ALMEFY
The Almefy Plugin enables secure 2FA login for your users – without passwords, just by scanning a QR code. Welcome to the ALMEFY experience Almefy enables a secure Two-Factor Authentication user experience in one step. No passwords needed, the users just scan to login. Your users just need to scan a QR code on your website with the Almefy App and login through our technology built on Identity Based Encryption (IBE). Almefy is the next generation of logins, taking the burden of secure passwords away from the users by eliminating them completely. We enable a secure, easy and fast Two-Factor Authentication in one step for the convenience of your users. Learn more about the Identity Based Encryption and 2FA and Almefy on our website. The ALMEFY HUB – Where you manage all accesses We offer an easy to manage setup and management of accesses through our ALMEFY HUB. The HUB gives you the possibility to setup new websites, manage admins and users and offers statistics for your reference. It is also the fastest way to get in touch with us in case you have any questions or need support! And here is how you get started with your ALMEFY Plugin: Setup To activate the plugin, please navigate to the Almefy settings in the backend. You will be required to provide a key and a secret to connect to the Almefy servers. To generate your individual key & secret, please contact us at https://almefy.com/contact/. We will send you an email with all instructions how to get access to the ALMEFY HUB where you generate your key & secret in a guided flow through our setup wizard. In the settings of the plugin you can also define a Redirect to after login url. Use a relative url like /profile-page to redirect users to a custom page. Alternatively leave the page blank to redirect users to the WordPress backend. Login To add the login code to your website add the [almefy-login] shortcode to your page. Alternatively you may add it via do_shortcode('[almefy-login]'); to your theme. If you would like to redirect users to the backend when logging in via the WordPress login at /wp-login.php but to a profile page when logging in via the the frontend you have to: – Leave the Redirect to after login empty in the plugin settings – Set the ‘redirect’ variable on the shortcode Example: [almefy-login redirect="/profile"] Device Management The built in device manager is found in the backend Users -> Profile. If you do not want your users to have access to the WordPress backend but let them manage their devices, add the [almefy-devices] shortcode to a custom profile page. Connecting new devices When creating an account, users will receive an email asking them to connect their device. Further devices may be connected in the backend Users -> Profile. To add management options like connecting and removing devices to the frontend of your website, you may include the device connection shortcode to a profile page using [almefy-connect]. Password-free Registration (Optional) You may add password free registration by adding the [almefy-register] shortcode. Disabling require_username will result in users just being prompted for an email address. The button text is customizable by setting the button_text variable. Example: [almefy-register require_username="false" button_text="Sign Up Now!"]; License GNU General Public License v2.0 – GNU Project – Free Software Foundation https://www.gnu.org Contact – Almefy : 2FA Authentication in one step https://almefy.com
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- login8×1.38%
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- backend6×1.04%
- page6×1.04%
- profile6×1.04%
- shortcode6×1.04%
- device4×0.69%
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- hub4×0.69%
WP Cassify
If you’re happy with this plugin : As a reward for my efforts, I would like to receive T-shirts (or other goodies) as gifts from the universities or companies that use it. My size is L. Best regards. This Apereo CAS authentication plugin has no phpCas library dependency. This is not only an authentication plugin. You can build custom authorization rules according to cas user attributes populated. If user don’t exist in WordPress database, it can be created automatically. There are many features. You can customize everything. Website https://wpcassify.wordpress.com/ Development and release environment This plugin is now developed and tested from a github repository. You can find it here : https://github.com/WP-Cassify/wp-cassify-develop Don’t hesitate to contribute to this project. You can fork it and make pull requests ! Requirements Require at least PHP version 7.0 Require at least PHP CURL package Features included SLO (Single Log Out) support (thanks to dedotombo and me) Adding NCONTAINS operator (thanks to blandman) Fix bug on Gateway mode (autologin) (thanks to dedotombo again). Now it’s now necessary to hack theme files to fire it. Adding option logout on authentication failure to not disturb users Initialize PHP session at a later stage (on wp_loaded not on init) Adding some customs hooks and filters. Tested with Apereo CAS Server version 7.3.5 Compatible with CAS Protocol version 2 and 3 Automatic user creation if not exist in WordPress database. Synchronize WordPress User metas with CAS User attributes. Add support for multivaluate cas user fields. Now multivaluate fields can be serialized to be stored in custom WP User meta. Backup / Restore plugin configuration options settings You can choose CAS User attributes you want to populate. Then you can access them via PHP Session. Be careful, to access to CAS User Attributes from your theme file (from 1.8.4), use code below : wp_cassify_get_cas_user_datas() ); } ?> Set up WordPress Roles to User according to CAS User attributes. If plugin is network activated, you can define User Role Rule scope by blog id. Authorization rule editor. Compatible with WordPress Access Control Plugin. Manage URL White List to bypass CAS Authentication on certain pages. Much simpler bypass authentication with post method provided by Susan Boland (See online documentation). Create wordpress authentication form with redirect attribute like this (works only if URL bypass is enabled in settings) : true, 'remember' => true, 'redirect' => site_url( '/?wp_cassify_bypass=bypass' ), 'form_id' => 'loginform', 'id_username' => 'user_login', 'id_password' => 'user_pass', 'id_remember' => 'rememberme', 'id_submit' => 'wp-submit', 'label_username' => __( 'Username' ), 'label_password' => __( 'Password' ), 'label_remember' => __( 'Remember Me' ), 'label_log_in' => __( 'Log In' ), 'value_username' => '', 'value_remember' => false ); wp_login_form( $args ); ?> Receive email notifications when trigger is fired (after user account creation, after user login/logout). Define notifications rules based on user attributes values. Purge user roles before applying user role rules. Define user account expiration rules bases on CAS User attributes. Network activation allowed You can set Service Logout URL (Needs to have CAS Server with followServiceRedirects option configured). Add support for web application hosted behind a reverse proxy. (Thanks to franck86) Add custom hooks : wp_cassify_after_cas_authentication, wp_cassify_before_auth_user_wordpress, wp_cassify_before_redirect, wp_cassify_after_redirect. (See online documentation) Custom filter to perform custom cas server response parsing. Hook name : wp_cassify_custom_parsing_cas_xml_response (See online documentation) Custom shortcode to generate CAS login/logout link into your blog. (See online documentation) Debug settings, dump last xml cas server response. Detect if user has already authenticated by CAS from your public pages and perform auto-login with gateway mode Add ‘-IN’ and ‘-NOTIN’ operators to process array attributes values returned from CAS. When you have : $cas_user_datas['title'] = array( 'Student', 'Professor' ); Then you can use : (CAS{title} -IN "professor")