NAME
    Net::SAML2 - SAML2 bindings and protocol implementation

VERSION
    version 0.43

SYNOPSIS
      See TUTORIAL.md for implementation documentation and
      t/12-full-client.t for a pseudo implementation following the tutorial

      # generate a redirect off to the IdP:

            my $idp = Net::SAML2::IdP->new($IDP);
            my $sso_url = $idp->sso_url('urn:oasis:names:tc:SAML:2.0:bindings:HTTP-Redirect');

            my $authnreq = Net::SAML2::Protocol::AuthnRequest->new(
                    issuer        => 'http://localhost:3000/metadata.xml',
                    destination   => $sso_url,
                    nameid_format => $idp->format('persistent'),
            )->as_xml;

            my $authnreq = Net::SAML2::Protocol::AuthnRequest->new(
              id            => 'NETSAML2_Crypt::OpenSSL::Random::random_pseudo_bytes(16),
              issuer        => $self->{id},         # Service Provider (SP) Entity ID
              destination   => $sso_url,            # Identity Provider (IdP) SSO URL
              provider_name => $provider_name,      # Service Provider (SP) Human Readable Name
              issue_instant => DateTime->now,       # Defaults to Current Time
            );

            my $request_id = $authnreq->id; # Store and Compare to InResponseTo

            # or

            my $request_id = 'NETSAML2_' . unpack 'H*', Crypt::OpenSSL::Random::random_pseudo_bytes(16);

            my $authnreq = Net::SAML2::Protocol::AuthnRequest->as_xml(
              id            => $request_id,         # Unique Request ID will be returned in response
              issuer        => $self->{id},         # Service Provider (SP) Entity ID
              destination   => $sso_url,            # Identity Provider (IdP) SSO URL
              provider_name => $provider_name,      # Service Provider (SP) Human Readable Name
              issue_instant => DateTime->now,       # Defaults to Current Time
            );

            my $redirect = Net::SAML2::Binding::Redirect->new(
                    key => '/path/to/SPsign-nopw-key.pem',
                    url => $sso_url,
                    param => 'SAMLRequest' OR 'SAMLResponse',
                    cert => '/path/to/IdP-cert.pem'
            );

            my $url = $redirect->sign($authnreq);

            my $ret = $redirect->verify($url);

      # handle the POST back from the IdP, via the browser:

            my $post = Net::SAML2::Binding::POST->new;
            my $ret = $post->handle_response(
                    $saml_response
            );

            if ($ret) {
                    my $assertion = Net::SAML2::Protocol::Assertion->new_from_xml(
                            xml => decode_base64($saml_response)
                    );

                    # ...
            }

DESCRIPTION
    Support for the Web Browser SSO profile of SAML2.

    Net::SAML2 correctly perform the SSO process against numerous SAML
    Identity Providers (IdPs). It has been tested against:

    GSuite (Google)
    Azure (Microsoft Office 365)
    OneLogin
    Jump
    Mircosoft ADFS
    Keycloak
    Auth0 (requires Net::SAML2 >=0.39)
    PingIdentity

NAME
    Net::SAML2 - SAML bindings and protocol implementation

MAJOR CAVEATS
    SP-side protocol only
    Requires XML metadata from the IdP

CONTRIBUTORS
    Chris Andrews <chris@nodnol.org>
    Oskari Okko Ojala <okko@frantic.com>
    Peter Marschall <peter@adpm.de>
    Mike Wisener <xmikew@cpan.org>
    Jeff Fearn <jfearn@redhat.com>
    Alessandro Ranellucci <aar@cpan.org>
    Mike Wisener <mwisener@secureworks.com>, xmikew <github@32ths.com>
    xmikew <github@32ths.com>
    Timothy Legge <timlegge@gmail.com>

COPYRIGHT
    The following copyright notice applies to all the files provided in this
    distribution, including binary files, unless explicitly noted otherwise.

    Copyright 2010, 2011 Venda Ltd.

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

AUTHOR
    Chris Andrews <chrisa@cpan.org>

COPYRIGHT AND LICENSE
    This software is copyright (c) 2021 by Chris Andrews and Others, see the
    git log.

    This is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify it under
    the same terms as the Perl 5 programming language system itself.