On a server side I have 2 middlewares - protect (is logged in?) and restrictTo (checks user's role). These middlewares stop users or guests from performing certain actions if they are not allowed to
exports.protect = catchAsync(async (req, res, next) => {
let token;
if (
req.headers.authorization && req.headers.authorization.startsWith("Bearer")
) {
token = req.headers.authorization.split(" ")[1];
}
if (!token) {
return next(new AppError("You are not signed in!", 401));
}
const decodedToken = await promisify(jwt.verify)(
token,
process.env.JWT_SECRET
);
const currentUser = await User.findById(decodedToken.id);
if (!currentUser) {
return next(new AppError("User with such token no longer exists"));
}
req.user = currentUser;
next();
});
exports.restrictTo = (...roles) => {
return (req, res, next) => {
if (!roles.includes(req.user.role)) {
return next(new AppError("No access", 403));
}
next();
};
};
But how do I protect routes on a client side? If I'm not allowed to post a new note then I should be stopped from going to a /newnote page so I can't see and fill the form.
JWT token is stored in cookies with httpOnly flag. So I can't access the token from a Vue router. Store a user's role in Vuex? Then how do I synchronize the token state in cookies and in Vuex? If my token has been destroyed on a server side I still can have it in Vuex until I send a request to a protected endpoint.
Should I request a special auth endpoint for protected routes to check my current role using beforeEach?
Basically, you should add two things:
store the current authenticated user. By default, authUser is null. When someone logs in, authUser is an object with the user’s data. you can store this in Vuex, localStorage, etc.
create an interceptor/middleware in whatever library you are using for your api requests. If at some point you get a 401/403, it means that the current user’s session expired, or he is trying to access a protected area he shouldnt be looking at. Either way, reset the local authUser to null and redirect to login.
In Spa/mobile you dont have to worry too much about this as long as your backend is properly secured. If your authUser logic is correct, then only users with bad intentions will try to reach protected areas, whereas normal users will play by the rules and never hit a page they arent supposed to with their current privileges (assuming the UI is wired up correctly…).
So I was trying out the authentication techniques with passport and passport-jwt with the express server. Here is the code I've been working with
const JwtStrategy = require("passport-jwt").Strategy;
const ExtractJwt = require("passport-jwt").ExtractJwt;
const User = require("../models/user");
const opts = {};
opts.jwtFromRequest = ExtractJwt.fromAuthHeaderAsBearerToken();
opts.secretOrKey = "secret";
module.exports = passport => {
passport.use(
new JwtStrategy(opts, (jwt_payload, done) => {
User.findById(jwt_payload.id,(err,user)=>{
if(err){
return done(err,false);
}
if(user){
done(null,user);
}
else{
done(null,false);
}
})
})
)
};
So the all point of using this passport authorization is to minimize the number of times the database is accessed, right?
But in this code after extracting the token, the database is accessed through the findById method to find whether the user is in the database, so what's the point in all of this if the database is accessed during each authentication request?
I'm pretty sure I'm saying something wrong, some help in clarifying this matter is deeply appreciated.
The question is, why would you need to do User.findById on the middleware?
You don't have to access the database on the middleware to find whether user exists or not from the JWT payload. When the user is getting the jwt through the /login endpoint, you should've already checked whether the user exists or not
// just a logic example on the login enpoint
const user = User.findUserByEmail(req.body.email);
if (!user) res.sendStatus(401); //returns 401 if user not found
else {
if (verifyPassword(req.body.password, password)) {
res.send(generatedJwtWithUserIdOnThePayload)
} else {
res.sendStatus(401); //returns 401 if password invalid
}
}
The jwt that's passed when logging in to the client already had valid user id in it, therefore you dont need to get User document from User.findById everytime client sending a request to your other endpoint.
Since user id is already inside the payload, unless you need other data beside user id from User document, you don't really need to do User.findById on the middleware
I am creating a keystone project and I need to provide allow or not allow users to access using the keystone signin. However, I found that keystoneJS sends a form data with email, password and csrf. This csrf is given to the user when he access to the login page.
Nevertheless, what I need to do is to comunicate externally to login the user, by using an API. How can I generate the _csrf? Is there another way then generate two requests?
Thanks
#Sericaia, you didn't include any code or specifics on how you intend to implement your login page, so my answer will be a little vague.
Keystone has an internal API for handling CSRF token creation and validation. I don't think it's documented, but here's a gist of how it works.
In your route handler you can create a CSRF token key/value pair that you can then inject into your view locals and then use in your view template. You can do it manually like this.
app.get('/login', function (req, res) {
var keystone = require('keystone');
var csrfTokenKey = keystone.security.csrf.TOKEN_KEY;
var csrfTokenValue = keystone.security.csrf.getToken(req, res);
res.render('login', {
csrfTokenKey: csrfTokenKey,
csrfTokenValue: csrfTokenValue
});
});
Or you can use provided middleware.
// the middleware will automatically inject the CSRF token
// into res.locals[keystone.security.csrf.LOCAL_KEY]
app.get('/login', keystone.security.csrf.middleware.init, function(req, res) {
...
});
You can also validate the CSRF token received from the client. You can do it manually as follows:
app.post('/login', function(req, res) {
if (keystone.security.csrf.validate(req)) {
// CSRF is valid
...
} else {
// CSRF is not valid
...
}
});
Or you can use the provided middleware.
// the middleware will return 403 status with "CSRF token mismatch"
// of there's a error validating the CSRF token received
app.post('/login', keystone.security.csrf.middleware.validate, function(req, res) {
...
});
Hope this helps.
Are there any existing user authentication libraries for node.js? In particular I'm looking for something that can do password authentication for a user (using a custom backend auth DB), and associate that user with a session.
Before I wrote an auth library, I figured I would see if folks knew of existing libraries. Couldn't find anything obvious via a google search.
-Shreyas
If you are looking for an authentication framework for Connect or Express, Passport is worth investigating: https://github.com/jaredhanson/passport
(Disclosure: I'm the developer of Passport)
I developed Passport after investigating both connect-auth and everyauth. While they are both great modules, they didn't suit my needs. I wanted something that was more light-weight and unobtrusive.
Passport is broken down into separate modules, so you can choose to use only what you need (OAuth, only if necessary). Passport also does not mount any routes in your application, giving you the flexibility to decide when and where you want authentication, and hooks to control what happens when authentication succeeds or fails.
For example, here is the two-step process to setup form-based (username and password) authentication:
passport.use(new LocalStrategy(
function(username, password, done) {
// Find the user from your DB (MongoDB, CouchDB, other...)
User.findOne({ username: username, password: password }, function (err, user) {
done(err, user);
});
}
));
app.post('/login',
passport.authenticate('local', { failureRedirect: '/login' }),
function(req, res) {
// Authentication successful. Redirect home.
res.redirect('/');
});
Additional strategies are available for authentication via Facebook, Twitter, etc. Custom strategies can be plugged-in, if necessary.
Session + If
I guess the reason that you haven't found many good libraries is that using a library for authentication is mostly over engineered.
What you are looking for is just a session-binder :) A session with:
if login and user == xxx and pwd == xxx
then store an authenticated=true into the session
if logout destroy session
thats it.
I disagree with your conclusion that the connect-auth plugin is the way to go.
I'm using also connect but I do not use connect-auth for two reasons:
IMHO breaks connect-auth the very powerful and easy to read onion-ring architecture of connect. A no-go - my opinion :).
You can find a very good and short article about how connect works and the onion ring idea here.
If you - as written - just want to use a basic or http login with database or file. Connect-auth is way too big. It's more for stuff like OAuth 1.0, OAuth 2.0 & Co
A very simple authentication with connect
(It's complete. Just execute it for testing but if you want to use it in production, make sure to use https)
(And to be REST-Principle-Compliant you should use a POST-Request instead of a GET-Request b/c you change a state :)
var connect = require('connect');
var urlparser = require('url');
var authCheck = function (req, res, next) {
url = req.urlp = urlparser.parse(req.url, true);
// ####
// Logout
if ( url.pathname == "/logout" ) {
req.session.destroy();
}
// ####
// Is User already validated?
if (req.session && req.session.auth == true) {
next(); // stop here and pass to the next onion ring of connect
return;
}
// ########
// Auth - Replace this example with your Database, Auth-File or other things
// If Database, you need a Async callback...
if ( url.pathname == "/login" &&
url.query.name == "max" &&
url.query.pwd == "herewego" ) {
req.session.auth = true;
next();
return;
}
// ####
// This user is not authorized. Stop talking to him.
res.writeHead(403);
res.end('Sorry you are not authorized.\n\nFor a login use: /login?name=max&pwd=herewego');
return;
}
var helloWorldContent = function (req, res, next) {
res.writeHead(200, { 'Content-Type': 'text/plain' });
res.end('authorized. Walk around :) or use /logout to leave\n\nYou are currently at '+req.urlp.pathname);
}
var server = connect.createServer(
connect.logger({ format: ':method :url' }),
connect.cookieParser(),
connect.session({ secret: 'foobar' }),
connect.bodyParser(),
authCheck,
helloWorldContent
);
server.listen(3000);
NOTE
I wrote this statement over a year ago and have currently no active node projects. So there are may be API-Changes in Express. Please add a comment if I should change anything.
Looks like the connect-auth plugin to the connect middleware is exactly what I need
I'm using express [ http://expressjs.com ] so the connect plugin fits in very nicely since express is subclassed (ok - prototyped) from connect
I was basically looking for the same thing. Specifically, I wanted the following:
To use express.js, which wraps Connect's middleware capability
"Form based" authentication
Granular control over which routes are authenticated
A database back-end for users/passwords
Use sessions
What I ended up doing was creating my own middleware function check_auth that I pass as an argument to each route I want authenticated. check_auth merely checks the session and if the user is not logged in, then redirects them to the login page, like so:
function check_auth(req, res, next) {
// if the user isn't logged in, redirect them to a login page
if(!req.session.login) {
res.redirect("/login");
return; // the buck stops here... we do not call next(), because
// we don't want to proceed; instead we want to show a login page
}
// the user is logged in, so call next()
next();
}
Then for each route, I ensure this function is passed as middleware. For example:
app.get('/tasks', check_auth, function(req, res) {
// snip
});
Finally, we need to actually handle the login process. This is straightforward:
app.get('/login', function(req, res) {
res.render("login", {layout:false});
});
app.post('/login', function(req, res) {
// here, I'm using mongoose.js to search for the user in mongodb
var user_query = UserModel.findOne({email:req.body.email}, function(err, user){
if(err) {
res.render("login", {layout:false, locals:{ error:err } });
return;
}
if(!user || user.password != req.body.password) {
res.render("login",
{layout:false,
locals:{ error:"Invalid login!", email:req.body.email }
}
);
} else {
// successful login; store the session info
req.session.login = req.body.email;
res.redirect("/");
}
});
});
At any rate, this approach was mostly designed to be flexible and simple. I'm sure there are numerous ways to improve it. If you have any, I'd very much like your feedback.
EDIT: This is a simplified example. In a production system, you'd never want to store & compare passwords in plain text. As a commenter points out, there are libs that can help manage password security.
Also have a look at everyauth if you want third party/social network login integration.
Here is some code for basic authentication from one of my projects. I use it against CouchDB with and additional auth data cache, but I stripped that code.
Wrap an authentication method around you request handling, and provide a second callback for unsuccessfull authentication. The success callback will get the username as an additional parameter. Don't forget to correctly handle requests with wrong or missing credentials in the failure callback:
/**
* Authenticate a request against this authentication instance.
*
* #param request
* #param failureCallback
* #param successCallback
* #return
*/
Auth.prototype.authenticate = function(request, failureCallback, successCallback)
{
var requestUsername = "";
var requestPassword = "";
if (!request.headers['authorization'])
{
failureCallback();
}
else
{
var auth = this._decodeBase64(request.headers['authorization']);
if (auth)
{
requestUsername = auth.username;
requestPassword = auth.password;
}
else
{
failureCallback();
}
}
//TODO: Query your database (don't forget to do so async)
db.query( function(result)
{
if (result.username == requestUsername && result.password == requestPassword)
{
successCallback(requestUsername);
}
else
{
failureCallback();
}
});
};
/**
* Internal method for extracting username and password out of a Basic
* Authentication header field.
*
* #param headerValue
* #return
*/
Auth.prototype._decodeBase64 = function(headerValue)
{
var value;
if (value = headerValue.match("^Basic\\s([A-Za-z0-9+/=]+)$"))
{
var auth = (new Buffer(value[1] || "", "base64")).toString("ascii");
return {
username : auth.slice(0, auth.indexOf(':')),
password : auth.slice(auth.indexOf(':') + 1, auth.length)
};
}
else
{
return null;
}
};
A few years have passed and I'd like to introduce my authentication solution for Express. It's called Lockit. You can find the project on GitHub and a short intro at my blog.
So what are the differences to the existing solutions?
easy to use: set up your DB, npm install, require('lockit'), lockit(app), done
routes already built-in (/signup, /login, /forgot-password, etc.)
views already built-in (based on Bootstrap but you can easily use your own views)
it supports JSON communication for your AngularJS / Ember.js single page apps
it does NOT support OAuth and OpenID. Only username and password.
it works with several databases (CouchDB, MongoDB, SQL) out of the box
it has tests (I couldn't find any tests for Drywall)
it is actively maintained (compared to everyauth)
email verification and forgot password process (send email with token, not supported by Passport)
modularity: use only what you need
flexibility: customize all the things
Take a look at the examples.
A different take on authentication is Passwordless, a token-based authentication module for express that circumvents the inherent problem of passwords [1]. It's fast to implement, doesn't require too many forms, and offers better security for the average user (full disclosure: I'm the author).
[1]: Passwords are Obsolete
A word of caution regarding handrolled approaches:
I'm disappointed to see that some of the suggested code examples in this post do not protect against such fundamental authentication vulnerabilities such as session fixation or timing attacks.
Contrary to several suggestions here, authentication is not simple and handrolling a solution is not always trivial. I would recommend passportjs and bcrypt.
If you do decide to handroll a solution however, have a look at the express js provided example for inspiration.
Good luck.
There is a project called Drywall that implements a user login system with Passport and also has a user management admin panel. If you're looking for a fully-featured user authentication and management system similar to something like what Django has but for Node.js, this is it. I found it to be a really good starting point for building a node app that required a user authentication and management system. See Jared Hanson's answer for information on how Passport works.
Here are two popular Github libraries for node js authentication:
https://github.com/jaredhanson/passport ( suggestible )
https://nodejsmodules.org/pkg/everyauth
Quick simple example using mongo, for an API that provides user auth for ie Angular client
in app.js
var express = require('express');
var MongoStore = require('connect-mongo')(express);
// ...
app.use(express.cookieParser());
// obviously change db settings to suit
app.use(express.session({
secret: 'blah1234',
store: new MongoStore({
db: 'dbname',
host: 'localhost',
port: 27017
})
}));
app.use(app.router);
for your route something like this:
// (mongo connection stuff)
exports.login = function(req, res) {
var email = req.body.email;
// use bcrypt in production for password hashing
var password = req.body.password;
db.collection('users', function(err, collection) {
collection.findOne({'email': email, 'password': password}, function(err, user) {
if (err) {
res.send(500);
} else {
if(user !== null) {
req.session.user = user;
res.send(200);
} else {
res.send(401);
}
}
});
});
};
Then in your routes that require auth you can just check for the user session:
if (!req.session.user) {
res.send(403);
}
Here is a new authentication library that uses timestamped tokens. The tokens can be emailed or texted to users without the need to store them in a database. It can be used for passwordless authentication or for two-factor authentication.
https://github.com/vote539/easy-no-password
Disclosure: I am the developer of this library.
If you need authentication with SSO (Single Sign On) with Microsoft Windows user account. You may give a try to https://github.com/jlguenego/node-expose-sspi.
It will give you a req.sso object which contains all client user information (login, display name, sid, groups).
const express = require("express");
const { sso, sspi } = require("node-expose-sspi");
sso.config.debug = false;
const app = express();
app.use(sso.auth());
app.use((req, res, next) => {
res.json({
sso: req.sso
});
});
app.listen(3000, () => console.log("Server started on port 3000"));
Disclaimer: I am the author of node-expose-sspi.
slim-auth
A lightweight, zero-configuration user authentication module. It doesn't need a sperate database.
https://www.npmjs.com/package/slimauth
It's simple as:
app.get('/private-page', (req, res) => {
if (req.user.isAuthorized) {
// user is logged in! send the requested page
// you can access req.user.email
}
else {
// user not logged in. redirect to login page
}
})