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Alternative frontend origins

Intermediate
Tutorial

Overview

If your application has reached the stage where you want to change domain names, and you have been authenticating with Internet Identity (II), you will want to make sure that your users can seamlessly keep the same principals they have already been using. To support this functionality, you can configure your application for alternative frontend origins using this guide.

End Result

You may need this guide if you are doing any of the following:

  • Moving from <canister-id>.icp0.io to a custom domain.
  • Asking users to login at /login instead of /.
  • Supporting users using raw.icp0.io.
  • Configuring multiple apps in your organization to use the same principals.

Constraints

Currently, a maximum of 10 alternative origins can be listed.

II will only follow this specification when the origin configuring these alternatives is hosted on a canister using certified assets.

For more information, see the Internet Identity specification.

Configuring alternative origins

For this example, you will have two domains, A and B. A will be the canonical origin, and B will be the alternative domain. To help illustrate this model, consider this website, which is hosted both at https://internetcomputer.org and https://hwvjt-wqaaa-aaaam-qadra-cai.icp0.io.

In this example, A would be the canister ID, or https://hwvjt-wqaaa-aaaam-qadra-cai.icp0.io.

B would be the alternative origin, or https://internetcomputer.org.

Listing origins

For origin A, you will need to provide a file that tells Internet Identity that B is a valid origin. You'll be placing the config files in src/assets directory of your frontend canister. If your frontend canister is currently configured to deploy assets from a dist folder, make sure to update the sources for your canister to include both:

"source": [
"dist",
"src/assets"
]

Inside of src/assets, create a .well-known folder, and add a file named ii-alternative-origins.

The file needs to exactly be named ii-alternative-origins, with no file extension. The content inside will be formatted as JSON, but the file should not end with .json.

Inside of the file, list your alternative origin for B. It will look something like this:

{
"alternativeOrigins": ["https://internetcomputer.org"]
}

Make sure that you remove any trailing slash or query parameters from the origin

Now, your project should look something like this:

├── dfx.json
├── src
│ ├── assets
│ │ ├── .well-known
│ │ │ └── ii-alternative-origins

Configuring your frontend canister

Because the dot syntax in .well-known ordinarily will be treated as "hidden" by the file system, the frontend canister will need to be configured to upload your document. To configure the frontend canister, create a new file, .ic-assets.json. .ic-assets.json needs to be placed inside a directory listed in sources for your canister, so you can use src/assets again. Your new list of files should look like this:

├── dfx.json
├── package.json
├── src
│ ├── project_frontend
│ │ ├── src
│ │ │ ├── .ic-assets.json
│ │ │ ├── .well-known
│ │ │ │ └── ii-alternative-origins

Then, configure the .well-known directory to be included, with:

[
{
"match": ".well-known",
"ignore": false
},
{
"match": ".well-known/ii-alternative-origins",
"headers": {
"Access-Control-Allow-Origin": "*",
"Content-Type": "application/json"
},
"ignore": false
}
]

This includes a general rule to not ignore the .well-known directory, and rules to deliver the ii-alternative-origins with access control and content-type headers.

Then, all you need to do is deploy your canister. When you attempt to authenticate from origin B from then on, you will get back the same principal you get while using A.