Before you start

You need:
  • An Auth0 development tenant with Universal Login configured.
  • A custom-domain-configured application.
  • A development app or a sample app (like the React sample app) running on your localhost
  • A database connection that uses passwords.
By the end of this guide, you’ll have an identity-first flow with a customized Login screen. To learn more, read the Getting Started guide and visit the SDK reference guide.

Setup

In your , set up Universal Login, Identifier First Authentication, and a Database Connection that uses passwords. Run a single-page application to build custom login screens. To understand the context for Advanced Customizations interfaces, clone our boilerplate app: git clone https://github.com/auth0-samples/auth0-acul-samples Install the ACUL SDK. After cloning the react boilerplate, change the directory to the auth0-acul-samples folder and install the SDK.
# Clone the ACUL sample application into the root folder of your project

git clone https://github.com/auth0-samples/auth0-acul-samples.git

# Change directory to install the ACUL sample application 

cd auth0-acul-samples && npm i
This example uses Shadcn components. Run the shadcn init command to set up your project. After answering a few questions to configure components.json, begin adding components to your project. Your completed Build Login with Password flow will use button, label, input, text, link, CardHeader, CardTitle, CardDescription, and CardContent components.
npx shadcn@latest init

npx shadcn@latest add button input label text link card

Step 1. Build the login screen

Login screen on Universal Login
Below is a full sample of the Screen.

Import and initialize the SDK

In the auth0-acul-samples/src folder, create a folder called screens and a file called Login.tsx. Import the SDK and in the React component initialize the SDK for the screen.
import { Login as ScreenProvider } from "@auth0/auth0-acul-js";

export default function Login() {
  // Initialize the SDK for this screen
  const screenProvider = new ScreenProvider();
  ...
 }

Use the SDK to access properties and methods on the screen

Using the SDK you can access the properties and methods of the screen. The Auth0 ACUL JS SDK provides properties and methods to access the data.
<form noValidate onSubmit={formSubmitHandler}>
      ...
      <CardContent>
        <div className="mb-2 space-y-2">
          <Label htmlFor="identifier">
            {screenProvider.screen.texts?.emailPlaceholder ??
              "Enter your email"}
          </Label>
          <Input
            type="text"
            id="identifier"
            name="identifier"
            defaultValue={
              screenProvider.screen.data?.username ??
              screenProvider.untrustedData.submittedFormData?.username
            }
          />
        </div>
        <div className="mb-2 space-y-2">
          <Label htmlFor="identifier">
            {screenProvider.screen.texts?.passwordPlaceholder ?? "Password"}
          </Label>
          <Input type="password" id="password" name="password" />
        </div>
        <Button type="submit" className="w-full">
          {screenProvider.screen.texts?.buttonText ?? "Continue"}
        </Button>
      ...
      </CardContent>
    </form>
  );
}

Call the submit action

Using the SDK, submit the data captured in the screen to the server. The server process this data and will route the user to the next step in the flow. If there are errors, this screen is reloaded, allowing you to display them to the user. Errors are accessed from the SDK.
const formSubmitHandler = (event: ChangeEvent<HTMLFormElement>) => {
    event.preventDefault();

    // grab the value from the form
    const identifierInput = event.target.querySelector(
      "input#identifier"
    ) as HTMLInputElement;

    // Call the SDK
    screenProvider.login({ username: identifierInput?.value });
  };

Step 2: Configure ACUL to use local assets

Use Auth0 CLI, Terraform, or the to enable ACUL. For details about what can be configured, read Configure ACUL Screens.

Test your configuration on a local server

ACUL requires assets to be hosted on a public URL. Run a local server and test your assets before deploying them.
// Creates the local assets 

npm run build 
cd dist 

// Serves the assets from localhost

npx serve -p 8080 --cors

Step 3: Deploy the assets and update your tenant configuration

Advanced Customization for works with all modern Javascript bundlers. like Vite and Webpack. For more information, read Deploy and Host Advanced Customizations. For more information about deploying ACUL to your tenant, read Configure ACUL Screens.
Read…To learn…                                
Advanced Customizations for Universal LoginHow Advanced Customizations work.
Getting Started with Advanced CustomizationsGetting Started basics for Advanced Customizations
Advanced Customizations for Universal Login: ScreensA list of all screens available for Advanced Customizations.