Presumptions:
1. There is a hybrid app where it is used both in browser and wrapped in WebView for "native app".
2. If you navigate to the app's website, it will redirect you to other domain if you are not logged in.
3. Whatever query string you put in the URL will be removed.
Problem:
- It should auto login to the login page when user clicks on a certain link regardless of the device (app or browser).
- This is not a problem in the "native app" as I can inject JS code.
- Manually typing the link in browser's address bar should not auto login.
The only solution I can think of right now is to fix presumption #3 as I think it is a result of poor design.
"is it a deliberate choice to make the mobile app and web app work differently regarding this feature? or can we unify these flows to reduce maintenance?"
[Hector] there are a lot of files that come from an installation with licensing tools that we copy over to the development environment, otherwise the server won't stop complaining
\[**[Captain Obvious](https://discord.gg/PNMq3pBSUe)**] Delete them from the repo. Commit the delete (if they are already in there as far as git is aware) Edit the gitignore to ignore the files, and commit the changes to that Restore the files, and git won't care
[Hector] I mean they are needed, but they are always there for other people to download
[Hector] IDK what's the point if everyone should be replacing them
[Captain Obvious] If it's specfic to a developer, then there's no point in it beinf in the repo
[Captain Obvious] I guess you could add an ignore for the file already in the repo, I'm not entirely sure but then I think it will ignore subsequent changes to the file, but the original one will aways be in the repo
[Captain Obvious] But the file needs to be unchanged when you commit the change to gitignore
internally, it is the internal authority doing the actions
for example, you, as user, may be authorized to queue some process the process internally sends reports via email, which you are not allowed to do, but the internal authority is
the entry point (queueing the process) would have to do the authorization check to see if you have the appropriate permissions on the given resources
technically speaking, all the systems support MT, but we dont use it yet
> The Set-Cookie HTTP response header is used to send a cookie from the server to the user agent, so that the user agent can send it back to the server later. To send multiple cookies, multiple Set-Cookie headers should be sent in the same response.
okay I think they have a weird implementation here
because they "manually request" for cookie.
isn't that suppose to happen after authorization request?
anyway, supposedly, I have received a generic token which will allow me to receive a cookie at some certain server. Let's say I have obtained this generic token from A but this A uses an 3rd party IdP that is a requirement to generate that generic token. How do I know which server I should use this generic token? Is it on 3rd party IdP or in A?
if my assumptions here are valid, what if the 3rd party IdP receives it from another IdP?
I think I should just use it on A
I would assume that A should just have the copy of that identity wherever it pulled it from.
Introducing preview 2 of incremental ASP.NET migration tooling, including support for shared authentication. The post Incremental ASP.NET Migration Tooling Preview 2 appeared first on .NET Blog.
[milleniumbug] "I have two briefcases full of documents and I want a single briefcase that contains all of the documents from the two briefcases so I glued the two briefcases together" is what you did
[milleniumbug] anyway what you need is something that can understand the pdf format, read the actual pdf file, get the pages from it, and you doing the same stuff with the two files, putting these pages in the proper order, and then producing another pdf file from that
[milleniumbug] which is, you know, the same as you would do with opening these briefcases and getting the contents from them
[milleniumbug] and then putting them in another briefcase
corporate is the only place I see PDFs being used in my area, and that's because my employer's website needs to generate PDFs full of metallurgical data -- but even for something like a CV, people just use online portfolios
Depends - many places want the CV to be a PDF. Many others accept Word documents but then the formatting could be wonky when opened.
Hence it's just easier to ask for PDF and users can just take their Word document and make it into a PDF
But manuals, documentation, other materials are also common. Worked on a system once for an estate agency that took data for their properties and produced PDFs. They had hard copy versions of these anyways and wanted to have basically the same but for their website, so people could download it, instead of going to their office for one.
@Alex If your boss doesn't mind spending money, PDF4NET might also be an answer. I've just noticed now it is being used here for the purposes you want in a large code base of my work o2sol.com/pdf4net/overview.htm