Book Image

ASP.NET Core 2 and Angular 5

By : Valerio De Sanctis
Book Image

ASP.NET Core 2 and Angular 5

By: Valerio De Sanctis

Overview of this book

Become fluent in both frontend and backend web development by combining the impressive capabilities of ASP.NET Core 2 and Angular 5 from project setup right through the deployment phase. Full-stack web development means being able to work on both the frontend and backend portions of an application. The frontend is the part that users will see or interact with, while the backend is the underlying engine, that handles the logical flow: server configuration, data storage and retrieval, database interactions, user authentication, and more. Use the ASP.NET Core MVC framework to implement the backend with API calls and server-side routing. Learn how to put the frontend together using top-notch Angular 5 features such as two-way binding, Observables, and Dependency Injection, build the Data Model with Entity Framework Core, style the frontend with CSS/LESS for a responsive and mobile-friendly UI, handle user input with Forms and Validators, explore different authentication techniques, including the support for third-party OAuth2 providers such as Facebook, and deploy the application using Windows Server, SQL Server, and the IIS/Kestrel reverse proxy.
Table of Contents (17 chapters)
Title Page
Credits
About the Author
About the Reviewers
www.PacktPub.com
Customer Feedback
Preface

Third-party authentication


Allowing users to sign in using their existing credentials is often a great way to drive additional traffic to our applications, as demonstrated by a number of case studies by Google, Facebook, and Twitter.

As you might already know, ASP.NET Core Identity comes with a set of handy packages that will take care of that, saving ourselves from dealing with the relevant amount of complexity of the OAuth2 authentication flow that we saw back in Chapter 8, Authentication and Authorization. In this section, we'll demonstrate how we can use its built-in features to implement some external authentication mechanism using a widely known third-party provider such as Facebook.

OAuth2 authorization flow

Before we start, let's do a quick recap of how the OAuth2 authorization flow actually works for a standard web application:

  1. The user asks the web application to login with the external provider X.
  2. The web application prompts the user with a pop-up window containing a page directly...