Authentication API

Top  Previous  Next

z/Scope Anywhere provides you with an API that you can use to develop your own authentication method and integrate it with z/Scope Anywhere.

 

Choose the code sample of your language of preference and add it to your implementation:

 

 

Delphi:

 

function ValidateUser(

   const UserName, Password, Metadata: PWideChar;

   SecurityRole, WinUser, WinPass, CustomData: PWideChar;

   var Handled: Boolean): Cardinal; stdcall;

 

 

Input:

 

Username & Password

The credentials that you are trying to validate with the external authentication

Metadata

A JSON with the remote browser/user information: URL, IP, Cookie UBRWID and the product's name

 

 

Output:

 

SecurityRole

Specifies the Windows mapping of the authenticated user (UserName and Password). This SecurityRole can either be a Windows user or group, and it will be used to check which profiles it has access to

WinUser, WinPass

(optional) Credentials of a mapped Windows user. Will be used to run the application instance.

CustomData

(optional) Data for passing on to the application

Handled

Returns whether the login could be handled by the DLL.

 

 

C++:

 

THINFINITY_API DWORD __stdcall ValidateUser(LPWSTR lpUserName, LPWSTR lpPassword, LPWSTR lpMetadata,
LPWSTR lpSecurityRole, LPWSTR lpWinUser, LPWSTR lpWinPass, LPWSTR lpCustomData,

 PBOOLEAN pHandled)

 

 

Input:

 

lpUserName & lpPassword

The credentials that you are trying to validate with the external authentication

lpMetadata

A JSON with the remote browser/user information: URL, IP, Cookie UBRWID and the product's name

 

 

Output:

 

lpSecurityRole

Specifies the Windows mapping of the authenticated user (UserName and Password). This SecurityRole can either be a Windows user or group, and it will be used to check which profiles it has access to

lpWinUser, lpWinPass

(optional) Credentials of a mapped Windows user. Will be used to run the application instance.

lpCustomData

Data for passing on to the application

pHandled

Returns whether the login could be handled by the DLL.

 

 

C#:

 

[DllExport("ValidateUser", CallingConvention = CallingConvention.StdCall)]
[return: MarshalAs(UnmanagedType.I4)]
public static Int32 ValidateUser(
       [In, MarshalAs(UnmanagedType.LPWStr)] string lpUserName,
      [In, MarshalAs(UnmanagedType.LPWStr)] string lpPassword,
       [In, MarshalAs(UnmanagedType.LPWStr)] string lpMetadata,

      [In, Out, MarshalAs(UnmanagedType.LPWStr)] StringBuilder lpSecurityRole,
      [In, Out, MarshalAs(UnmanagedType.LPWStr)] StringBuilder lpWinUser,
       [In, Out, MarshalAs(UnmanagedType.LPWStr)] StringBuilder lpWinPass,
       [In, Out, MarshalAs(UnmanagedType.LPWStr)] StringBuilder lpCustomData,
      [Out] bool pHandled);

 

 

Input:

 

lpUserName & lpPassword

Specifies the Windows mapping of the authenticated user (UserName and Password). This SecurityRole can either be a Windows user or group, and it will be used to check which profiles it has access to

lpMetadata

A JSON with the remote browser/user information: URL, IP, Cookie UBRWID and the product's name

 

 

Output:

 

lpSecurityRole

The authenticated username

lpWinUser, lpWinPass

(optional) Credentials of a mapped Windows user. Will be used to run the application instance.

lpCustomData

Data to pass on to the application

pHandled

Returns whether the login could be handled by the DLL.

 

 

Read More:

Authentication Methods - External DLL