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WordPress OAuth & OpenID Connect Single Sign-On (SSO) plugin enables secure login into WordPress using Linkedin as OAuth and OpenID Connect provider. You can also configure plugin using different custom providers and standard IDPs. It supports advanced Single Sign-On (SSO) features such as user profile Attribute mapping, Role mapping, etc. Here we will go through a guide to configure SSO between WordPress and Linkedin. By the end of this guide, users should be able to login to WordPress from Linkedin. To know more about other features we provide in WP OAuth Single Sign-On ( OAuth & OpenID Connect Client ) plugin, you can click here.
Pre-requisites : Download And Installation
- Log into your WordPress instance as an admin.
- Go to the WordPress Dashboard -> Plugins and click on Add New.
- Search for a WordPress OAuth Single Sign-On (SSO) plugin and click on Install Now.
- Once installed click on Activate.
Steps to configure Linkedin Single Sign-On (SSO) Login into WordPress
1. Setup Linkedin as OAuth Provider
- First of all, go tohttps://www.linkedin.com/secure/developer?newapp= in order to create a new application. Click on Create Application button to create a new application.
- Enter the required details and click on the Create app button to save your
changes.
- Copy the Client Id and the Client Secret and save it in
your miniOrange OAuth Client plugin under Client Id and
the Client Secret text fields respectively.
- Copy the Redirect/ Callback URl from miniOrange OAuth Client
plugin and enter it under OAuth 2.0 -> Authorized Redirect
URLs textbox. Click on the Add button adjacent to the text box
to save it. Finally, click on the Update button to save your
configurations.
- Select the Products as shown in the image below as these are necessary in order to set permissions.
- You will see the permissions as shown in the image below.
You have successfully configured Linkedin as OAuth Provider for achieving Linkedin SSO login into your WordPress Site.
2. Setup WordPress as OAuth Client
- Go to the Configure OAuth tab in the Plugin and search for LinkedIn app in the applications list, and select the LinkedIn app.
- Then, configure App Name, Client ID, Client Secret and Endpoints.
- Enter Scope value as openid email.
- Please refer the below table for configuring the scope & endpoints for Linkedin in the plugin.
Note: You can add only one scope (r_liteprofile or r_emailaddress) with the free plugin. If you want to fetch all the user attributes under both the scopes from LinkedIn then you need to purchase our premium plan.
Client ID : |
from the step 3 above |
Client Secret : |
from the step 3 above |
Scope: |
r_emailaddress r_liteprofile w_member_social |
Authorize Endpoint: |
https://www.linkedin.com/oauth/v2/authorization |
Access Token Endpoint: |
https://www.linkedin.com/oauth/v2/accessToken |
Get User Info Endpoint: |
https://api.linkedin.com/v2/me |
Custom redirect URL after logout:[optional] |
https://YOUR_DOMAIN/v2/logout?client_id=YOUR_CLIENT_ID&returnTo=LOGOUT_URL |
- Click on Save Settings to save the configuration.
You have successfully configured WordPress as OAuth Client for achieving Linkedin login into your WordPress Site.
3. User Attribute Mapping
- User Attribute Mapping is mandatory for enabling users to successfully login into WordPress. We will be setting up user profile attributes for WordPress using below settings.
Finding user attributes
- Go to Configure OAuth tab. Scroll down and click on Test Configuration.
- You will see all the values returned by your OAuth Provider to WordPress in a table. If you don't see value for First Name, Last Name, Email or Username, make the required settings in your OAuth Provider to return this information.
- Once you see all the values in Test Configuration, go to Attribute / Role Mapping tab, you will get the list of attributes in a Username dropdown.
4. Role Mapping [Premium]
- Click on “Test Configuration” and you will get the list of Attribute Names and Attribute Values that are sent by your OAuth provider.
- From the Test Configuration window, map the Attribute Names in the Attribute Mapping section of the plugin. Refer to the screenshot for more details.
- Enable Role Mapping: To enable Role Mapping, you need to map Group Name Attribute. Select the attribute name from the list of attributes which returns the roles from your provider application.
Eg: Role
- Assign WordPress role to the Provider role: Based on your provider application, you can allocate the WordPress role to your provider roles. It can be a student, teacher, administrator or any other depending on your application. Add the provider roles under Group Attribute Value and assign the required WordPress role in front of it under WordPress Role.
For example, in the below image. Teacher has been assigned the role of Administrator & Student is assigned the role of Subscriber.
- Once you save the mapping, the provider role will be assigned the WordPress administrator role after SSO.
Example: As per the given example, Users with role ‘teacher’ will be added as Administrator in WordPress and ‘student’ will be added as Subscriber.
5: Login Settings / Sign In Settings
- The settings in Single Sign-On (SSO) Settings tab define the user experience for Single Sign-On (SSO). To add a Linkedin login widget on your WordPress page, you need to follow the below steps.