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Open Source Single Sign-On Server Keycloak (Red Hat Single Sign-On) Red Hat: Open source: Yes: Federated SSO (LDAP and Active Directory), standard protocols (OpenID Connect, OAuth 2.0 and SAML 2.0) for Web, clustering and single sign on. Red Hat Single Sign-On is version of Keycloak for which RedHat provides commercial support. Microsoft ...
WS-Security, WS-Federation, WS-Trust, SAML 1.1 / 2.0, Liberty, Single Sign-on, RBAC, CardSpace, OAuth 2.0, OpenID, STS. Includes out of the box integration with cloud and social media providers (Office 365, Windows Live (MSN), Google, Facebook, Salesforce, Amazon web services and 200+ preconfigured connections to SaaS providers etc ...
OAuth is an authorization protocol, rather than an authentication protocol. Using OAuth on its own as an authentication method may be referred to as pseudo-authentication. [26] The following diagrams highlight the differences between using OpenID (specifically designed as an authentication protocol) and OAuth for authorization.
Spring Security is a Java/Java EE framework that provides authentication, authorization and other security features for enterprise applications. The project was started in late 2003 as 'Acegi Security' (pronounced Ah-see-gee / ɑː s iː dʒ iː /, whose letters are the first, third, fifth, seventh, and ninth characters from the English alphabet, in order to prevent name conflicts [2]) by Ben ...
Keycloak supports various protocols such as OpenID, OAuth version 2.0 and SAML and provides features such as user management, two-factor authentication, permissions and roles management, creating token services, etc. [3] It is possible to integrate Keycloak with other technologies, such as front-end frameworks like React or Angular, as well as ...
The Central Authentication Service (CAS) is a single sign-on protocol for the web. [1] Its purpose is to permit a user to access multiple applications while providing their credentials (such as user ID and password) only once.
The Liberty Alliance contributed its Identity Federation Framework (ID-FF) to the OASIS SSTC in September 2003: ID-FF 1.1 was released in April 2003; ID-FF 1.2 was finalized in November 2003; Versions 1.0 and 1.1 of SAML are similar even though small differences exist., [10] however, the differences between SAML 2.0 and SAML 1.1 are substantial ...
SAML 2.0 supports W3C XML encryption and service-provider–initiated web browser single sign-on exchanges. [21] A user wielding a user agent (usually a web browser) is called the subject in SAML-based single sign-on. The user requests a web resource protected by a SAML service provider.