Class: Aws::CognitoIdentityProvider::Types::RespondToAuthChallengeRequest
- Inherits:
-
Struct
- Object
- Struct
- Aws::CognitoIdentityProvider::Types::RespondToAuthChallengeRequest
- Defined in:
- gems/aws-sdk-cognitoidentityprovider/lib/aws-sdk-cognitoidentityprovider/types.rb
Overview
The request to respond to an authentication challenge.
Constant Summary collapse
- SENSITIVE =
[:client_id, :session, :challenge_responses, :user_context_data]
Instance Attribute Summary collapse
-
#analytics_metadata ⇒ Types::AnalyticsMetadataType
Information that supports analytics outcomes with Amazon Pinpoint, including the user's endpoint ID.
-
#challenge_name ⇒ String
The name of the challenge that you are responding to.
-
#challenge_responses ⇒ Hash<String,String>
The responses to the challenge that you received in the previous request.
-
#client_id ⇒ String
The ID of the app client where the user is signing in.
-
#client_metadata ⇒ Hash<String,String>
A map of custom key-value pairs that you can provide as input for any custom workflows that this action triggers.
-
#session ⇒ String
The session identifier that maintains the state of authentication requests and challenge responses.
-
#user_context_data ⇒ Types::UserContextDataType
Contextual data about your user session like the device fingerprint, IP address, or location.
Instance Attribute Details
#analytics_metadata ⇒ Types::AnalyticsMetadataType
Information that supports analytics outcomes with Amazon Pinpoint, including the user's endpoint ID. The endpoint ID is a destination for Amazon Pinpoint push notifications, for example a device identifier, email address, or phone number.
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# File 'gems/aws-sdk-cognitoidentityprovider/lib/aws-sdk-cognitoidentityprovider/types.rb', line 9635 class RespondToAuthChallengeRequest < Struct.new( :client_id, :challenge_name, :session, :challenge_responses, :analytics_metadata, :user_context_data, :client_metadata) SENSITIVE = [:client_id, :session, :challenge_responses, :user_context_data] include Aws::Structure end |
#challenge_name ⇒ String
The name of the challenge that you are responding to.
ADMIN_NO_SRP_AUTH challenge with this
operation.
Possible challenges include the following:
USERNAME and, when the app
client has a client secret, SECRET_HASH in the parameters. Include
a DEVICE_KEY for device authentication.
WEB_AUTHN: Respond to the challenge with the results of a successful authentication with a WebAuthn authenticator, or passkey, asCREDENTIAL. Examples of WebAuthn authenticators include biometric devices and security keys.PASSWORD: Respond with the user's password asPASSWORD.PASSWORD_SRP: Respond with the initial SRP secret asSRP_A.SELECT_CHALLENGE: Respond with a challenge selection asANSWER. It must be one of the challenge types in theAvailableChallengesresponse parameter. Add the parameters of the selected challenge, for exampleUSERNAMEandSMS_OTP.SMS_MFA: Respond with the code that your user pool delivered in an SMS message, asSMS_MFA_CODEEMAIL_MFA: Respond with the code that your user pool delivered in an email message, asEMAIL_MFA_CODEEMAIL_OTP: Respond with the code that your user pool delivered in an email message, asEMAIL_OTP_CODE.SMS_OTP: Respond with the code that your user pool delivered in an SMS message, asSMS_OTP_CODE.PASSWORD_VERIFIER: Respond with the second stage of SRP secrets asPASSWORD_CLAIM_SIGNATURE,PASSWORD_CLAIM_SECRET_BLOCK, andTIMESTAMP.CUSTOM_CHALLENGE: This is returned if your custom authentication flow determines that the user should pass another challenge before tokens are issued. The parameters of the challenge are determined by your Lambda function and issued in theChallengeParametersof a challenge response.DEVICE_SRP_AUTH: Respond with the initial parameters of device SRP authentication. For more information, see Signing in with a device.DEVICE_PASSWORD_VERIFIER: Respond withPASSWORD_CLAIM_SIGNATURE,PASSWORD_CLAIM_SECRET_BLOCK, andTIMESTAMPafter client-side SRP calculations. For more information, see Signing in with a device.NEW_PASSWORD_REQUIRED: For users who are required to change their passwords after successful first login. Respond to this challenge withNEW_PASSWORDand any required attributes that Amazon Cognito returned in therequiredAttributesparameter. You can also set values for attributes that aren't required by your user pool and that your app client can write.Amazon Cognito only returns this challenge for users who have temporary passwords. When you create passwordless users, you must provide values for all required attributes.
In a NEW_PASSWORD_REQUIREDchallenge response, you can't modify a required attribute that already has a value. InAdminRespondToAuthChallengeorRespondToAuthChallenge, set a value for any keys that Amazon Cognito returned in therequiredAttributesparameter, then use theAdminUpdateUserAttributesorUpdateUserAttributesAPI operation to modify the value of any additional attributes.MFA_SETUP: For users who are required to setup an MFA factor before they can sign in. The MFA types activated for the user pool will be listed in the challenge parametersMFAS_CAN_SETUPvalue.To set up time-based one-time password (TOTP) MFA, use the session returned in this challenge from
InitiateAuthorAdminInitiateAuthas an input toAssociateSoftwareToken. Then, use the session returned byVerifySoftwareTokenas an input toRespondToAuthChallengeorAdminRespondToAuthChallengewith challenge nameMFA_SETUPto complete sign-in.To set up SMS or email MFA, collect a
phone_numberoremailattribute for the user. Then restart the authentication flow with anInitiateAuthorAdminInitiateAuthrequest.
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# File 'gems/aws-sdk-cognitoidentityprovider/lib/aws-sdk-cognitoidentityprovider/types.rb', line 9635 class RespondToAuthChallengeRequest < Struct.new( :client_id, :challenge_name, :session, :challenge_responses, :analytics_metadata, :user_context_data, :client_metadata) SENSITIVE = [:client_id, :session, :challenge_responses, :user_context_data] include Aws::Structure end |
#challenge_responses ⇒ Hash<String,String>
The responses to the challenge that you received in the previous request. Each challenge has its own required response parameters. The following examples are partial JSON request bodies that highlight challenge-response parameters.
You must provide a SECRET_HASH parameter in all challenge responses
to an app client that has a client secret. Include a DEVICE_KEY
for device authentication.
- SELECT_CHALLENGE
"ChallengeName": "SELECT_CHALLENGE", "ChallengeResponses": { "USERNAME": "[username]", "ANSWER": "[Challenge name]"}Available challenges are
PASSWORD,PASSWORD_SRP,EMAIL_OTP,SMS_OTP, andWEB_AUTHN.Complete authentication in the
SELECT_CHALLENGEresponse forPASSWORD,PASSWORD_SRP, andWEB_AUTHN:"ChallengeName": "SELECT_CHALLENGE", "ChallengeResponses": { "ANSWER": "WEB_AUTHN", "USERNAME": "[username]", "CREDENTIAL": "[AuthenticationResponseJSON]"}"ChallengeName": "SELECT_CHALLENGE", "ChallengeResponses": { "ANSWER": "PASSWORD", "USERNAME": "[username]", "PASSWORD": "[password]"}"ChallengeName": "SELECT_CHALLENGE", "ChallengeResponses": { "ANSWER": "PASSWORD_SRP", "USERNAME": "[username]", "SRP_A": "[SRP_A]"}
For
SMS_OTPandEMAIL_OTP, respond with the username and answer. Your user pool will send a code for the user to submit in the next challenge response."ChallengeName": "SELECT_CHALLENGE", "ChallengeResponses": { "ANSWER": "SMS_OTP", "USERNAME": "[username]"}"ChallengeName": "SELECT_CHALLENGE", "ChallengeResponses": { "ANSWER": "EMAIL_OTP", "USERNAME": "[username]"}
- WEB_AUTHN
"ChallengeName": "WEB_AUTHN", "ChallengeResponses": { "USERNAME": "[username]", "CREDENTIAL": "[AuthenticationResponseJSON]"}- PASSWORD
"ChallengeName": "PASSWORD", "ChallengeResponses": { "USERNAME": "[username]", "PASSWORD": "[password]"}- PASSWORD_SRP
"ChallengeName": "PASSWORD_SRP", "ChallengeResponses": { "USERNAME": "[username]", "SRP_A": "[SRP_A]"}- SMS_OTP
"ChallengeName": "SMS_OTP", "ChallengeResponses": {"SMS_OTP_CODE": "[code]", "USERNAME": "[username]"}- EMAIL_OTP
"ChallengeName": "EMAIL_OTP", "ChallengeResponses": {"EMAIL_OTP_CODE": "[code]", "USERNAME": "[username]"}- SMS_MFA
"ChallengeName": "SMS_MFA", "ChallengeResponses": {"SMS_MFA_CODE": "[code]", "USERNAME": "[username]"}- PASSWORD_VERIFIER
This challenge response is part of the SRP flow. Amazon Cognito requires that your application respond to this challenge within a few seconds. When the response time exceeds this period, your user pool returns a
NotAuthorizedExceptionerror."ChallengeName": "PASSWORD_VERIFIER", "ChallengeResponses": {"PASSWORD_CLAIM_SIGNATURE": "[claim_signature]", "PASSWORD_CLAIM_SECRET_BLOCK": "[secret_block]", "TIMESTAMP": [timestamp], "USERNAME": "[username]"}- CUSTOM_CHALLENGE
"ChallengeName": "CUSTOM_CHALLENGE", "ChallengeResponses": {"USERNAME": "[username]", "ANSWER": "[challenge_answer]"}- NEW_PASSWORD_REQUIRED
"ChallengeName": "NEW_PASSWORD_REQUIRED", "ChallengeResponses": {"NEW_PASSWORD": "[new_password]", "USERNAME": "[username]"}To set any required attributes that
InitiateAuthreturned in anrequiredAttributesparameter, add"userAttributes.[attribute_name]": "[attribute_value]". This parameter can also set values for writable attributes that aren't required by your user pool.In a NEW_PASSWORD_REQUIREDchallenge response, you can't modify a required attribute that already has a value. InAdminRespondToAuthChallengeorRespondToAuthChallenge, set a value for any keys that Amazon Cognito returned in therequiredAttributesparameter, then use theAdminUpdateUserAttributesorUpdateUserAttributesAPI operation to modify the value of any additional attributes.- SOFTWARE_TOKEN_MFA
"ChallengeName": "SOFTWARE_TOKEN_MFA", "ChallengeResponses": {"USERNAME": "[username]", "SOFTWARE_TOKEN_MFA_CODE": [authenticator_code]}- DEVICE_SRP_AUTH
"ChallengeName": "DEVICE_SRP_AUTH", "ChallengeResponses": {"USERNAME": "[username]", "DEVICE_KEY": "[device_key]", "SRP_A": "[srp_a]"}- DEVICE_PASSWORD_VERIFIER
"ChallengeName": "DEVICE_PASSWORD_VERIFIER", "ChallengeResponses": {"DEVICE_KEY": "[device_key]", "PASSWORD_CLAIM_SIGNATURE": "[claim_signature]", "PASSWORD_CLAIM_SECRET_BLOCK": "[secret_block]", "TIMESTAMP": [timestamp], "USERNAME": "[username]"}- MFA_SETUP
"ChallengeName": "MFA_SETUP", "ChallengeResponses": {"USERNAME": "[username]"}, "SESSION": "[Session ID from VerifySoftwareToken]"- SELECT_MFA_TYPE
"ChallengeName": "SELECT_MFA_TYPE", "ChallengeResponses": {"USERNAME": "[username]", "ANSWER": "[SMS_MFA|EMAIL_MFA|SOFTWARE_TOKEN_MFA]"}
For more information about SECRET_HASH, see Computing secret hash
values. For information about DEVICE_KEY, see Working with
user devices in your user pool.
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# File 'gems/aws-sdk-cognitoidentityprovider/lib/aws-sdk-cognitoidentityprovider/types.rb', line 9635 class RespondToAuthChallengeRequest < Struct.new( :client_id, :challenge_name, :session, :challenge_responses, :analytics_metadata, :user_context_data, :client_metadata) SENSITIVE = [:client_id, :session, :challenge_responses, :user_context_data] include Aws::Structure end |
#client_id ⇒ String
The ID of the app client where the user is signing in.
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# File 'gems/aws-sdk-cognitoidentityprovider/lib/aws-sdk-cognitoidentityprovider/types.rb', line 9635 class RespondToAuthChallengeRequest < Struct.new( :client_id, :challenge_name, :session, :challenge_responses, :analytics_metadata, :user_context_data, :client_metadata) SENSITIVE = [:client_id, :session, :challenge_responses, :user_context_data] include Aws::Structure end |
#client_metadata ⇒ Hash<String,String>
A map of custom key-value pairs that you can provide as input for any custom workflows that this action triggers.
You create custom workflows by assigning Lambda functions to user
pool triggers. When you use the RespondToAuthChallenge API action,
Amazon Cognito invokes any functions that are assigned to the
following triggers: post authentication, pre token generation,
define auth challenge, create auth challenge, and verify auth
challenge. When Amazon Cognito invokes any of these functions, it
passes a JSON payload, which the function receives as input. This
payload contains a clientMetadata attribute, which provides the
data that you assigned to the ClientMetadata parameter in your
RespondToAuthChallenge request. In your function code in Lambda, you
can process the clientMetadata value to enhance your workflow for
your specific needs.
For more information, see Using Lambda triggers in the Amazon Cognito Developer Guide.
ClientMetadata parameter, note that Amazon
Cognito won't do the following:
Store the
ClientMetadatavalue. This data is available only to Lambda triggers that are assigned to a user pool to support custom workflows. If your user pool configuration doesn't include triggers, theClientMetadataparameter serves no purpose.Validate the
ClientMetadatavalue.Encrypt the
ClientMetadatavalue. Don't send sensitive information in this parameter.
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# File 'gems/aws-sdk-cognitoidentityprovider/lib/aws-sdk-cognitoidentityprovider/types.rb', line 9635 class RespondToAuthChallengeRequest < Struct.new( :client_id, :challenge_name, :session, :challenge_responses, :analytics_metadata, :user_context_data, :client_metadata) SENSITIVE = [:client_id, :session, :challenge_responses, :user_context_data] include Aws::Structure end |
#session ⇒ String
The session identifier that maintains the state of authentication
requests and challenge responses. If an AdminInitiateAuth or
AdminRespondToAuthChallenge API request results in a determination
that your application must pass another challenge, Amazon Cognito
returns a session with other challenge parameters. Send this session
identifier, unmodified, to the next AdminRespondToAuthChallenge
request.
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# File 'gems/aws-sdk-cognitoidentityprovider/lib/aws-sdk-cognitoidentityprovider/types.rb', line 9635 class RespondToAuthChallengeRequest < Struct.new( :client_id, :challenge_name, :session, :challenge_responses, :analytics_metadata, :user_context_data, :client_metadata) SENSITIVE = [:client_id, :session, :challenge_responses, :user_context_data] include Aws::Structure end |
#user_context_data ⇒ Types::UserContextDataType
Contextual data about your user session like the device fingerprint, IP address, or location. Amazon Cognito threat protection evaluates the risk of an authentication event based on the context that your app generates and passes to Amazon Cognito when it makes API requests.
For more information, see Collecting data for threat protection in applications.
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# File 'gems/aws-sdk-cognitoidentityprovider/lib/aws-sdk-cognitoidentityprovider/types.rb', line 9635 class RespondToAuthChallengeRequest < Struct.new( :client_id, :challenge_name, :session, :challenge_responses, :analytics_metadata, :user_context_data, :client_metadata) SENSITIVE = [:client_id, :session, :challenge_responses, :user_context_data] include Aws::Structure end |