# Social/External Logins The [Account Module](../Modules/Account.md) has already configured to handle social or external logins out of the box. You can follow the ASP.NET Core documentation to add a social/external login provider to your application. ## Example: Facebook Authentication Follow the [ASP.NET Core Facebook integration document](https://docs.microsoft.com/en-us/aspnet/core/security/authentication/social/facebook-logins) to support the Facebook login for your application. #### Add the NuGet Package Add the [Microsoft.AspNetCore.Authentication.Facebook](https://www.nuget.org/packages/Microsoft.AspNetCore.Authentication.Facebook) package to your project. Based on your architecture, this can be `.Web`, `.IdentityServer` (for tiered setup) or `.Host` project. #### Configure the Provider Use the `.AddFacebook(...)` extension method in the `ConfigureServices` method of your [module](../Module-Development-Basics.md), to configure the client: ````csharp context.Services.AddAuthentication() .AddFacebook(facebook => { facebook.AppId = "..."; facebook.AppSecret = "..."; facebook.Scope.Add("email"); facebook.Scope.Add("public_profile"); }); ```` > It would be a better practice to use the `appsettings.json` or the ASP.NET Core User Secrets system to store your credentials, instead of a hard-coded value like that. Follow the [Microsoft's document](https://docs.microsoft.com/en-us/aspnet/core/security/authentication/social/facebook-logins) to learn the user secrets usage. ## Angular UI Beginning from the v3.1, the Angular UI uses authorization code flow (as a best practice) to authenticate the user by redirecting to the MVC UI login page. So, even if you are using the Angular UI, social/external login integration is same as explained above and it will work out of the box.