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Display logged-in user details
5 min

At this point, we’ve successfully implemented login and logout capabilities using the Asgardeo React SDK. The next step is to explore how to access and display logged-in user details within the app. The Asgardeo React SDK loads the basic user attribute details to the authentication state, so that you can directly access those from the state (such as state.username) and use them in the application. First, let’s try to display the username using state.username.Replace the code in app.jsx with the following.

import { useAuthContext } from "@asgardeo/auth-react";
import './App.css';

const App = () => {
  const { state, signIn, signOut } = useAuthContext();

  return (
    <>
      {
        state.isAuthenticated
          ? <>
            <p>Welocme {state.username}</p>
            <button onClick={() => signOut()}>Logout</button>
          </>
          : <button onClick={() => signIn()}>Login</button>
      }
    </>
  )
};

export default App;

If your React application is already running in the development mode, the home page will be reloaded and you will see the updated user interface.

Logout screen

There may be instances where you’d need to retrieve user attributes outside React components. Asgardeo React SDK provides a getBasicUserInfo function, which allows you to retrieve the authenticated user’s basic information. The code example in the following section demonstrates this process and can be adapted to fit your application with any necessary customizations.

Again, replace the code in app.jsx with the following.

import { useAuthContext } from "@asgardeo/auth-react";
import { useEffect, useState } from "react";
import './App.css';

const App = () => {

  const { state, getBasicUserInfo, signIn, signOut } = useAuthContext();
  const [userInfo, setUserInfo] = useState(undefined);

  useEffect(() => {
    getBasicUserInfo().then((response) => {
      setUserInfo(response)
    }).catch((error) => {
      console.error(error);
    });
  }, [state]);


  return (
    <>
      {
        state.isAuthenticated
          ? <>
            <p>Welcome {userInfo?.username}</p>
            <button onClick={() => signOut()}>Logout</button>
          </>
          : <button onClick={() => signIn()}>Login</button>
      }
    </>
  )
};

export default App;

The above code snippet, the app utilizes the useAuthContext hook to access authentication state and methods such as getBasicUserInfo, signIn, and signOut. It also uses React's useState to store basic user information and useEffect to fetch this information whenever the authentication state changes. If the user is authenticated, the app displays a welcome message with the username and a button to log out. If the user is not authenticated, it shows a login button that triggers the sign-in process, and the errors during user info retrieval are handled by logging them to the console.

Similarly, you can access the other user attributes, such as email, display name, allowed scopes, etc as well. The following code snippet shows you how you can access them in your app. Asgardeo React SDK is responsible for processing the ID token and decoding these attributes.

 <p>Your email: { userInfo?.email }</p>
 <p>Display name: { userInfo?.displayName }</p>
 <p>Allowed scopes: { userInfo?.allowedScopes }</p>
 <p>Tenant domain: { userInfo?.tenantDomain }</p>
 <p>Session state: { userInfo?.sessionState }</p>

Getting additional user attributes

Other than the above attributes decoded and available to you by default, Asgardeo React SDK provides getDecodedIDToken method to access any other user attributes that are not exposed by getBasicUserInfo. This method will decode the ID token in browser storage and return the output as a JSON object.

To get additional user attributes to the ID token, the application should be configured to request the specific user attributes at the time of login. For example, if you want to retrieve a user's mobile number as an attribute, you need to configure the application to request the user’s mobile number as an attribute in the ID token.

  1. Log in to the WSO2 Identity Server console and select the application you created.
  2. Go to the User Attributes tab.
  3. Select the phone scope.
  4. Expand the scope, and you will see that all attributes under this scope (e.g., mobile_number) are selected.
  5. Click Update to save the changes.
const { state, signIn, signOut, getDecodedIDToken } = useAuthContext();


const [mobileNumber, setMobileNumber] = useState("")


useEffect(() => {
  if (state.isAuthenticated) {
    getDecodedIDToken().then((decodedIdToken) => {
      console.log(decodedIdToken);
      setMobileNumber(decodedIdToken.phone_number)
    }).catch((error) => {
        console.log(error);
    })
  }
}, [ state.isAuthenticated ]);


return (
   <>
    <p>Your mobile number: {mobileNumber}</p>
   </>
)

In the above code snippet, we run the getDecodedIDToken method if the user is authenticated, and print the output to the browser console. The decoded ID token response will be printed to the browser console as follows.

ID token

In this step, we further improved our React app to display the user attributes. As the next step, we will try to secure routes within the app.