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Customer Login API

Customer Login API

Introduction

In this tutorial, you will learn how to enable single sign-on for storefront customers using the Customer Login API and JSON Web Tokens.

You can also use the GraphQL Storefront API to authorize your application to work with customer-specific storefront data.

Overview

Single sign-on (SSO) is an authentication mechanism that enables users to sign in to multiple software applications using the same set of credentials that the user enters only once. It eliminates the need to maintain multiple passwords, which streamlines the process of accessing web applications. For more details, see Single Sign-On (opens in a new tab).

When a user signs into your web app, you can use the Customer Login API to authenticate the user to your BigCommerce store through SSO.

You can use the Customer Login API in the following use cases:

  • Integrate with an SSO provider or identity provider (IdP)
  • Set up continuous login between a BigCommerce store and another application
  • Enable alternative sign-in methods (ex. phone number and SMS password)

Storefront customers are signed in using the access point URL /login/token/{token}. The {token} must be a JSON Web Token (JWT) containing parameters for the customer login request signed by your application’s OAuth client secret. For more information on the OAuth protocol, see OAuth (opens in a new tab).

JWT is an industry standard (RFC 7519 (opens in a new tab)) for securely transmitting information between two parties. A JWT is a sequence of base64url-encoded strings separated by dots (.). The sections include the header, payload, and signature. For more details, see Introduction to JSON Web Tokens (opens in a new tab).

Customer Login JWT payload reference

Field NameTypeDescription
issstringThe issuer; The API account's client ID.
iatinteger, UNIX timeThe issued at time; when the JWT was issued.
jtistring, UUIDThe JWT ID; a unique identifier for the JWT.
operationstringThe value is always customer_login
store_hashstringThe store hash identifying the store the shopper is signing in to.
channel_idintegerOptional field containing the channel_id corresponding to the storefront the shopper is signing in to. Depending on your implementation, omitting the channel_id can lead to CORS errors; for example, see Managing Carts. You must include the channel_id when using JWTs to embed checkout on a headless storefront. The default channel_id value is 1.
customer_idintegerThe ID of the shopper who is signing in.
redirect_tostringOptional field containing a relative path for the shopper's destination after sign-in. Defaults to /account.php.
request_ipstringOptional field containing the expected IP address for the request. If provided, BigCommerce will check that it matches the browser trying to sign in.

Prerequisites

To enable SSO using the Customer Login API, you will need the following:

  • A BigCommerce store
  • API client ID and client secret with the OAuth Scope set to Customers Login
  • Node.js (opens in a new tab) installed on your machine if you plan to use JavaScript

Be sure to set the Customers Login scope to Login.

Example OAuth Scope

API account notes

  • This endpoint requires store-level API account credentials. For more information about generating accounts, consult the Guide to API Accounts.
  • The app you create needs to be installed or published on a store to be able to generate store-level access tokens. All you would need are the client ID and client secret. See the section on client ID-based authentication in the Authentication tutorial.

Enable single sign-on

To sign a customer in to their storefront account using the Customer Login API, your app needs to redirect the customer’s browser to the following access point URL: https://storedomain.com/login/token/{token}.

The {token} parameter is the JWT containing the payload data signed by your app’s OAuth client secret.

We recommend writing a script to generate a login token since the JWT’s iat (issued at) claim is only valid for 30 seconds. BigCommerce supplies helper methods for generating login tokens in our API Client Libraries.

The beginning of this tutorial focuses on manually creating a token using the debugger tool at JWT.io (opens in a new tab). Then, we will explore how to use a JavaScript function to programmatically generate an access point URL.

Create JWT using the debugger tool

To create a JWT, you will need to obtain a customer_id using the Customers v3 API.

  1. Send a GET request to the Get All Customers endpoint. Choose a customer and make note of the customer_id.
{
    "accepts_product_review_abandoned_cart_emails": true,
    "authentication": {
      "force_password_reset": false
    },
    "company": "BigCommerce",
    "customer_group_id": 2,
    "date_created": "2020-02-06T17:46:33Z",
    "date_modified": "2020-02-07T19:58:03Z",
    "email": "customer@email.com",
    "first_name": "Jane",
    "id": 1,    // customer_id
    "last_name": "Doe",
    "notes": "",
    "phone": "",
    "registration_ip_address": "",
    "tax_exempt_category": "D"
}
  1. Open the debugger at JWT.io (opens in a new tab).

  2. In the "HEADER" field, make sure the JWT alg (algorithm) field is set to "HS256" and the typ (token type) field is set to "JWT".

JWT Header

  1. In the "PAYLOAD: DATA" field, create a payload.

JWT Payload

  1. In the "VERIFY SIGNATURE" field, replace “your-256-bit-secret” with your Client Secret.

JWT Signature

  1. Copy the login token from the encoded box and paste it into the access point URL, replacing the {token} parameter.

Example:

https://storedomain.com/login/token/eyJhbGciOiJIUzI1NiIsInR5cCI6IkpXVCJ9.eyJpc3MiOiJ7Y2xpZW50X2lkfSIsImlhdCI6MTUzNTM5MzExMywianRpIjoie3V1aWR9Iiwib3BlcmF0aW9uIjoiY3VzdG9tZXJfbG9naW4iLCJzdG9yZV9oYXNoIjoie3N0b3JlX2hhc2h9IiwiY3VzdG9tZXJfaWQiOjJ9.J-fAtbjRFGdLsT744DhoprFEDqIfVq72HbDzrbFy6Is
  1. Paste the URL into the address bar of your web browser.

If the request was successful, you will be signed in as a customer and directed to /account.php. If it was unsuccessful, a sign in attempt error message will be displayed and you will be directed to /login.php.

Login Error

For common causes of sign-in failure, see Troubleshooting.

Create JWT using a JavaScript function

In this part of the tutorial, we will walk you through creating an access point URL using JavaScript. You will need node.js (opens in a new tab) installed on your machine to complete this section.

  1. Create and open a new folder by running the following commands in your terminal:
$ mkdir urlGenerator
$ cd urlGenerator
  1. Create a new node project with the following command:
$ npm init
  1. Install jsonwebtoken (opens in a new tab) and uuid (opens in a new tab) npm packages:
$ npm install jsonwebtoken uuid
  1. Open the urlGenerator folder in your code editor of choice and create a new JS file.

  2. Paste the following code into the new JS file:

const jwt = require('jsonwebtoken');
const {v4: uuidv4} = require('uuid');
 
function getLoginUrl(customerId, storeHash, storeUrl, clientId, clientSecret) {
   const dateCreated = Math. round((new Date()). getTime() / 1000);
   const  payload = {
       "iss": clientId,
       "iat": dateCreated,
       "jti": uuidv4(),
       "operation": "customer_login",
       "store_hash": storeHash,
       "customer_id": customerId,
   }
   let token = jwt.sign(payload, clientSecret, {algorithm:'HS256'});
   return `${storeUrl}/login/token/${token}`;
};
 
const clientId = "Your client id";
const clientSecret = "Your client secret";
const customerId = "Your customer id";
const storeHash = "Your store hash";
const storeUrl = "Your store url";
 
const loginUrl = getLoginUrl(customerId, storeHash, storeUrl, clientId, clientSecret);
console.log(loginUrl);
  1. Replace your app and customer-specific values in the variables.

  2. Run the code:

$ node youFileName.js

You should receive a complete access point URL as an output.

  1. Copy the URL and paste it into the address bar of your browser.

If the request was successful, you will be signed in as a customer and directed to /account.php. If it was unsuccessful, you will receive a sign in attempt error message and be directed to /login.php. For common causes of sign in failure, see Troubleshooting.

Sample code

Helper methods for generating login tokens are provided in our API Client Libraries. See the following BigCommerce repositories for language-specific examples:

For client libraries in other languages, see Libraries for Token Signing/Verification (opens in a new tab).

Signing out

To sign a customer out, set the redirect_to field of the JWT’s payload to /login.php?action=logout.

Troubleshooting

  • If the clock of the server generating the “iat” claim is not synchronized, the timestamp will be out of sync and the request will fail. If your system’s time is different from the BigCommerce server time, you can use the Get System Timestamp endpoint as a source of truth.
  • You can only visit the access point URL once. The token will be invalidated after the GET request is made.
  • Tokens should not be generated in advance. Instead, the app should generate the token and immediately redirect the user’s browser to the access point URL.

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