This is an NGINX module to check for a valid JWT and proxy to an upstream server or redirect to a login page. It supports additional features such as extracting claims from the JWT and placing them on the request/response headers.
The v2
branch, which has now been merged to master
includes breaking changes. Please see the initial v2 release for details,
This module depends on the JWT C Library. Transitively, that library depends on a JSON Parser called Jansson as well as the OpenSSL library.
This module requires several new nginx.conf
directives, which can be specified at the http
, server
, or location
levels.
Directive | Description |
---|---|
auth_jwt_key |
The key to use to decode/verify the JWT, in binhex format -- see below. |
auth_jwt_redirect |
Set to "on" to redirect to auth_jwt_loginurl if authentication fails. |
auth_jwt_loginurl |
The URL to redirect to if auth_jwt_redirect is enabled and authentication fails. |
auth_jwt_enabled |
Set to "on" to enable JWT checking. |
auth_jwt_algorithm |
The algorithm to use. One of: HS256, HS384, HS512, RS256, RS384, RS512 |
auth_jwt_location |
Indicates where the JWT is located in the request -- see below. |
auth_jwt_validate_sub |
Set to "on" to validate the sub claim (e.g. user id) in the JWT. |
auth_jwt_extract_request_claims |
Set to a space-delimited list of claims to extract from the JWT and set as request headers. These will be accessible via e.g: $http_jwt_sub |
auth_jwt_extract_response_claims |
Set to a space-delimited list of claims to extract from the JWT and set as response headers. These will be accessible via e.g: $sent_http_jwt_sub |
auth_jwt_use_keyfile |
Set to "on" to read the key from a file rather than from the auth_jwt_key directive. |
auth_jwt_keyfile_path |
Set to the path from which the key should be read when auth_jwt_use_keyfile is enabled. |
The default algorithm is HS256
, for symmetric key validation. When using one of the HS*
algorithms, the value for auth_jwt_key
should be specified in binhex format. It is recommended to use at least 256 bits of data (32 pairs of hex characters or 64 characters in total) as in the example above. Note that using more than 512 bits will not increase the security. For key guidelines please see NIST Special Publication 800-107 Recommendation for Applications Using Approved Hash Algorithms, Section 5.3.2 The HMAC Key.
The configuration also supports RSA public key validation via (e.g.) auth_jwt_algorithm RS256
. When using the RS*
alhorithms, the auth_jwt_key
field must be set to your public key OR auth_jwt_use_keyfile
should be set to on
and auth_jwt_keyfile_path
should point to the public key on disk. NGINX won't start if auth_jwt_use_keyfile
is set to on
and a key file is not provided.
When using an RS*
algorithm with an inline key, be sure to set auth_jwt_key
to the public key, rather than a PEM certificate. E.g.:
auth_jwt_key "-----BEGIN PUBLIC KEY-----
MIIBIjANBgkqhkiG9w0BAQEFAAOCAQ8AMIIBCgKCAQEA0aPPpS7ufs0bGbW9+OFQ
RvJwb58fhi2BuHMd7Ys6m8D1jHW/AhDYrYVZtUnA60lxwSJ/ZKreYOQMlNyZfdqA
rhYyyUkedDn8e0WsDvH+ocY0cMcxCCN5jItCwhIbIkTO6WEGrDgWTY57UfWDqbMZ
4lMn42f77OKFoxsOA6CVvpsvrprBPIRPa25H2bJHODHEtDr/H519Y681/eCyeQE/
1ibKL2cMN49O7nRAAaUNoFcO89Uc+GKofcad1TTwtTIwmSMbCLVkzGeExBCrBTQo
wO6AxLijfWV/JnVxNMUiobiKGc/PP6T5PI70Uv67Y4FzzWTuhqmREb3/BlcbPwtM
oQIDAQAB
-----END PUBLIC KEY-----";
When using an RS*
algorithm with a public key file, do as follows:
auth_jwt_use_keyfile on;
auth_jwt_keyfile_path "/path/to/pub_key.pem";
A typical use case would be to specify the key and login URL at the http
level, and then only turn JWT authentication on for the locations which you want to secure (or vice-versa). Unauthorized requests will result in a 302 Moved Temporarily
response with the Location
header set to the URL specified in the auth_jwt_loginurl
directive, and a querystring parameter return_url
whose value is the current / attempted URL.
If you prefer to return 401 Unauthorized
rather than redirect, you may turn auth_jwt_redirect
off:
auth_jwt_redirect off;
By default, theAuthorization
header is used to provide a JWT for validation. However, you may use the auth_jwt_location
directive to specify the name of the header or cookie which provides the JWT:
auth_jwt_location HEADER=auth-token; # get the JWT from the "auth-token" header
auth_jwt_location COOKIE=auth-token; # get the JWT from the "auth-token" cookie
Optionally, the module can validate that a sub
claim (e.g. the user's id) exists in the JWT. You may enable this feature as follows:
auth_jwt_validate_sub on;
You may specify claims to be extracted from the JWT and placed on the request and/or response headers. This is especially handly because the claims will then also be available as NGINX variables.
If you only wish to access a claim as an NGINX variable, you should use auth_jwt_extract_request_claims
so that the claim does not end up being sent to the client as a response header. However, if you do want the claim to be sent to the client in the response, then use auth_jwt_extract_response_claims
instead.
Please note that number
, boolean
, array
, and object
claims are not supported at this time -- only string
claims are supported. An error will be thrown if you attempt to extract a non-string claim.
For example, you could configure an NGINX location which redirects to the current user's profile. Suppose sub=abc-123
, the configuration below would redirect to /profile/abc-123
.
location /profile/me {
auth_jwt_extract_request_claims sub;
return 301 /profile/$http_jwt_sub;
}
Response claims are used in the same way, with the only differences being:
- the variables are accessed via the
$sent_http_jwt_*
pattern, e.g.$sent_http_jwt_sub
, and - the headers are sent to the client.
You may extract multiple claims by specifying all claims as arguments to a single directive, or by supplying multiple directives. The following two examples are equivalent.
auth_jwt_extract_request_claims sub firstName lastName;
auth_jwt_extract_request_claims sub;
auth_jwt_extract_request_claims firstName;
auth_jwt_extract_request_claims lastName;
This module has historically not been versioned, however, we are now starting to version the module in order to add clarity. We will add releases here in GitHub with additional details. In the future we may also publish pre-built modules for a selection of NGINX versions.
If you'd like to contribute to this repository, please first initiate the Git hooks by running ./.bin/init
(note the .
before bin
) -- this will ensure that tests are run before you push your changes.
- Install the C/C++ extension from Microsoft.
- Add a C/C++ config file at
.vscode/c_cpp_properties.json
with the following (or similar) content:
{
"configurations": [
{
"name": "Linux",
"includePath": [
"${workspaceFolder}/**",
"~/Projects/nginx/objs/**",
"~/Projects/nginx/src/**",
"~/Projects/libjwt/include/**",
"~/Projects/jansson/src/**"
],
"defines": [],
"compilerPath": "/usr/bin/clang",
"cStandard": "c17",
"cppStandard": "c++14",
"intelliSenseMode": "linux-clang-x64"
}
],
"version": 4
}
Note the includePath
additions above -- please update them as appropriate. Next we need to pull these sources.
- Download the NGINX release matching the version you're targeting.
- Extract the NGINX archive to wherever you'd like.
- Update the
includePath
entires shown above to match the location you chose. - Enter the directory where you extracted NGINX and run:
./configure --with-compat
- Clone this repository as follows (replace
<target_dir>
):git clone git@github.com:benmcollins/libjwt.git <target_dir>
- Enter the directory and switch to the latest tag:
git checkout $(git tag | sort -Vr | head -n 1)
- Update the
includePath
entires shown above to match the location you chose.
- Clone this repository as follows (replace
<target_dir>
):git clone git@github.com:akheron/jansson.git <target_dir>
- Enter the directory and switch to the latest tag:
git checkout $(git tag | sort -Vr | head -n 1)
- Update the
includePath
entires shown above to match the location you chose.
Once you save your changes to .vscode/c_cpp_properties.json
, you should see that warnings and errors in the Problems panel go away, at least temprorarily. Hopfeully they don't come back, but if they do, make sure your include paths are set correctly.
The ./scripts.sh
file contains multiple commands to make things easy:
Command | Description |
---|---|
build_module |
Builds the NGINX image. |
rebuild_module |
Re-builds the NGINX image. |
start_nginx |
Starts the NGINX container. |
stop_nginx |
Stops the NGINX container. |
cp_bin |
Copies the compiled binaries out of the NGINX container. |
build_test_runner |
Builds the images used by the test stack (uses Docker compose). |
rebuild_test_runner |
Re-builds the images used by the test stack. |
test |
Runs test.sh against the NGINX container (uses Docker compose). |
test_now |
Runs test.sh without rebuilding. |
You can run multiple commands in sequence by separating them with a space, e.g.:
./scripts.sh build_module test
To build the Docker images, module, start NGINX, and run the tests against, you can simply do:
./scripts.sh all
When you make a change to the module run ./scripts.sh build_module test
to build a fresh module and run the tests. Note that rebuild_module
is not often needed as build_module
hashes the module's source files which will cause a cache miss while building the container, causing the module to be rebuilt.
When you make a change to the test NGINX config or test.sh
, run ./scripts.sh test
to run the tests. Similar to above, the test sources are hashed and the containers will be rebuilt as needed.
The image produced with ./scripts.sh build_module
only differs from the official NGINX image in two ways:
- the JWT module itself, and
- the
nginx.conf
file is overwritten with our own.
The tests use a customized NGINX image, distinct from the main image, as well as a test runner image. By running ./scripts.sh test
, the two test containers will be stood up via Docker compose, then they'll be started, and the tests will run. At the end of the test run, both containers will be automatically stopped and destroyed. See below to learn how to trace test failures across runs.
After making changes and finding that some tests fail, it can be difficult to understand why. By default, logs are written to Docker's internal log mechanism, but they won't be persisted after the test run completes and the containers are removed.
In order to persist logs, you can configure the log driver to use. You can do this by setting the environment variable LOG_DRIVER
before running the tests. On Linux/Unix systems, you can use the driver journald
, as follows:
# need to rebuild the test runner with the proper log driver
LOG_DRIVER=journald ./scripts.sh rebuild_test_runner
# run the tests
./scripts.sh test
# check the logs
journalctl -eu docker CONTAINER_NAME=jwt-nginx-test
Now you'll be able to see logs from previous test runs. The best way to make use of this is to open two terminals, one where you run the tests, and one where you follow the logs:
# terminal 1
./scripts.sh test
# terminal 2
journalctl -fu docker CONTAINER_NAME=jwt-nginx-test