Class: Aws::CognitoIdentityProvider::Types::AdminInitiateAuthResponse
- Inherits:
-
Struct
- Object
- Struct
- Aws::CognitoIdentityProvider::Types::AdminInitiateAuthResponse
- Defined in:
- gems/aws-sdk-cognitoidentityprovider/lib/aws-sdk-cognitoidentityprovider/types.rb
Overview
Initiates the authentication response, as an administrator.
Constant Summary collapse
- SENSITIVE =
[:session]
Instance Attribute Summary collapse
-
#authentication_result ⇒ Types::AuthenticationResultType
The outcome of successful authentication.
-
#challenge_name ⇒ String
The name of the challenge that you're responding to with this call.
-
#challenge_parameters ⇒ Hash<String,String>
The challenge parameters.
-
#session ⇒ String
The session that must be passed to challenge-response requests.
Instance Attribute Details
#authentication_result ⇒ Types::AuthenticationResultType
The outcome of successful authentication. This is only returned if
the user pool has no additional challenges to return. If Amazon
Cognito returns another challenge, the response includes
ChallengeName
, ChallengeParameters
, and Session
so that your
user can answer the challenge.
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# File 'gems/aws-sdk-cognitoidentityprovider/lib/aws-sdk-cognitoidentityprovider/types.rb', line 1312 class AdminInitiateAuthResponse < Struct.new( :challenge_name, :session, :challenge_parameters, :authentication_result) SENSITIVE = [:session] include Aws::Structure end |
#challenge_name ⇒ String
The name of the challenge that you're responding to with this call.
This is returned in the AdminInitiateAuth
response if you must
pass another challenge.
WEB_AUTHN
: Respond to the challenge with the results of a successful authentication with a passkey, or webauthN, factor. These are typically biometric devices or security keys.PASSWORD
: Respond withUSER_PASSWORD_AUTH
parameters:USERNAME
(required),PASSWORD
(required),SECRET_HASH
(required if the app client is configured with a client secret),DEVICE_KEY
.PASSWORD_SRP
: Respond withUSER_SRP_AUTH
parameters:USERNAME
(required),SRP_A
(required),SECRET_HASH
(required if the app client is configured with a client secret),DEVICE_KEY
.SELECT_CHALLENGE
: Respond to the challenge withUSERNAME
and anANSWER
that matches one of the challenge types in theAvailableChallenges
response parameter.MFA_SETUP
: If MFA is required, users who don't have at least one of the MFA methods set up are presented with anMFA_SETUP
challenge. The user must set up at least one MFA type to continue to authenticate.SELECT_MFA_TYPE
: Selects the MFA type. Valid MFA options areSMS_MFA
for SMS message MFA,EMAIL_OTP
for email message MFA, andSOFTWARE_TOKEN_MFA
for time-based one-time password (TOTP) software token MFA.SMS_MFA
: Next challenge is to supply anSMS_MFA_CODE
that your user pool delivered in an SMS message.EMAIL_OTP
: Next challenge is to supply anEMAIL_OTP_CODE
that your user pool delivered in an email message.PASSWORD_VERIFIER
: Next challenge is to supplyPASSWORD_CLAIM_SIGNATURE
,PASSWORD_CLAIM_SECRET_BLOCK
, andTIMESTAMP
after the client-side SRP calculations.CUSTOM_CHALLENGE
: This is returned if your custom authentication flow determines that the user should pass another challenge before tokens are issued.DEVICE_SRP_AUTH
: If device tracking was activated in your user pool and the previous challenges were passed, this challenge is returned so that Amazon Cognito can start tracking this device.DEVICE_PASSWORD_VERIFIER
: Similar toPASSWORD_VERIFIER
, but for devices only.ADMIN_NO_SRP_AUTH
: This is returned if you must authenticate withUSERNAME
andPASSWORD
directly. An app client must be enabled to use this flow.NEW_PASSWORD_REQUIRED
: For users who are required to change their passwords after successful first login. Respond to this challenge withNEW_PASSWORD
and any required attributes that Amazon Cognito returned in therequiredAttributes
parameter. You can also set values for attributes that aren't required by your user pool and that your app client can write. For more information, see AdminRespondToAuthChallenge.Amazon Cognito only returns this challenge for users who have temporary passwords. Because of this, and because in some cases you can create users who don't have values for required attributes, take care to collect and submit required-attribute values for all users who don't have passwords. You can create a user in the Amazon Cognito console without, for example, a required
birthdate
attribute. The API response from Amazon Cognito won't prompt you to submit a birthdate for the user if they don't have a password.In a NEW_PASSWORD_REQUIRED
challenge response, you can't modify a required attribute that already has a value. InAdminRespondToAuthChallenge
, set a value for any keys that Amazon Cognito returned in therequiredAttributes
parameter, then use theAdminUpdateUserAttributes
API operation to modify the value of any additional attributes.MFA_SETUP
: For users who are required to set up an MFA factor before they can sign in. The MFA types activated for the user pool will be listed in the challenge parametersMFAS_CAN_SETUP
value.To set up software token MFA, use the session returned here from
InitiateAuth
as an input toAssociateSoftwareToken
, and use the session returned byVerifySoftwareToken
as an input toRespondToAuthChallenge
with challenge nameMFA_SETUP
to complete sign-in. To set up SMS MFA, users will need help from an administrator to add a phone number to their account and then callInitiateAuth
again to restart sign-in.
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# File 'gems/aws-sdk-cognitoidentityprovider/lib/aws-sdk-cognitoidentityprovider/types.rb', line 1312 class AdminInitiateAuthResponse < Struct.new( :challenge_name, :session, :challenge_parameters, :authentication_result) SENSITIVE = [:session] include Aws::Structure end |
#challenge_parameters ⇒ Hash<String,String>
The challenge parameters. These are returned to you in the
AdminInitiateAuth
response if you must pass another challenge. The
responses in this parameter should be used to compute inputs to the
next call (AdminRespondToAuthChallenge
).
All challenges require USERNAME
and SECRET_HASH
(if applicable).
The value of the USER_ID_FOR_SRP
attribute is the user's actual
username, not an alias (such as email address or phone number), even
if you specified an alias in your call to AdminInitiateAuth
. This
happens because, in the AdminRespondToAuthChallenge
API
ChallengeResponses
, the USERNAME
attribute can't be an alias.
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# File 'gems/aws-sdk-cognitoidentityprovider/lib/aws-sdk-cognitoidentityprovider/types.rb', line 1312 class AdminInitiateAuthResponse < Struct.new( :challenge_name, :session, :challenge_parameters, :authentication_result) SENSITIVE = [:session] include Aws::Structure end |
#session ⇒ String
The session that must be passed to challenge-response requests. If
an AdminInitiateAuth
or AdminRespondToAuthChallenge
API request
determines that the caller must pass another challenge, Amazon
Cognito returns a session ID and the parameters of the next
challenge. Pass this session Id in the Session
parameter of
AdminRespondToAuthChallenge
.
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# File 'gems/aws-sdk-cognitoidentityprovider/lib/aws-sdk-cognitoidentityprovider/types.rb', line 1312 class AdminInitiateAuthResponse < Struct.new( :challenge_name, :session, :challenge_parameters, :authentication_result) SENSITIVE = [:session] include Aws::Structure end |