Hi Jean-Claude

OpenID Connect is an identity layer on top of OAuth 2. Our solution includes a 
Fuseki DataSetAssembler that provides secured datasets, so it doesn't modifies 
Fuseki but merely provides an add-on. It also includes a Shiro 
AuthenticatingFilter  taking care of the authentication part. We provide a 
docker distribution of Fuseki with this add-ons.

Cheers,
Reto

-----Original Message-----
From: Jean-Claude Moissinac <jean-claude.moissi...@telecom-paristech.fr> 
Sent: Friday, May 24, 2019 4:22 PM
To: users@jena.apache.org
Subject: Re: Fuseki OIDC: OpenId authenticated Fuseki access

Hi Reto

Interesting
I would like to support such access (or OAuth) Is your solution a modified 
version of Fuseki or the integration of some features via the Shiro support of 
fuseki?

Cheers

--
Jean-Claude Moissinac



Le ven. 24 mai 2019 à 15:56, Reto Gmür <r...@factsmission.com> a écrit :

> Hi all,
>
> At FactsMission we've been experimenting with controlling Fuseki 
> access with OpenID (OIDC) authentication and we would like to invite 
> you to try out the results and give us feedback.
>
>
>   *   You may either set up your own instance using the code available
> here: https://github.com/linked-solutions/fuseki-oidc
>   *   Or, try out our demo-instance here:
> https://fuseki-oidc-sample-client.factsmission.org/
>
> While you'll need to set up an account to try it out, you can do so 
> with any fake email-address as verification is disabled.
>
> Once you logged in with OIDC you will be able to read data from any 
> graph but only allowed to write to a specific graph associated with your 
> account.
> The motivation for this configuration is to allow guest-book style
> (client-side) applications where user can add and edit entries in 
> their personal graph and see the entries from any graph.
>
> Let me know if you find this useful or if we missed something.
>
> Cheers,
> Reto
>
>
>

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