to serialize them in the access/identity tokens returned to the client application and how you can easily grant one or multiple scopes. 2016 Jul 13
Creating your own OpenID Connect server with ASOS: implementing the authorization code and implicit flowsIn this post, learn how you can implement the authorization code and implicit flows using ASOS and ASP.NET Core MVC. 2016 Jul 13
Creating your own OpenID Connect server with ASOS: implementing the resource owner password credentials grantIn this post, learn how you can implement the resource owner password credentials grant using ASOS. 2016 Jul 13
Creating your own OpenID Connect server with ASOS: creating your own authorization providerIn this post, discover the events model used by ASOS and the rest of the ASP.NET Core security stack and how you can leverage it to control how your authorization server handles requests. 2016 Jul 13
Creating your own OpenID Connect server with ASOS: registering the middleware in the ASP.NET Core pipelineIn this post, discover how to reference and register ASOS and the OAuth 2.0 token validation middleware in your ASP.NET Core application. 2016 Jul 13
Creating your own OpenID Connect server with ASOS: choosing the right flow(s)In this post, discover the differences between the standard authorization code, implicit, resource owner password credentials and client credentials flows offered by OAuth 2.0 and OpenID Connect. 2016 Jul 13
Creating your own OpenID Connect server with ASOS: introductionLearn how you can create your own OpenID Connect server using ASOS in 7 steps. 2016 Jul 13