* First attempt at OpenIddict * Making headway and more TODOs * Redo current policies for multiple schemas + clean up auth controller * Fix bad merge * Clean up some more test code * Fix spacing * Include AddAuthentication() in OpenIddict addition * A little more clean-up * Move application creation to its own implementation + prepare for middleware to handle valid callback URL * Enable refresh token flow * Fix bad merge from v11/dev * Support auth for Swagger and Postman in non-production environments + use default login screen for back-office logins * Add workaround to client side login handling so the OAuth return URL is not corrupted before redirection * Add temporary configuration handling for new backoffice * Restructure the code somewhat, move singular responsibility from management API project * Add recurring task for cleaning up old tokens in the DB * Fix bad merge + make auth controller align with the new management API structure * Explicitly handle the new management API path as a backoffice path (NOTE: this is potentially behaviorally breaking!) * Redo handle the new management API requests as backoffice requests, this time in a non-breaking way * Add/update TODOs * Replace NSwag with Swashbuckle and clean up unnecessary client secret workaround * Revert duplication of current auth policies for OpenIddict (as it breaks everything for V11 without the new management APIs) and introduce a dedicated PoC policy setup for OpenIddict. * Fix failing unit tests * A little niceness + export new OpenApi.json and fix path in contract unit test * Redo after merge with v11/dev + filter out unwanted mime types * Remove CreatedResult and NotFoundObjectResult where possible * Custom schema IDs - no more "ViewModel" postfix and make generic lists look less clunky too * A little more explanation for generic schema ID generation * Force Swashbuckle to use enum string names * Update OpenApi.json to match new enum string values * Add clarifying comment about weird looking construct
Umbraco CMS ·

Umbraco is the friendliest, most flexible and fastest growing ASP.NET CMS, and used by more than 500,000 websites worldwide. Our mission is to help you deliver delightful digital experiences by making Umbraco friendly, simpler and social.
Learn more at umbraco.com
See the official Umbraco website for an introduction, core mission and values of the product and team behind it.
Please also see our Code of Conduct.
Getting Started
Umbraco Cloud is the easiest and fastest way to use Umbraco yet, with full support for all your custom .NET code and integrations. You're up and running in less than a minute, and your life will be made easier with automated upgrades and a built-in deployment engine. We offer a free 14-day trial, no credit card needed.
If you want to DIY, then you can download Umbraco either as a ZIP file or via NuGet. It's the same version of Umbraco CMS that powers Umbraco Cloud, but you'll need to find a place to host it yourself, and handling deployments and upgrades will be all up to you.
Documentation
The documentation for Umbraco CMS can be found on Our Umbraco. The source for the Umbraco docs is open source as well and we're happy to look at your documentation contributions.
Join the Umbraco community
Our friendly community is available 24/7 at the community hub, we call "Our Umbraco". Our Umbraco features forums for questions and answers, documentation, downloadable plugins for Umbraco, and a rich collection of community resources.
Besides "Our", we all support each other also via Twitter: Umbraco HQ, Release Updates, #umbraco
Contributing
Umbraco is contribution-focused and community-driven. If you want to contribute back to the Umbraco source code, please check out our guide to contributing.
