This content originally appeared on DEV Community and was authored by Tasnim Ferdous
Overview
After reading this article, you will able to
- Authenticate users with their username/email and password
- Understand the uses of accessToken and refreshToken
- Protect api endpoints from unauthorized clients by validating accessToken
- Allow multi-logins with ability to revoke all session
- Have a template with signup,signin and endpoint protection to kickstart your next rest api
The code is available on github
I suggest to read the full article first and then start coding
The source code structure is as follows
.
├── controllers
│ ├── auth
│ │ ├── login.ts
│ │ ├── logout.ts
│ │ ├── refreshAccessToken.ts
│ │ └── register.js
│ └── users.ts
├── db # functions to make calls to the database
│ ├── connect.ts
│ ├── tokens.ts
│ └── users.ts
├── index.ts
├── middlewares
│ ├── validateRegistrationData.ts
│ └── verifyTokens.ts
├── routes
│ ├── auth.ts
│ ├── index.ts
│ └── users.ts
└── utils
├── genToken.ts
├── hashString.ts
└── verifyToken.ts
Table of Contents
- Database Schema
- Overview of auth routes
- Registration
- Log In
- Refresh Access Token
- Access protected resource
-
Log Out
- Log out current session
- Log out from All devices
-
Testing the api
- Register
- Login
- Accessing protected endpoint
- Refresh Access Token
Database Schema
- The database is using sqlite so you don't have to setup any database in your system
- This project uses prisma ORM which will give you typescript support with excellent auto completion experience
prisma/schema.prisma:
model User {
id String @id @default(uuid())
email String @unique
username String @unique
password String
refreshTokens RefreshToken[]
}
model RefreshToken {
id String @id
hashedToken String
user User @relation(fields: [userId], references: [id], onDelete: Cascade)
userId String
createdAt DateTime @default(now())
}
- User and RefreshToken has one to many relationship
- One user can have multiple refreshToken so that logins from multiple devices can be persisted
- Run
npx prisma generate
to generate prisma client code. Then runnpx prisma migrate dev
to create necessary tables according to the schema - Tip : You can use
npx prisma studio
to interect with the database in a Web GUI
Overview of auth routes
routes/auth.ts:
const router = express.Router();
router.post("/auth/login", login);
router.post("/auth/register", validateRegistrationData, register);
router.get("/auth/refresh", verifyRefreshToken, refreshAccessToken);
router.delete("/auth/logout", logout);
router.delete("/auth/logout_all", logout_all);
export { router as authRouter };
All routes are prefixed with "/api"
Registration
Route : router.post("/auth/register", validateRegistrationData, register)
- The request body should contain username, email and password
- We will create a middleware to validate the registration data
middlewares/validateRegistrationData.ts:
export const validateRegistrationData = async (req, res, next) => {
const { email, username, password } = req.body;
if (!password) return res.status(400).json({ error: "No password provided" });
if (!username) return res.status(400).json({ error: "No username provided" });
if (!email) return res.status(400).json({ error: "No email provided" });
let user = await findUserByUsernameOrEmail(username, email);
if (user) {
let error = "Email already exits";
if (user.email !== email) error = "Username already exits";
return res.json({ error });
}
req.user = {
email,
username,
password,
};
next();
};
- If an account with the same username or email already exists then return
- Else attach the
user
object toreq
and go to the next function
controllers/auth/register.ts:
export const register = async (req, res) => {
const user = await createUser(req.user);
if (!user) return res.json({ error: "Registration Failed" });
const data = {
username: user.username,
email: user.email,
};
res.json({ data });
};
- Hash the password before storing to the database
const createUser = async (user: any) => {
user.password = await hashString(user.password);
return db.user.create({
data: user,
});
};
Log In
Route : router.post("/auth/login", login)
- The request body should contain { username, password }
- Here username field can contain email also, providing the option to log in with both username and email
- Return an error if user doesn't exist or password is incorrect
- Create accessToken and refreshToken
- Send the refreshToken to be saved as a httpOnly cookie with 30 days validity
- Send the accessToken
controllers/auth/login.ts:
export const login = async (req, res) => {
try {
if (!req.body.username)
return res.status(400).json({ error: "No Username provided" });
if (!req.body.password)
return res.status(400).json({ error: "No Password provided" });
const { username, password } = req.body;
// User can log in with username or email
const user = await findUserByUsernameOrEmail(username, username);
if (!user) return res.status(404).json({ error: "User Not Found" });
const match = await bcrypt.compare(password, user.password);
if (!match) return res.status(401).json({ error: "Wrong Password" });
const accessToken = genAccessToken(user);
const tokenId = randomUUID();
const refreshToken = genRefreshToken(user, tokenId);
res.cookie("refreshToken", refreshToken, {
httpOnly: true,
maxAge: 24 * 60 * 60 * 30 * 1000, // 30 days
});
// add the token to the database
addRefreshToken(tokenId, user.id, refreshToken);
return res.json({ accessToken });
} catch (error) {
return res.status(500).json({ error: "Internal Error" });
}
};
- refreshToken is sensitive data, hence you shouldn't store it in plain text
- You could either hash it or encrypt it
const addRefreshToken = async (
id: string,
userId: number,
refreshToken: string
) => {
const hashedToken = await hashString(refreshToken);
return db.refreshToken.create({
data: {
id,
userId,
hashedToken,
},
});
};
Refresh Access Token
Route : router.get("/auth/refresh", verifyRefreshToken, refreshAccessToken)
- If the token is expired or tampered with then the verification will fail
- If the verification passes but the token doesn't exist in the db, then you can suspect that someone is trying to use an old token that might be stolen so you return Unauthorized
- Otherwise, delete the refreshToken that was in the cookie of the request, create new token, save it to the database and send set it as a httpOnly cookie, this practice is called refresh token rotation
- Send the accessToken
export const refreshAccessToken = async (req, res) => {
const user = req.user;
const newTokenId = randomUUID();
const newRefreshToken = genRefreshToken(user, newTokenId);
res.cookie("refreshToken", newRefreshToken, {
httpOnly: true,
maxAge: 24 * 60 * 60 * 1000 * 30,
});
// refresh token rotation
deleteRefreshTokenById(user.jwtid);
addRefreshToken(newTokenId, user.id, newRefreshToken);
//
const accessToken = genAccessToken(user);
return res.json({ accessToken });
};
Access protected resource
As an example, /users can be used as a protected endpoint
Route : router.use("/users", verifyAccessToken, listUsers)
middlewares/verifyAccessToken.ts:
export const verifyAccessToken = (req, res, next) => {
const authHeader = req.headers["authorization"];
const token = authHeader && authHeader.split(" ")[1];
if (token == null) return res.sendStatus(401);
const user = tokenVerifier.validateAccessToken(token);
if (user.tokenError)
return res.status(401).json({
error: "Invalid Access token",
tokenError: user.tokenError,
});
req.user = user;
return next();
};
- The client has to send the token in the authorization header following the format
Bearer $token
- If the token is not valid, the error will be returned (such as TokenExpiredError or JsonWebTokenError if the token is modified)
- Otherwise the server will query the database and send the list of users to the client
Log Out
Route : router.delete("/auth/logout", logout)
Log out current session
export const logout = async (req, res) => {
const refreshToken = req.cookies.refreshToken;
if (!refreshToken) return res.status(401).json({ error: "No Refresh Token" });
// does not check if it exists in the db
const user = tokenVerifier.verifyRefreshToken(refreshToken);
if (user.tokenError)
return res.status(401).json({
error: "Invalid Refresh token",
tokenError: user.tokenError,
});
res.clearCookie("refreshToken");
deleteRefreshTokenById(user.jwtid);
return res.sendStatus(200);
};
Log out from All devices
Route : router.delete("/auth/logout", logout_all)
export const logout_all = async (req, res) => {
const refreshToken = req.cookies.refreshToken;
if (!refreshToken) return res.status(401).json({ error: "No Refresh Token" });
res.clearCookie("refreshToken");
// does not check if it exists in the db
const user = tokenVerifier.verifyRefreshToken(refreshToken);
if (user.tokenError)
return res.status(401).json({
error: "Invalid Refresh token",
tokenError: user.tokenError,
});
// delete all tokens associated with this user
deleteAllRefreshTokens(user.id);
return res.sendStatus(200);
};
Notice 2 things,
- There's no check to see if the token exists in db
- Access token verification is skipped
Lets consider a scenario where the client's cookie is hijacked, so attacker has the refreshToken
- Now he is going to use that refreshToken to get new accessToken
- Which will invalidate the refreshToken of the client from which it was hijacked
- That client may be the legitimate user
- And now that client can't get any new accessToken
- So if accesToken verification or the check to see if token exists was in db was present then that client wouldn't be able to logout
Testing the api
You can use curl to perform all the requests
All the commands listed below is written on tests/api-test-curl.sh
If you use Insomnia, which is an awesome open source api testing tool, you can import all the requests from tests/api-test-insomnia.json
Register
curl --request POST \
--url http://localhost:5000/api/auth/register \
--header 'Content-Type: application/json' \
--data '{
"username" : "gr523",
"email" : "gr523@gmail.com",
"password" : "Pass82G9"
}'
Login
curl --request POST \
--url http://localhost:5000/api/auth/login \
--header 'Content-Type: application/json' \
--cookie-jar "cookie.txt" \
--data '{
"username" : "gr523",
"password" : "Pass82G9"
}'
Output: {"accessToken":"eyJhbGciOiJIUzI1NiIsInR5cCI6IkpXVCJ9.eyJpZCI6IjNjY2Q2ZjNhLWQxMzItNDQzZi05NWM0LTRmMDJjYmU3ZDRlMSIsInVzZXJuYW1lIjoiZ3I1MjMiLCJlbWFpbCI6ImdyNTIzQGdtYWlsLmNvbSIsImlhdCI6MTY4MTkyOTYyNywiZXhwIjoxNjgxOTI5OTI3fQ.qbfKNvMk2W9JojB7O9CAtshOKoPQ1n2whLWrP4lzEJo"}
- The cookie will be saved in cookie.txt
- Copy the value of accessToken to your clipboard
Accessing protected endpoint
- Paste the accessToken after Bearer
curl --request GET \
--url http://localhost:5000/api/api/users \
--header 'Authorization: Bearer eyJhbGciOiJIUzI1NiIsInR5cCI6IkpXVCJ9.eyJpZCI6IjNjY2Q2ZjNhLWQxMzItNDQzZi05NWM0LTRmMDJjYmU3ZDRlMSIsInVzZXJuYW1lIjoiZ3I1MjMiLCJlbWFpbCI6ImdyNTIzQGdtYWlsLmNvbSIsImlhdCI6MTY4MTkyOTYyNywiZXhwIjoxNjgxOTI5OTI3fQ.qbfKNvMk2W9JojB7O9CAtshOKoPQ1n2whLWrP4lzEJo'
Output: {"users":[{"id":"3ccd6f3a-d132-443f-95c4-4f02cbe7d4e1","username":"gr523","email":"gr523@gmail.com"}]}
- Modify the value of the accessToken
curl --request GET \
--url http://localhost:5000/api/api/users \
--header 'Authorization: Bearer xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxNiIsInR5cCI6IkpXVCJ9.eyJpZCI6IjNjY2Q2ZjNhLWQxMzItNDQzZi05NWM0LTRmMDJjYmU3ZDRlMSIsInVzZXJuYW1lIjoiZ3I1MjMiLCJlbWFpbCI6ImdyNTIzQGdtYWlsLmNvbSIsImlhdCI6MTY4MTkyOTYyNywiZXhwIjoxNjgxOTI5OTI3fQ.qbfKNvMk2W9JojB7O9CAtshOKoPQ1n2whLWrP4lzEJo'
Output {"error":"Invalid Access token","tokenError":"JsonWebTokenError"}
The validity duration of the accessToken is set to 5 minutes, after that you can't use that token to access protected resources
The response will be {"error":"Invalid Access token","tokenError":"TokenExpiredError"}
You can change the validity duration in utils/genToken.ts
Refresh Access Token
- Use the value of refreshToken from cookie.txt
curl --request GET \
--url http://localhost:5000/api/auth/refresh \
--cookie refreshToken=eyJhbGciOiJIUzI1NiIsInR5cCI6IkpXVCJ9.eyJqd3RpZCI6IjQwY2VkYmRjLWM2NmQtNGJlYy1hNjc4LTg0MWJkZDhlMTBkMyIsImlkIjoiM2NjZDZmM2EtZDEzMi00NDNmLTk1YzQtNGYwMmNiZTdkNGUxIiwidXNlcm5hbWUiOiJncjUyMyIsImVtYWlsIjoiZ3I1MjNAZ21haWwuY29tIiwiaWF0IjoxNjgxOTI4MzgwLCJleHAiOjE2ODQ1MjAzODB9.WDk-YbqxX7_yCr8ATbDxbCV-W6EUNzxZPchPaHnuZAI
Or in linux you can use sed,
curl --request GET \
--url http://localhost:5000/api/auth/refresh \
--cookie refreshToken="$(sed -En '/refreshToken/s/.*refreshToken\s*(.*)/\1/p' cookie.txt)"
Log in again and request refresh, the respone will be {"error":"Invalid Refresh Token","tokenError":"OldToken"}
You have read up to this point, you are ready to take kickstart your next rest-api project. Would appreciate any feedback. Tell me, if you like this style of tutorial or what could be changed to make it better
This content originally appeared on DEV Community and was authored by Tasnim Ferdous
Tasnim Ferdous | Sciencx (2023-04-19T20:17:59+00:00) Authenticate and protect REST API routes with JWT and refersh token rotation. Retrieved from https://www.scien.cx/2023/04/19/authenticate-and-protect-rest-api-routes-with-jwt-and-refersh-token-rotation/
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