Authl 0.5.2 was just released, bringing support for PKCE. And that surfaced another bug in Authorio.
Thanks to @fluffy, Authorio’s profile exchange is not completely useless.
For Authorio 0.8.3, I made a change to the way it handles user profile URLs, and that forced me to think a little more on exactly what a profile URL is.
Authorio 0.8.4 has been released.
There’s no new features in this release, but some under-the-hood changes have been made to the way user profile URLs are handled.
Once you’ve recorded more than a screen’s worth of clips, it makes sense to start grouping them. One of the main ways Reiterate allows you to group clips is through sessions.
Authorio 0.8.3 has been released.
This release adds user profiles. In the latest spec clients can request and receive user profile data. Authorio lets you specify that data and optionally send it upon request.
Authorio 0.8.2 has been released.
The main new feature in this release is Local Sessions. You can enable this in the config file, and if it’s enabled you get a “Remember Me” box you can check on the authentication form. This works like any other website you can log into. Checking the box means you don’t have to type in your password for 30 days (or however long you set the session lifetime in the config).
Getting Bridgy and Jekyll to work together took a little more effort than I expected.
Now that I have my IndieAuth solution working, and I can log in to various IndieWeb sites with this blog, the next step is to set up WebMention.io and Bridgy.
I’ve released Authorio 0.8.0 on RubyGems. This is the initial release for the package.
Authorio is the first open source project I’ve contributed to. It’s a part of the IndieWeb community which bills itself as a “people-focused alternative” to the corporate web.