Single-Sign-On into WordPress using Admidio as an OpenID Provider

Starting with version 5.0, Admidio can be used by other applications to authenticate users against Admidios user base. These instructions will guide you through the process of connecting WordPress to Admidio to use Admidio's login. For general instructions, and other apps, please visit the general Single-Sign-On overview page.

Throughout the document we will assume you have both Admidio and WordPress already set up properly at https://admidio.local/ and https://wordpress.local/. Please modify these URLs to your actual installation.

As a first step, one needs to configure Admidio to act as an OpenID Provider (OP). This has to be done once and is not specific to WordPress. Please follow this guide: #a_basic_setup_for_admidio_as_an_oidc_id_provider

Basically, one (1) needs to create a cryptographic key to sign message and choose a unique EntityID. The page https://admidio.local/adm_program/modules/preferences.php?panel=sso also provides the link to the metadata xml, and the individual settings in case a client does not support auto-configuration via metadata.

Setting up a client (OpenID “Relying Party” - short RP) to use Admidio's user accounts for logging in consists of two steps: (1) The client (RP, WordPress in our case) needs to be set up with the data about the OpenID Provider (OP). As WordPress does not support auto-configuration useing the OpenID discovery endpoint, one has to manually paste the endpoint URLs of the OpenID provider. Admidio provides copy buttons in the preferences screen, so this is rather straightforward. (2) Admidio needs to be told about the client. In particular, the entity ID and the redirect URL must be given, and a custom-generated (random) secret must be copied to the client configuration.

The concrete steps are:

  • At the Relying Party (RP) - WordPress in our case - install the extension to support OpenID login.
    • Configure it either with Admidio's endpoint URLs for authentication, token and userinfo, and enter the EntityID.
    • Also, choose which scopes (groups of profile fields) should be requested from Admidio (“openid” is required; Since the OpenID Wordpress plugin does not support groups mapping, the “groups” scope is not relevant and has no use.
  • In Admidio, create a new OpenID client.
    • Choose an easily understood label for the client (only used in Admidio's list of clients, but has no technical use)
    • Enter the ClientID from the RP, Copy the created Client Secret (you will later need to paste it into the WordPress configuration), and enter the Redirect URI for the RP. The latter can be found on the RP's configuration page.
    • In Admidio, map the user ID, username, email and fullname to fields that are included in the OpenID login response (so-called “claims”) and enter the corresponding claim names in Wordpress. If the field names are not alligned, login will not be possible, but the error message will be quite generic without helpful hints.

There are several OpenID plugins for WordPress, but none of the free versions supports permission mapping based on groups. The best free plugin we found is the OpenID Connect for WP plugin, which is a hard fork of Jonathan Daggerhart's OpenID Connect Generic plugin (which he is no longer able to maintain due to WordPress's stance on WP Engine and the fallout of the actions of Matt Mullenweg). The “OpenID Connect for WP” plugin is not available in the Wordpress plugin directory, only the previous “OpenID Connect Generic” by Daggerhart. We still recommend to use the newer “OpenID Connect for WP” and install it manually (either using git or by downloading the plugin code to the WP installation). See the plugin's source code repository on GitHub: https://github.com/forumone/openid-connect-wp-dist

If you have shell access to the WP installation, the easiest way is to use the git shell command:

# Switch to the base directory of your WordPress installation. Then:
cd wp-content/plugins/
git clone https://github.com/forumone/openid-connect-wp-dist.git

After installation it can be configured in the menu item “Settings” → “OpenID Connect Client”.

First, one has to copy over the OpenID endpoint URLs from Admidio's OpenID preferences (each URL has a copy button). You can find them here:

The remaining settings in Wordpress are client-specific, so one first needs to setup the OpenID client in Admidio and configure WordPress and Admidio in parallel.

It is now a good idea to keep two browser windows open so one can easily select and copy the settings. Admidio even provides little “copy” buttons/icons to copy the various settings to the clipboard for easy pasting into the WordPress configuration.

Return to Admidio's SSO preferences page, go to the “Single-Sign-On Client Administration” (the button right below the endpoint URLs and above the “Save” button), and create a new client.

  1. The Client Name is the label of the client in Admidio's client list, it can be anything you like.
  2. The “Client ID” and “Client Secret” in Admidio and WordPress have to match exactly. The ID is typically the client's URL, although some clients allow any unique identifier. The Client Secret should a random string and will serve like a password. Admidio will create one and allow it to be copied to the client. Afterwards it is only stored as a hash in the database and not be recovered any more. However, one can create a new Client Secret in Admidio and copy that to the client's configuration.
  3. Enter the scopes you desire in the WordPress config and make sure that Admidio's config matches it. At least openid must be included (Admidio will implicitly add it). Sonce the WordPress plugin does not support OpenID groups, the presence of the “groups” scope has no effect.
  4. In Admidio, choose which field should be sent to and used by the Wordpress Plugin to uniquely identify users. This would typically be the login name, although the user ID or UUID area also possible.

In addition, WordPress also provides settings to map OpenID claims (defined profile fields with a fixed name, defined in the OpenID standard) to the WordPress user's ID, nickname, email and fullname, as well as flags to enable automatic user creation when a new user logs in to WordPress.

  1. WordPress will display its Redirect URL at the very bottom of the form, which needs to be copied to Admidio's OpenID client configuration.

After saving the changes (both in WordPress and Admidio), the apps should should now be set up for single-sign-on in WordPress.

Admidio and WordPress should now be set up to use Admidio for logging in to WordPress. If you log out of WordPress and try to log in again, you will be shown the Admidio login screen and then redirected back to WordPress.

  • The OpenID Connect for WP plugin does not support groups and assigning WordPress permissions based on OpenID claims. If this is required, consider Single-Sign-On via the SAML protocol. WordPress has a SAML plugin that supports permission mapping and works with Admidio.
  • The claim names for the user ID, nickname, email and full name must be entered exactly as given in Admidio, otherwise login will fail with some cryptic error messages.
Error Message Reason and solution
ERROR (incomplete-user-claim): User claim incomplete. The user ID is misspellt or wrong (or not included in the OpenID response). Try to use “sub” as the user ID in WordPress, and make sure that the openid scope is included.
ERROR (no-nickname): No nickname found in user claim using key: claimname The claim used for the nickname is wrong or missing. Check whether the given claim name matches exactly an OpenID claim name configured in Admidio and whether the “profile” scope is included (both in WordPress and Admidio).
ERROR(incomplete-user-claim): User claim incomplete. The claim names given for email and fullname in Wordpress are either wrong or missing from the OpenID response. Check whether the given claim names given for the email and fullname match exactly an OpenID claim names configured in Admidio and whether the “profile” and “email” scopes are included (both in WordPress and Admidio).
  • en/2.0/single_sign_on/oidc_wordpress.txt
  • Last modified: 2025/05/13 19:26
  • by kainhofer