cotter-react
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0.1.0 • Public • Published

cotter-react

npm version

Installation

yarn add cotter-react

#or

npm install cotter-react --save

Example

Play around in this Codesandbox.

Get Started

To use the CotterProvider, you need to wrap your root component with CotterProvder.

Wrap your Root Component with CotterProvider

import React from "react";
import { Router } from "@reach/router";
import LoginPage from "../login";
import { CotterProvider, LoginForm } from "cotter-react"; // 👈  Import Cotter Provider

function App() {
  return (
    // 👇 1) Wrap CotterProvider around your ROOT COMPONENT
    <CotterProvider apiKeyID="<YOUR API KEY ID>">  // 👈  Copy paste your Cotter API Key ID.
      <Router>
        <LoginPage path="/" />
      </Router>
    </CotterProvider>
  );
}

export default App;

Using Gatsby

How to add Context Provider in Gatsby

Update your gatsby-browser.js file in the root folder of your project

import React from "react"
import { CotterProvider } from "cotter-react"
export const wrapRootElement = ({ element }) => (
  <CotterProvider apiKeyID="<YOUR API KEY ID>">
    {element}
  </CotterProvider>
)

Available Functions

Using the React SDK, we have included CotterProvider for authentication state management.

Adding the LoginForm

The LoginForm component automatically sends a verification email or SMS to the entered email or phone number, and respond with the results.

To use the LoginForm component, you can import LoginForm and do the following:

<LoginForm
  formID={"form_default"}         // - Select which form customization to use (check your dashboard)
  type="EMAIL"                    // - EMAIL or PHONE
  authMethod="MAGIC_LINK"         // - OTP or MAGIC_LINK
  onBegin={onSignupBegin}         // - A function that runs before verification email/SMS is sent
  onSuccess={onSignupSuccess}     // - A function that runs after the login/signup is successful
  onError={onSignupError}         // - A function that runs if the login/signup encountered an error
  width={340}                     // - Width & height of the form
  height={300}                    //   Recommended at least 300x300
  additionalFields={[             // - The form includes 1 field for email/phone. Use this to add
    {                             //   more fields.
      name: "name",
      label: "Full Name",
      placeholder: "Enter your full name",
    },
  ]}
  styles={loginFormStyles}        // - You can style the form on Cotter's Dashboard or pass in CSS here.
/>

To send successful form submission following your config in the dashboard, follow this guide

onBegin function:

The onBegin function receives the user entered fields as a parameter.

  • To stop submission and display an error, return a string with the error message.
  • To continue submission with no error, return null. Learn more about onBegin function

For example:

const myOnBeginFunction = (payload) => {
  if (payload.identifier === "myemail@gmail.com") {
    // If there's an error, return a string with the error message
    return "Phone Number is not allowed";
  }
  // If there's no error, return null
  return null;
}

// Payload object looks like this
var payload = {
  identifier: "myemail@gmail.com",
  identifier_type: "PHONE",
  device_type: "BROWSER",
  device_name: "Chrome ...",
  client_json: { // This is available if you set up AdditionalFields
    "name": "Hello World",
    "address": "Street Address"
  }
};

onSuccess function:

When the user successfully login or sign up, the onSuccess function will receive a response from Cotter that includes the user-entered fields an a JWT token to validate the user successfully verified their email or phone number. Learn more about onSuccess function

  • To send successful form submission following your config in the dashboard, follow this guide

For example:

const onSuccessFunc = (payload) => {
  // Send data to Server
  axios
    .post("https://slug.brev.dev/login", payload)
    .then((resp) => console.log("Response From Server", resp))
    .catch((err) => console.log(err));
}

// Payload object looks like this:
var payload {
    "email": "myemail@gmail.com", // User's email (or phone number),
    "name": "Hello World",
    "address": "Street Address",
    "oauth_token": {
        "access_token": "eyJhbGciOiJFUzI1NiIsImt...", // Access Token to validate
        "id_token": "eyJhbGciOiJFUzI1Ni...",
        "refresh_token": "27805:CNf76faa8trMhjXM...",
        "expires_in": 3600,
        "token_type": "Bearer",
        "auth_method": "OTP"
    },
    "user": {
        "ID": "abcdefgh-abcd-abcd-abcd-af6f81fb5432", // Cotter User ID
        "issuer": "<YOUR_API_KEY_ID>",
        "identifier": "myemail@gmail.com"
    }
}

onError function:

When there's an error, the onError function will be invoked. The error returned may differ based on the error, you should display an error message when this is invoked, and try it in console.log to see the error responses.

additionalFields: The default form includes 1 field which is the email input or phone number input. If you want to collect more information, use this to add more fields. For example:

const additionalFields = [
          {
            label: "Full Name",
            name: "name",
            placeholder: "Enter your full name"
          },
          {
            label: "Address",
            name: "address",
            placeholder: "Enter your address"
          },
          {
            label: "Prefilled Info",
            name: "prefilled",
            type: "hidden",     // availabe types are the same as HTML input type.
            initial_value: "autofill value"
          }
        ]

styles:

There are 2 ways to style your login form.

To pass in a styles object, you can find each component's class name using inspect element, then add the style for each class name like the following:

const styles = {
    input_label: {
      fontFamily: "Roboto",
      fontSize: 15,
      color: "red",
      fontWeight: 700,
    },
    input_text_container_default: {
      backgroundColor: "#fce883",
      padding: "20px 60px",
    },
    input_text: {
      backgroundColor: "#fce883",
      fontFamily: "Roboto",
      fontSize: 20,
    },
    button_container: {
      borderRadius: 0,
    },
    button_text: {
      color: "aqua",
    },
  }

Using the CotterProvider

The CotterProvider provides you with useful authentication state and the current user information. To use it:

const { isLoading, isLoggedIn, user, getAccessToken, logout, getCotter, apiKeyID, checkLoggedIn } = useContext(CotterContext);
  • isLoading (bool): tells you if the CotterProvider is loading the necessary data
  • isLoggedIn (bool): tells you if the user is logged-in or not
  • user (object): gives you the user object of the currently logged-in user
const user = {
    "ID": "abcdefgh-abcd-abcd-abcd-67ebae3cdfcf",
    "issuer": "abcdefgh-abcd-abcd-abcd-5cc8b69051e8",
    "client_user_id": "abcdefgh-abcd-abcd-abcd-67ebae3cdfcf",
    "enrolled": [
        "WEBAUTHN"
    ],
    "identifier": "putri@cotter.app"
}
  • getAccessToken (async function): returns the Cotter Access Token object. To get the string encoded JWT access token to pass to your backend, use
const token = await getAccessToken();
const accessTokenStr = token?.token;
  • logout (async function): a function to logout the user
<div onClick={logout}>Log Out</div>

Require Authentication using withAuthenticationRequired

This wrapper will check if the user is logged-in, if not, it'll redirect to the loginPagePath

import { withAuthenticationRequired } from "cotter-react";

function DashboardPage() {...}

// Protect this page using the `withAuthenticationRequired` HOC
// If user is not logged-in, they'll be redirected to the `loginPagePath`
export default withAuthenticationRequired(DashboardPage, {
  loginPagePath: "/",
});

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Version

0.1.0

License

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Collaborators

  • putrikarunia
  • julianna-stytch