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# Mojolicious::Plugin::SPNEGO

```perl
use Mojolicious::Lite;

my $SERVER = $ENV{AD_SERVER} // die "AD_SERVER env variable not set";

app->secrets(['My secret passphrase here']);

plugin 'SPNEGO', ad_server => $SERVER;

get '/' => sub {
   my $c = shift;
   if (not $c->session('user')){
       $c->ntlm_auth({
           auth_success_cb => sub {
               my $c = shift;
               my $user = shift;
               my $ldap = shift; # bound Net::LDAP::SPNEGO connection
               $c->session('user',$user->{samaccountname});
               $c->session('name',$user->{displayname});
               my $groups = $ldap->get_ad_groups($user->{samaccountname});
               $c->session('groups',[ sort keys %$groups]);
               return 1;
           }
       }) or return;
   }
} => 'index';

app->start;

__DATA__

@@ index.html.ep
<!DOCTYPE html>
<html>
<head>
<title>NTLM Auth Test</title>
</head>
<body>
<h1>Hello <%= session 'name' %></h1>
<div>Your account '<%= session 'user' %>' belongs to the following groups:</div>
<ul>
% for my $group (@{session 'groups' }) {
   <li>'<%= $group %>'</li>
% }
</ul>
</body>
</html>
```

# DESCRIPTION

The Mojolicious::Plugin::SPNEGO lets you provide NTLM SSO by using an
active directory server as authentication provider. The plugin uses
the [Net::LDAP::SPNEGO](https://metacpan.org/pod/Net::LDAP::SPNEGO) module.

On loading the plugin default values for the helpers can be configured:

```perl
plugin 'SPNEGO', ad_server => $SERVER;
```

or

```perl
$app->plugin('SPNEGO',ad_server => $SERVER);
```

The plugin provides the following helper method:

## $c->ntlm\_auth(ad\_server => $AD\_SERVER, auth\_success\_cb => $cb)

The `ntlm_auth` method runs an NTLM authentication dialog with the browser
by forwarding the tokens coming from the browser to the AD server specified
in the `ad_server` argument.

If a `auth_success_cb` is specified it will be executed once the ntlm dialog
has completed successfully. Depending on the return value of the
callback the entire process will be considered successfull or not.

Since ntlm authentication is reather complex, you may want to save
authentication success in a cookie.

Note that windows will only do automatic NTLM SSO with hosts in the local zone
so you may have to add your webserver to this group of machines in the
Internet Settings dialog.

# EXAMPLE

The included example script `eg/demo.pl` shows how to use the plugin
to implement NTLM authentication for a [Mojolicious::Lite](https://metacpan.org/pod/Mojolicious::Lite) web application.

Use the following steps to run the demo:

```
$ perl Makefile.PL
$ make 3rd
$ env AD_SERVER=ad-server.example.com ./eg/demo.pl deamon
```

Now connect with your webbrowser to the webserver runing on port 3000. If you
login from a Windows host and the url you are connecting resides in the local
zone, you will see (or rather not see) seemless authentication taking place.
Finally a webpage will be displayed showing a list of groups you are a member of.

The demo script stores your authentication in a cookie in your brower, so once
you are authenticated, you will have to restart the browser or remove the cookie
to force another authentication.

# COPYRIGHT

Copyright OETIKER+PARTNER AG 2016. All rights reserved.

# LICENSE

This library is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify
it under the same terms as Perl itself.

# AUTHOR

Tobias Oetiker, <tobi@oetiker.ch>

# HISTORY

```
2016-08-21 to 0.1.0 initial version
```