Practical OAuth, OpenID and JWT in C# .NET Core
Get hands on with these standards and technologies in .NET Core
Description
OAuth (2.0), OpenID, and JWT pretty much go hand-in-hand with new web application development today. Especially for an enterprise setting where security controls are the top priority!
In this course, we will focus on the key understandings needed to put these technologies and standards into action.
We will build practical examples using .NET Core C# 5.0.
By the end of the course, we will have spanned both basic and complex integrations of Identity services.
Supporting a custom Identity provider in your application is a real bonus (if not a requirement) for Enterprise customers.
Many of the 3rd party services and tools used to implement authentication and authorization are easy to switch on with a few lines of code.
However, without this practical hands-on experience integration OAuth, OpenID, and JWT, Enterprise grown Identity Providers are often out of reach.
This course is for you if:
You've never worked with OAuth, OpenID, or JWT in your applications before, or,
You've used example code from Microsoft documentation with varied success or confidence in the solution, or,
You want to understand how these standards are leveraged in native .NET Core code, or,
You want to understand how to implement identity-based Microservice APIs, or,
You want to integrate with a custom Enterprise Identity Provider built on OAuth or OpenID
What You Will Learn!
- Understand OAuth, OpenID and JWT
- Implement Microsoft Identity (OpenID) server side and client side
- Consume any OAuth provider using .NET Core C# 5.0
- Consume any OpenID provider using .NET Core C# 5.0
- Create and configure your own Identity Provider
- Use a 'Front door key' pattern to secure your applications
Who Should Attend!
- Beginner and intermediate developers who want to learn and overcome OAuth integration challenges
- Cloud architects who want to understand common OAuth integration challenges
- Developers who need to implement OAuth or OpenID in their application and must integrate a custom enterprise identity provider