# SimpleSAMLphp Service Provider QuickStart

[TOC]

This guide will describe how to configure SimpleSAMLphp as a service
provider (SP). You should previously have installed SimpleSAMLphp as
described in the [SimpleSAMLphp installation instructions](installation).

[installation]: simplesamlphp-install

Configuring the SP
------------------

The SP is configured by an entry in `config/authsources.php`.

This is a minimal `authsources.php` for a SP:

```php
<?php
$config = [

    /* This is the name of this authentication source, and will be used to access it later. */
    'default-sp' => [
        'saml:SP',
        'entityID' => 'https://sp1.example.org/',
    ],
];
```

For more information about additional options available for the SP,
see the [`saml:SP` reference](./saml:sp).

If you want multiple Service Providers in the same site and installation,
you can add more entries in the `authsources.php` configuration. If so
remember to set the EntityID explicitly. Here is an example:

```php
    'sp1' => [
        'saml:SP',
        'entityID' => 'https://sp1.example.org/',
    ],
    'sp2' => [
        'saml:SP',
        'entityID' => 'https://sp2.example.org/',
    ],
```

### Enabling a certificate for your Service Provider

Some Identity Providers / Federations may require that your Service Providers
holds a certificate. If you enable a certificate for your Service Provider,
it may be able to sign requests and response sent to the Identity Provider,
as well as receiving encrypted responses.

Create a self-signed certificate in the `cert/` directory.

```bash
cd cert
openssl req -newkey rsa:3072 -new -x509 -days 3652 -nodes -out saml.crt -keyout saml.pem
```

Then edit your `authsources.php` entry, and add references to your certificate:

```php
    'default-sp' => [
        'saml:SP',
        'privatekey' => 'saml.pem',
        'certificate' => 'saml.crt',
    ],
```

Adding IdPs to the SP
---------------------

The service provider you are configuring needs to know about the identity
providers you are going to connect to it. This is configured by metadata
stored in `metadata/saml20-idp-remote.php`.

This is a minimal example of a `metadata/saml20-idp-remote.php`
metadata file:

```php
<?php
$metadata['https://example.com'] = [
    'SingleSignOnService'  => 'https://example.com/simplesaml/saml2/idp/SSOService.php',
    'SingleLogoutService'  => 'https://example.com/simplesaml/saml2/idp/SingleLogoutService.php',
    'certificate'          => 'example.pem',
];
```

`example.pem` under your `cert/` directory contains the certificate the
identity provider uses for signing assertions.

For more information about available options in the idp-remote metadata
files, see the [IdP remote reference](simplesamlphp-reference-idp-remote).

If you have the metadata of the remote IdP as an XML file, you can use the
built-in XML to SimpleSAMLphp metadata converter, which by default is
available at `/module.php/admin/federation/metadata-converter` in
your SimpleSAMLphp installation.

Note that the idp-remote file lists all IdPs you trust.
You should remove all IdPs that you don't use.


Setting the default IdP
-----------------------

An option in the authentication source allows you to configure which IdP should
be used. This is the `idp` option.

```php
<?php
$config = [

    'default-sp' => [
        'saml:SP',

        /*
         * The entity ID of the IdP this should SP should contact.
         * Can be NULL/unset, in which case the user will be shown a list of available IdPs.
         */
        'idp' => 'https://idp.example.com',
    ],
];
```

Exchange metadata with the IdP
------------------------------

In order to complete the connection between your SP and an IdP, you must
exchange the metadata of your SP with the IdP. The metadata of your SP can be
found in the *Federation* tab of the web interface. Copy the SAML 2.0 XML
Metadata document automatically generated by SimpleSAMLphp and send it to the
administrator of the IdP. You can also send them the dedicated URL of your
metadata, so that they can fetch it periodically and obtain automatically any
changes that you may perform to your SP.

You will also need to add the metadata of the IdP. Ask them to provide you with
their metadata, and parse it using the *XML to SimpleSAMLphp metadata converter*
tool available also in the *Federation* tab of the web interface. Copy the
resulting parsed metadata and paste it with a text editor into the
`metadata/saml20-idp-remote.php` file in your SimpleSAMLphp directory.

If you intend to add your SP to a federation, the procedure for managing trust
in federations will differ, but the common part is that you would need to
provide the *SAML 2.0 metadata of your SP*, and register that with the
federation administration. You will probably be required too to consume
the federation metadata periodically. Read more about
[automated metadata management](./metarefresh:simplesamlphp-automated_metadata)
to learn more about that. 


Test the SP
-----------

After the metadata is configured on the IdP, you should be able to test the
configuration. The admin module of SimpleSAMLphp has a tab to test
authentication sources. There you should a list of authentication sources,
including the one you have created for the SP.

After you click the link for that authentication source, you will be
redirected to the IdP. After entering your credentials, you should be
redirected back to the test page.
The test page should contain a list of your attributes:

![Screenshot of the status page after a user has succesfully authenticated](resources/simplesamlphp-sp/screenshot-example.png)

For a better looking, more advanced Discovery Service with tabs and live
search, you may want to use the `discopower` module.

Integrating authentication with your own application
----------------------------------------------------

The API is documented in [the SP API reference](simplesamlphp-sp-api).

For those web resources you want to protect, you must add a few
lines of PHP code:

- Register the SimpleSAMLphp classes with the PHP autoloader.
- Require authentication of the user for those places it is required.
- Access the users attributes.

Example code:

We start off with loading a file which registers the SimpleSAMLphp classes
with the autoloader.

```php
require_once('../../src/_autoload.php');
```

We select our authentication source:

```php
$as = new \SimpleSAML\Auth\Simple('default-sp');
```

We then require authentication:

```php
$as->requireAuth();
```

And print the attributes:

```php
$attributes = $as->getAttributes();
print_r($attributes);
```

Each attribute name can be used as an index into $attributes to obtain the
value. Every attribute value is an array - a single-valued attribute is an
array of a single element.

We can also request authentication with a specific IdP:

```php
$as->login([
    'saml:idp' => 'https://idp.example.org/',
]);
```

Other options are also available.
Take a look in the documentation for the [SP module](./saml:sp) for a list
of all parameters.

If we are using PHP sessions in SimpleSAMLphp and in the application we are
protecting, SimpleSAMLphp will close any existing session when invoked for the
first time, and its own session will prevail afterwards. If you want to restore
your own session after calling SimpleSAMLphp, you can do so by cleaning up the
session like this:

```php
$session = \SimpleSAML\Session::getSessionFromRequest();
$session->cleanup();
```

If you don't cleanup SimpleSAMLphp's session and try to use $_SESSION
afterwards, you won't be using your own session and all your data is
likely to get lost or inaccessible.

Note that if your application uses a [custom session handler](https://www.php.net/manual/en/function.session-set-save-handler.php),
SimpleSAMLphp will use it as well. This can lead to problems because
SimpleSAMLphp's stand-alone web UI uses the default PHP session handlers.
Therefore, you may need to unset the custom handler before making any calls to SimpleSAMLphp:

```php
// use custom save handler
session_set_save_handler($handler);
session_start();

// close session and restore default handler
session_write_close();
session_set_save_handler(new SessionHandler(), true);

// use SimpleSAML\Session
$session = \SimpleSAML\Session::getSessionFromRequest();
$session->cleanup();
session_write_close();

// back to custom save handler
session_set_save_handler($handler);
session_start();
```


Support
-------

If you need help to make this work, or want to discuss SimpleSAMLphp with other
users of the software, you are fortunate: Around SimpleSAMLphp there is a great
Open source community, and you are welcome to join! The forums are open for you
to ask questions, contribute answers other further questions, request
improvements or contribute with code or plugins of your own.

-  [SimpleSAMLphp homepage](https://simplesamlphp.org)
-  [List of all available SimpleSAMLphp documentation](https://simplesamlphp.org/docs/)
-  [Join the SimpleSAMLphp user's mailing list](https://simplesamlphp.org/lists)