React Keycloak
React bindings for Keycloak
Table of Contents
Install
React Keycloak requires:
- React 16.8 or later
keycloak-js
9.0.2 or later
yarn add @react-keycloak/web
or
npm install --save @react-keycloak/web
Getting Started
Setup Keycloak instance
Create a keycloak.js
file in the src
folder of your project (where App.js
is located) with the following content
import Keycloak from 'keycloak-js'
// Setup Keycloak instance as needed
// Pass initialization options as required or leave blank to load from 'keycloak.json'
const keycloak = new Keycloak()
export default keycloak
Setup KeycloakProvider
Wrap your App inside ReactKeycloakProvider
and pass the keycloak
instance as prop
import { ReactKeycloakProvider } from '@react-keycloak/web'
import keycloak from './keycloak'
// Wrap everything inside KeycloakProvider
const App = () => {
return <ReactKeycloakProvider authClient={keycloak}>...</ReactKeycloakProvider>
}
N.B. If your using other providers (such as react-redux
) it is recommended to place them inside ReactKeycloakProvider
.
ReactKeycloakProvider
automatically invokes keycloak.init()
method when needed and supports the following props:
-
initOptions
, contains the object to be passed to keycloak.init()
method, by default the following is used
{
onLoad: 'check-sso',
}
for more options see Keycloak docs.
-
LoadingComponent
, a component to be displayed while keycloak
is being initialized, if not provided child components will be rendered immediately. Defaults to null
-
isLoadingCheck
, an optional loading check function to customize LoadingComponent display condition. Return true
to display LoadingComponent, false
to hide it.
Can be implemented as follow
;(keycloak) => !keycloak.authenticated
-
onEvent
, an handler function that receives events launched by keycloak
, defaults to null
.
It can be implemented as follow
;(event, error) => {
console.log('onKeycloakEvent', event, error)
}
Published events are:
onReady
onInitError
onAuthSuccess
onAuthError
onAuthRefreshSuccess
onAuthRefreshError
onTokenExpired
onAuthLogout
-
onTokens
, an handler function that receives keycloak
tokens as an object every time they change, defaults to null
.
Keycloak tokens are returned as follow
{
"idToken": string,
"refreshToken": string,
"token": string
}
Hook Usage
When a component requires access to Keycloak
, you can use the useKeycloak
Hook.
import { useKeycloak } from '@react-keycloak/web'
export default () => {
// Using Object destructuring
const { keycloak, initialized } = useKeycloak()
// Here you can access all of keycloak methods and variables.
// See https://www.keycloak.org/docs/latest/securing_apps/index.html#javascript-adapter-reference
return (
<div>
<div>{`User is ${
!keycloak.authenticated ? 'NOT ' : ''
}authenticated`}</div>
{!!keycloak.authenticated && (
<button type="button" onClick={() => keycloak.logout()}>
Logout
</button>
)}
</div>
)
}
External Usage (Advanced)
If you need to access keycloak
instance from non-React
files (such as sagas
, utils
, providers
...), you can import the instance directly from the keycloak.js
file.
The instance will be initialized by react-keycloak
but you'll need to be carefull when using the instance and avoid setting/overriding any props, you can however freely access the exposed methods (such as refreshToken
, login
, etc...).
Examples
See inside examples
folder of @react-keycloak/react-keycloak-examples
repository for various demo implementing this library main features.
Guides and Articles
Contributing
See the contributing guide to learn how to contribute to the repository and the development workflow.
License
MIT
If you found this project to be helpful, please consider buying me a coffee.