peanut-restify-jwt
v0.5.7
Published
JWT authentication middleware. (with API KEY support)
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restify-jwt
Restify middleware that validates JsonWebTokens and sets req.user
.
This module lets you authenticate HTTP requests using JWT tokens in your restify applications.
Install
$ npm install restify-jwt
Usage
The JWT authentication middleware authenticates callers using a JWT.
If the token is valid, req.user
will be set with the JSON object decoded
to be used by later middleware for authorization and access control.
For example,
var jwt = require('restify-jwt');
app.get('/protected',
jwt({secret: 'shhhhhhared-secret'}),
function(req, res) {
if (!req.user.admin) return res.send(401);
res.send(200);
});
You can specify audience and/or issuer as well:
jwt({ secret: 'shhhhhhared-secret',
audience: 'http://myapi/protected',
issuer: 'http://issuer' })
If the JWT has an expiration (
exp
), it will be checked.
If you are using a base64 URL-encoded secret, pass a Buffer
with base64
encoding as the secret instead of a string:
jwt({ secret: new Buffer('shhhhhhared-secret', 'base64') })
Optionally you can make some paths unprotected as follows:
app.use(jwt({ secret: 'shhhhhhared-secret'}).unless({path: ['/token']}));
This is especially useful when applying to multiple routes. In the example above, path
can be a string, a regexp, or an array of any of those.
For more details on the
.unless
syntax including additional options, please see express-unless.
This module also support tokens signed with public/private key pairs. Instead of a secret, you can specify a Buffer with the public key
var publicKey = fs.readFileSync('/pat/to/public.pub');
jwt({ secret: publicKey });
By default, the decoded token is attached to req.user
but can be configured with the requestProperty
option.
jwt({ secret: publicKey, requestProperty: 'auth' });
A custom function for extracting the token from a request can be specified with
the getToken
option. This is useful if you need to pass the token through a
query parameter or a cookie. You can throw an error in this function and it will
be handled by restify-jwt
.
app.use(jwt({
secret: 'hello world !',
credentialsRequired: false,
getToken: function fromHeaderOrQuerystring (req) {
if (req.headers.authorization && req.headers.authorization.split(' ')[0] === 'Bearer') {
return req.headers.authorization.split(' ')[1];
} else if (req.query && req.query.token) {
return req.query.token;
}
return null;
}
}));
Multi-tenancy
If you are developing an application in which the secret used to sign tokens is not static, you can provide a callback function as the secret
parameter. The function has the signature: function(req, payload, done)
:
req
(Object
) - The restifyrequest
object.payload
(Object
) - An object with the JWT claims.done
(Function
) - A function with signaturefunction(err, secret)
to be invoked when the secret is retrieved.err
(Any
) - The error that occurred.secret
(String
) - The secret to use to verify the JWT.
For example, if the secret varies based on the JWT issuer:
var jwt = require('restify-jwt');
var data = require('./data');
var utilities = require('./utilities');
var secretCallback = function(req, payload, done){
var issuer = payload.iss;
data.getTenantByIdentifier(issuer, function(err, tenant){
if (err) { return done(err); }
if (!tenant) { return done(new Error('missing_secret')); }
var secret = utilities.decrypt(tenant.secret);
done(null, secret);
});
};
app.get('/protected',
jwt({secret: secretCallback}),
function(req, res) {
if (!req.user.admin) return res.send(401);
res.send(200);
});
Revoked tokens
It is possible that some tokens will need to be revoked so they cannot be used any longer. You can provide a function as the isRevoked
option. The signature of the function is function(req, payload, done)
:
req
(Object
) - The restifyrequest
object.payload
(Object
) - An object with the JWT claims.done
(Function
) - A function with signaturefunction(err, revoked)
to be invoked once the check to see if the token is revoked or not is complete.err
(Any
) - The error that occurred.revoked
(Boolean
) -true
if the JWT is revoked,false
otherwise.
For example, if the (iss, jti)
claim pair is used to identify a JWT:
var jwt = require('restify-jwt');
var data = require('./data');
var utilities = require('./utilities');
var isRevokedCallback = function(req, payload, done){
var issuer = payload.iss;
var tokenId = payload.jti;
data.getRevokedToken(issuer, tokenId, function(err, token){
if (err) { return done(err); }
return done(null, !!token);
});
};
app.get('/protected',
jwt({secret: shhhhhhared-secret,
isRevoked: isRevokedCallback}),
function(req, res) {
if (!req.user.admin) return res.send(401);
res.send(200);
});
Error handling
The default behavior is to throw an error when the token is invalid, so you can add your custom logic to manage unauthorized access as follows:
app.use(function (err, req, res, next) {
if (err.name === 'UnauthorizedError') {
res.send(401, 'invalid token...');
}
});
You might want to use this module to identify registered users without preventing unregistered clients to access to some data, you can do it using the option credentialsRequired:
app.use(jwt({
secret: 'hello world !',
credentialsRequired: false
}));
Tests
$ npm install
$ npm test
Credits
Based on auth0/express-jwt. The major difference is that restify-jwt tries to use built in restify errors wherever possible.