Azure Domain Verification client library for JavaScript
Domain Verification library provides capabilities to create TXT challenge to verify domain and actually verify domain
Getting started
Currently supported environments
- Node.js version 14.x.x or higher
Prerequisites
- An Azure subscription.
- An existing Communication Services resource. If you need to create the resource, you can use the Azure Portal, the Azure PowerShell, or the Azure CLI.
Installing
npm install @azure-tools/communication-domain-verification
Authentication
To create a client object to access the Communication Services API, you will need a connection string
or the endpoint
of your Communication Services resource and a credential
. The Domain Verification client can use either Azure Active Directory credentials or an API key credential to authenticate.
You can get a key and/or connection string from your Communication Services resource in the Azure Portal. You can also find the endpoint for your Communication Services resource in the Azure Portal.
Once you have a key, you can authenticate the client with any of the following methods:
Using a connection string
import { DomainVerificationClient } from "@azure/communication-domain-verification";
const connectionString = "endpoint=<endpoint>;accessKey=<accessKey>";
const client = new DomainVerificationClient(connectionString);
AzureKeyCredential
Using an access key with If you use a key to initialize the client you will also need to provide the appropriate endpoint. You can get this endpoint from your Communication Services resource in Azure Portal. Once you have a key and endpoint, you can authenticate with the following code:
import { AzureKeyCredential } from "@azure/core-auth";
import { DomainVerificationClient } from "@azure/communication-domain-verification";
const credential = new AzureKeyCredential("<key-from-resource>");
const client = new DomainVerificationClient("<endpoint-from-resource>", credential);
Using an Azure Active Directory Credential
Connection string authentication is used in most of the examples, but you can also authenticate with Azure Active Directory using the Azure Identity library. To use the DefaultAzureCredential provider shown below, or other credential providers provided with the Azure SDK, please install the @azure/identity
package:
npm install @azure/identity
The @azure/identity
package provides a variety of credential types that your application can use to do this. The README for @azure/identity
provides more details and samples to get you started.
import { DefaultAzureCredential } from "@azure/identity";
import { DomainVerificationClient } from "@azure/communication-domain-verification";
let credential = new DefaultAzureCredential();
const client = new DomainVerificationClient("<endpoint-from-resource>", credential);
Usage
The following sections provide code snippets that cover some of the common tasks using the Azure Communication Services Domain Verification client. The scenarios that are covered here consist of:
Crate Verification Challenge
Create domain verification challenge
import { DomainVerificationClient } from "@azure/communication-domain-verification";
const connectionString = "endpoint=<endpoint>;accessKey=<accessKey>";
const client = new DomainVerificationClient(connectionString);
async function main() {
const domainName = "contoso.com";
let result = await client.createDomainOwnershipChallenge(domainName)
console.log(`Domain verification challenge value is ${result.value}`);
}
main();
Verify Domain Ownership
Create domain verification challenge
import { DomainVerificationClient } from "@azure/communication-domain-verification";
const connectionString = "endpoint=<endpoint>;accessKey=<accessKey>";
const client = new DomainVerificationClient(connectionString);
async function main() {
const domainName = "contoso.com";
let result = await client.verifyDomainOwnership(domainName)
console.log(`Domain verification status is: ${result.status}`);
}
main();
Troubleshooting
Next steps
Contributing
If you'd like to contribute to this library, please read the contributing guide to learn more about how to build and test the code.