public class AuthProvider extends Object
original non RX-ified interface using Vert.x codegen.| Modifier and Type | Field and Description | 
|---|---|
| static io.vertx.lang.rx.TypeArg<AuthProvider> | __TYPE_ARG | 
| Constructor and Description | 
|---|
| AuthProvider(AuthProvider delegate) | 
| AuthProvider(Object delegate) | 
| Modifier and Type | Method and Description | 
|---|---|
| void | authenticate(JsonObject authInfo,
            Handler<AsyncResult<User>> resultHandler)Authenticate a user. | 
| Observable<User> | authenticateObservable(JsonObject authInfo)Deprecated. 
 use  rxAuthenticate(io.vertx.core.json.JsonObject)instead | 
| boolean | equals(Object o) | 
| AuthProvider | getDelegate() | 
| int | hashCode() | 
| static AuthProvider | newInstance(AuthProvider arg) | 
| Single<User> | rxAuthenticate(JsonObject authInfo)Authenticate a user. | 
| String | toString() | 
public static final io.vertx.lang.rx.TypeArg<AuthProvider> __TYPE_ARG
public AuthProvider(AuthProvider delegate)
public AuthProvider(Object delegate)
public AuthProvider getDelegate()
public void authenticate(JsonObject authInfo, Handler<AsyncResult<User>> resultHandler)
The first argument is a JSON object containing information for authenticating the user. What this actually contains depends on the specific implementation. In the case of a simple username/password based authentication it is likely to contain a JSON object with the following structure:
   {
     "username": "tim",
     "password": "mypassword"
   }
 
 For other types of authentication it contain different information - for example a JWT token or OAuth bearer token.
 
 If the user is successfully authenticated a User object is passed to the handler in an AsyncResult.
 The user object can then be used for authorisation.
authInfo - The auth informationresultHandler - The result handler@Deprecated public Observable<User> authenticateObservable(JsonObject authInfo)
rxAuthenticate(io.vertx.core.json.JsonObject) insteadThe first argument is a JSON object containing information for authenticating the user. What this actually contains depends on the specific implementation. In the case of a simple username/password based authentication it is likely to contain a JSON object with the following structure:
   {
     "username": "tim",
     "password": "mypassword"
   }
 
 For other types of authentication it contain different information - for example a JWT token or OAuth bearer token.
 
 If the user is successfully authenticated a User object is passed to the handler in an AsyncResult.
 The user object can then be used for authorisation.
authInfo - The auth informationpublic Single<User> rxAuthenticate(JsonObject authInfo)
The first argument is a JSON object containing information for authenticating the user. What this actually contains depends on the specific implementation. In the case of a simple username/password based authentication it is likely to contain a JSON object with the following structure:
   {
     "username": "tim",
     "password": "mypassword"
   }
 
 For other types of authentication it contain different information - for example a JWT token or OAuth bearer token.
 
 If the user is successfully authenticated a User object is passed to the handler in an AsyncResult.
 The user object can then be used for authorisation.
authInfo - The auth informationpublic static AuthProvider newInstance(AuthProvider arg)
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