Issuing JWT token myself versus using IdentityServer4(OIDC) for Web API

痞子三分冷 提交于 2019-12-01 13:38:41

In any case you will implement OAuth2. Think of Oidc as an extension of OAuth2. The most important thing to keep in mind is seperation of concerns.

Forget Oidc, Identity Server 4 is all about authentication: "who is the user"? Consider Google login. When a user logs in for the first time, the application doesn't know the user, it only knows that Google does.

Authorization takes place on a different level and isn't really a concern of IdentityServer. For that you could take a look at PolicyServer.

So you'll need to keep the user database seperated from the application database. This doesn't mean you need another database, just don't mix contexts. If you have a relation from the "business context" to e.g. the user table in the "Identity context" then you are going to have a problem eventually.

In your setup your web api is both the resource and the identity provider. This means that every new web api you create has to be implemented as both resource and identity provider. For maintainability you could create a seperate web api that acts as an identity provider, while the web api is a resource only. You can implement something like that as long as all apps can read the token.

The same counts for the front. Why should the front have anything to do with the user? All it needs to do is pass the token in order to get the user authorized. In case of IdentityServer, the app contacts it to verify the user and receives a token. It knows nothing about credentials. This is more secure. The client app can be compromised. The credentials can be intercepted.

Having single apps with a specific concern makes things more maintainable. And it is quite easy to add a new resource without having to code when you use IdentityServer. Just add the configuration. It also allows you to add other flows in the future that are not needed at this time. And as a side note, the consent screen is optional.

The bonus is that you can implement SSO, where in your setup that could be harder, if not impossible.

So you don't have to use IdentityServer, nor Oidc. Your setup may be just fine. But if you build something, keep seperation of concerns in mind.

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