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/*
 * Copyright 2014 Red Hat, Inc.
 *
 * Red Hat licenses this file to you under the Apache License, version 2.0
 * (the "License"); you may not use this file except in compliance with the
 * License.  You may obtain a copy of the License at:
 *
 * http://www.apache.org/licenses/LICENSE-2.0
 *
 * Unless required by applicable law or agreed to in writing, software
 * distributed under the License is distributed on an "AS IS" BASIS, WITHOUT
 * WARRANTIES OR CONDITIONS OF ANY KIND, either express or implied.  See the
 * License for the specific language governing permissions and limitations
 * under the License.
 */

package io.vertx.rxjava.ext.auth;

import rx.Observable;
import rx.Single;
import io.vertx.rx.java.RxHelper;
import io.vertx.rx.java.WriteStreamSubscriber;
import io.vertx.rx.java.SingleOnSubscribeAdapter;
import java.util.Map;
import java.util.Set;
import java.util.List;
import java.util.Iterator;
import java.util.function.Function;
import java.util.stream.Collectors;
import io.vertx.core.Handler;
import io.vertx.core.AsyncResult;
import io.vertx.core.json.JsonObject;
import io.vertx.core.json.JsonArray;
import io.vertx.lang.rx.RxGen;
import io.vertx.lang.rx.TypeArg;
import io.vertx.lang.rx.MappingIterator;

/**
 *
 * User-facing interface for authenticating users.
 *
 * 

* NOTE: This class has been automatically generated from the {@link io.vertx.ext.auth.AuthProvider original} non RX-ified interface using Vert.x codegen. */ @RxGen(io.vertx.ext.auth.AuthProvider.class) public class AuthProvider { @Override public String toString() { return delegate.toString(); } @Override public boolean equals(Object o) { if (this == o) return true; if (o == null || getClass() != o.getClass()) return false; AuthProvider that = (AuthProvider) o; return delegate.equals(that.delegate); } @Override public int hashCode() { return delegate.hashCode(); } public static final TypeArg __TYPE_ARG = new TypeArg<>( obj -> new AuthProvider((io.vertx.ext.auth.AuthProvider) obj), AuthProvider::getDelegate ); private final io.vertx.ext.auth.AuthProvider delegate; public AuthProvider(io.vertx.ext.auth.AuthProvider delegate) { this.delegate = delegate; } public AuthProvider(Object delegate) { this.delegate = (io.vertx.ext.auth.AuthProvider)delegate; } public io.vertx.ext.auth.AuthProvider getDelegate() { return delegate; } /** * Authenticate a user. *

* 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 {@link io.vertx.rxjava.ext.auth.User} object is passed to the handler in an {@link io.vertx.core.AsyncResult}. * The user object can then be used for authorisation. * @param authInfo The auth information * @param resultHandler The result handler */ public void authenticate(JsonObject authInfo, Handler> resultHandler) { delegate.authenticate(authInfo, new Handler>() { public void handle(AsyncResult ar) { if (ar.succeeded()) { resultHandler.handle(io.vertx.core.Future.succeededFuture(io.vertx.rxjava.ext.auth.User.newInstance((io.vertx.ext.auth.User)ar.result()))); } else { resultHandler.handle(io.vertx.core.Future.failedFuture(ar.cause())); } } }); } /** * Authenticate a user. *

* 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 {@link io.vertx.rxjava.ext.auth.User} object is passed to the handler in an {@link io.vertx.core.AsyncResult}. * The user object can then be used for authorisation. * @param authInfo The auth information * @return * @deprecated use {@link #rxAuthenticate} instead */ @Deprecated() public Observable authenticateObservable(JsonObject authInfo) { io.vertx.rx.java.ObservableFuture resultHandler = io.vertx.rx.java.RxHelper.observableFuture(); authenticate(authInfo, resultHandler.toHandler()); return resultHandler; } /** * Authenticate a user. *

* 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 {@link io.vertx.rxjava.ext.auth.User} object is passed to the handler in an {@link io.vertx.core.AsyncResult}. * The user object can then be used for authorisation. * @param authInfo The auth information * @return */ public Single rxAuthenticate(JsonObject authInfo) { return Single.create(new io.vertx.rx.java.SingleOnSubscribeAdapter<>(fut -> { authenticate(authInfo, fut); })); } public static AuthProvider newInstance(io.vertx.ext.auth.AuthProvider arg) { return arg != null ? new AuthProvider(arg) : null; } }





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