Pow is a robust, modular, and extendable authentication and user management solution for Phoenix and Plug-based apps.
- User registration
- Session based authorization
- Per Endpoint/Plug configuration
- API token authorization
- Mnesia cache with automatic cluster healing
- Multitenancy
- User roles
- Extendable
- I18n
- And more
Add Pow to your list of dependencies in mix.exs
:
defp deps do
[
# ...
{:pow, "~> 1.0.24"}
]
end
Run mix deps.get
to install it.
Umbrella project: Check out the umbrella project guide.
Install the necessary files:
mix pow.install
This will add the following files to your app:
LIB_PATH/users/user.ex
PRIV_PATH/repo/migrations/TIMESTAMP_create_users.ex
Add the following to config/config.exs
:
use Mix.Config
# ... existing config
config :my_app, :pow,
user: MyApp.Users.User,
repo: MyApp.Repo
# ... import_config
Set up WEB_PATH/endpoint.ex
to enable session based authentication (Pow.Plug.Session
is added after Plug.Session
):
defmodule MyAppWeb.Endpoint do
use Phoenix.Endpoint, otp_app: :my_app
# ...
plug Plug.Session, @session_options
plug Pow.Plug.Session, otp_app: :my_app
plug MyAppWeb.Router
end
Add Pow routes to WEB_PATH/router.ex
:
defmodule MyAppWeb.Router do
use MyAppWeb, :router
use Pow.Phoenix.Router
# ... pipelines
pipeline :protected do
plug Pow.Plug.RequireAuthenticated,
error_handler: Pow.Phoenix.PlugErrorHandler
end
scope "/" do
pipe_through :browser
pow_routes()
end
scope "/", MyAppWeb do
pipe_through [:browser, :protected]
# Add your protected routes here
end
# ... routes
end
That's it! Run mix ecto.setup
and you can now visit http://localhost:4000/registration/new
, and create a new user.
By default, Pow exposes as few files as possible.
If you wish to modify the templates, you can generate them (and the view files) using:
mix pow.phoenix.gen.templates
Remember to add web_module: MyAppWeb
to the configuration so that the view you've just generated will be used instead:
config :my_app, :pow,
# ...
web_module: MyAppWeb
Pow is made so it's easy to extend the functionality with your own complimentary library. The following extensions are included in this library:
Check out the "Other libraries" section for other extensions.
To keep it easy to understand and configure Pow, you'll have to enable the extensions yourself.
Let's install the PowResetPassword
and PowEmailConfirmation
extensions.
First, install extension migrations by running:
mix pow.extension.ecto.gen.migrations --extension PowResetPassword --extension PowEmailConfirmation
Then run the migrations with mix ecto.migrate
. Now, update config/config.ex
with the :extensions
and :controller_callbacks
key:
config :my_app, :pow,
user: MyApp.Users.User,
repo: MyApp.Repo,
extensions: [PowResetPassword, PowEmailConfirmation],
controller_callbacks: Pow.Extension.Phoenix.ControllerCallbacks
Update LIB_PATH/users/user.ex
with the extensions:
defmodule MyApp.Users.User do
use Ecto.Schema
use Pow.Ecto.Schema
use Pow.Extension.Ecto.Schema,
extensions: [PowResetPassword, PowEmailConfirmation]
# ...
def changeset(user_or_changeset, attrs) do
user_or_changeset
|> pow_changeset(attrs)
|> pow_extension_changeset(attrs)
end
end
Add Pow extension routes to WEB_PATH/router.ex
:
defmodule MyAppWeb.Router do
use MyAppWeb, :router
use Pow.Phoenix.Router
use Pow.Extension.Phoenix.Router,
extensions: [PowResetPassword, PowEmailConfirmation]
# ...
scope "/" do
pipe_through :browser
pow_routes()
pow_extension_routes()
end
# ...
end
Templates and views for extensions can be generated with:
mix pow.extension.phoenix.gen.templates --extension PowResetPassword --extension PowEmailConfirmation
Please follow the instructions in "Modify templates" to ensure that your custom templates and views will be used.
Many extensions require a mailer to have been set up. Let's create a mailer mock module in WEB_PATH/pow/mailer.ex
:
defmodule MyAppWeb.Pow.Mailer do
use Pow.Phoenix.Mailer
require Logger
def cast(%{user: user, subject: subject, text: text, html: html, assigns: _assigns}) do
# Build email struct to be used in `process/1`
%{to: user.email, subject: subject, text: text, html: html}
end
def process(email) do
# Send email
Logger.debug("E-mail sent: #{inspect email}")
end
end
Update config/config.ex
with :mailer_backend
key:
config :my_app, :pow,
# ...
mailer_backend: MyAppWeb.Pow.Mailer
This mailer module will only output the mail to your log, so you can e.g. try out the reset password and email confirmation links. You should integrate the Pow mailer with your actual mailer system. For Swoosh or Bamboo integration, check out the Configuring mailer guide.
Since Phoenix doesn't ship with a mailer setup by default you should first modify my_app_web.ex
with a :mailer_view
macro:
defmodule MyAppWeb do
# ...
def mailer_view do
quote do
use Phoenix.View, root: "lib/my_app_web/templates",
namespace: MyAppWeb
use Phoenix.HTML
end
end
# ...
end
Now generate the view and template files:
mix pow.extension.phoenix.mailer.gen.templates --extension PowResetPassword --extension PowEmailConfirmation
This will generate view files in WEB_PATH/views/POW_EXTENSION/mailer/
, and html and text templates in WEB_PATH/templates/POW_EXTENSION/mailer/
directory.
Add web_mailer_module: MyAppWeb
to the configuration so Pow will use the views you've just generated:
config :my_app, :pow,
# ...
web_mailer_module: MyAppWeb
The generated view files contain the subject lines for the emails.
Pow is built to be modular, and easy to configure. The configuration is passed to method calls as well as plug options, and they will take priority over any environment configuration. It's ideal in case you got an umbrella app with multiple separate user domains.
The easiest way to use Pow with Phoenix is to use a :otp_app
in method calls and set the app environment configuration. It will keep a persistent fallback configuration that you configure in one place.
Pow has three main groups of modules that each can be used individually, or in conjunction with each other:
This group will handle the plug connection. The configuration will be assigned to conn.private[:pow_config]
and passed through the controller to the users' context module. The Plug module has methods to authenticate, create, update, and delete users, and will generate/renew the session automatically.
This group contains all modules related to the Ecto based user schema and context. By default, Pow will use the Pow.Ecto.Context
module to authenticate, create, update and delete users with lookups to the database. However, it's straightforward to extend or write your custom user context. You can do this by setting the :users_context
configuration key.
This group contains the controllers, views, and templates for Phoenix. You only need to set the (session) plug in endpoint.ex
and add the routes to router.ex
. Views and templates are not generated by default, instead, the compiled views and templates in Pow are used. You can generate the templates used by running mix pow.phoenix.gen.templates
. You can also customize flash messages and callback routes by creating your own using :messages_backend
and :routes_backend
.
The registration and session controllers can be changed with your customized versions too, but since the routes are built on compile time, you'll have to set them up in router.ex
with :pow
namespace. For minor pre/post-processing of requests, you can use the :controller_callbacks
option. It exists to make it easier to modify flow with extensions (e.g., send a confirmation email upon user registration).
This module helps build extensions for Pow. There're three extension mix tasks to generate Ecto migrations and phoenix templates.
mix pow.extension.ecto.gen.migrations
mix pow.extension.phoenix.gen.templates
mix pow.extension.phoenix.mailer.gen.templates
Pow ships with a session plug module. You can easily switch it out with a different one. As an example, here's how you do that with Phoenix.Token
:
defmodule MyAppWeb.Pow.Plug do
use Pow.Plug.Base
@session_key :pow_user_token
@salt "user salt"
@max_age 86400
def fetch(conn, config) do
conn = Plug.Conn.fetch_session(conn)
token = Plug.Conn.get_session(conn, @session_key)
MyAppWeb.Endpoint
|> Phoenix.Token.verify(@salt, token, max_age: @max_age)
|> maybe_load_user(conn)
end
defp maybe_load_user({:ok, user_id}, conn), do: {conn, MyApp.Repo.get(User, user_id)}
defp maybe_load_user({:error, _any}, conn), do: {conn, nil}
def create(conn, user, config) do
token = Phoenix.Token.sign(MyAppWeb.Endpoint, @salt, user.id)
conn =
conn
|> Plug.Conn.fetch_session()
|> Plug.Conn.put_session(@session_key, token)
{conn, user}
end
def delete(conn, config) do
conn
|> Plug.Conn.fetch_session()
|> Plug.Conn.delete_session(@session_key)
end
end
defmodule MyAppWeb.Endpoint do
# ...
plug MyAppWeb.Pow.Plug, otp_app: :my_app
end
The user module has a fallback changeset/2
method. If you want to add custom validations, you can use the pow_changeset/2
method like so:
defmodule MyApp.Users.User do
use Ecto.Schema
use Pow.Ecto.Schema
schema "users" do
field :custom, :string
pow_user_fields()
timestamps()
end
def changeset(user_or_changeset, attrs) do
user_or_changeset
|> pow_changeset(attrs)
|> Ecto.Changeset.cast(attrs, [:custom])
|> Ecto.Changeset.validate_required([:custom])
end
end
Controllers in Pow are very slim and consists of just one Pow.Plug
method call with response methods. If you wish to change the flow of the Pow.Phoenix.RegistrationController
and Pow.Phoenix.SessionController
, the best way is to create your own and modify router.ex
.
However, to make it easier to integrate extension, you can add callbacks to the controllers that do some light pre/post-processing of the request:
defmodule MyCustomExtension.Phoenix.ControllerCallbacks do
use Pow.Extension.Phoenix.ControllerCallbacks.Base
def before_respond(Pow.Phoenix.RegistrationController, :create, {:ok, user, conn}, _config) do
# send email
{:ok, user, conn}
end
end
You can add methods for before_process/4
(before the action happens) and before_respond/4
(before parsing the results from the action).
To test with authenticated users in your controller tests, you just have to assign the user to the conn in your setup callback:
setup %{conn: conn} do
user = %User{email: "test@example.com"}
conn = Pow.Plug.assign_current_user(conn, user, otp_app: :my_app)
{:ok, conn: conn}
end
All templates can be generated and modified to use your Gettext module.
For flash messages, you can create the following module:
defmodule MyAppWeb.Pow.Messages do
use Pow.Phoenix.Messages
use Pow.Extension.Phoenix.Messages,
extensions: [PowResetPassword]
import MyAppWeb.Gettext
def user_not_authenticated(_conn), do: gettext("You need to sign in to see this page.")
# Message methods for extensions has to be prepended with the snake cased
# extension name. So the `email_has_been_sent/1` method from
# `PowResetPassword` is written as `pow_reset_password_email_has_been_sent/1`
# in your messages module.
def pow_reset_password_email_has_been_sent(_conn), do: gettext("An email with reset instructions has been sent to you. Please check your inbox.")
end
Add messages_backend: MyAppWeb.Pow.Messages
to your configuration. You can find all the messages in Pow.Phoenix.Messages
and [Pow Extension].Phoenix.Messages
.
You can customize callback routes by creating the following module:
defmodule MyAppWeb.Pow.Routes do
use Pow.Phoenix.Routes
alias MyAppWeb.Router.Helpers, as: Routes
def after_sign_in_path(conn), do: Routes.some_path(conn, :index)
end
Add routes_backend: MyAppWeb.Pow.Routes
to your configuration. You can find all the routes in Pow.Phoenix.Routes
.
Pow.Ecto.Schema.Password
is used to hash and verify with Pbkdf2. It's highly recommended to lower the iterations count in your test environment to speed up your tests:
config :pow, Pow.Ecto.Schema.Password, iterations: 1
You can change the password hashing function easily. For example, this is how you use comeonin with Argon2:
defmodule MyApp.Users.User do
use Ecto.Schema
use Pow.Ecto.Schema,
password_hash_methods: {&Argon2.hash_pwd_salt/1,
&Argon2.verify_pass/2}
# ...
end
You can use Pow.Plug.current_user/1
to fetch the current user from the connection.
This can be used to show the sign in or sign out links in your Phoenix template:
<%= if Pow.Plug.current_user(@conn) do %>
<span><%= link "Sign out", to: Routes.pow_session_path(@conn, :delete), method: :delete %></span>
<% else %>
<span><%= link "Register", to: Routes.pow_registration_path(@conn, :new) %></span>
<span><%= link "Sign in", to: Routes.pow_session_path(@conn, :new) %></span>
<% end %>
The current user can also be fetched by using the template assigns set in the configuration with :current_user_assigns_key
(defaults to @current_user
).
Enables session-based authorization. The user struct will be collected from a cache store through a GenServer using a unique token generated for the session. The token will be reset every time the authorization level changes (handled by Pow.Plug
) or after a certain interval (default 15 minutes).
The user struct fetched can be out of sync with the database if the row in the database is updated by actions outside Pow. In this case, it's recommended to add a plug that reloads the user struct and reassigns it to the connection.
Custom metadata can be set for the session by assigning a private :pow_session_metadata
key in the conn. Read the Pow.Plug.Session
module docs for more details.
By default Pow.Store.Backend.EtsCache
is started automatically and can be used in development and test environment.
For a production environment, you should use a distributed, persistent cache store. Pow makes this easy with Pow.Store.Backend.MnesiaCache
. To start MnesiaCache in your Phoenix app, add it to your application.ex
supervisor:
defmodule MyApp.Application do
use Application
def start(_type, _args) do
children = [
MyApp.Repo,
MyAppWeb.Endpoint,
Pow.Store.Backend.MnesiaCache
# # Or in a distributed system:
# {Pow.Store.Backend.MnesiaCache, extra_db_nodes: {Node, :list, []}},
# Pow.Store.Backend.MnesiaCache.Unsplit # Recover from netsplit
]
opts = [strategy: :one_for_one, name: MyAppWeb.Supervisor]
Supervisor.start_link(children, opts)
end
# ...
end
Update config/config.ex
with :cache_store_backend
key:
config :my_app, :pow,
# ...
cache_store_backend: Pow.Store.Backend.MnesiaCache
Remember to add :mnesia
to your :extra_applications
so it'll be available for your release build. Mnesia will write files to the current working directory. The path can be changed with config :mnesia, dir: '/path/to/dir'
.
The MnesiaCache requires write access. If you've got a read-only file system you should take a look at the Redis cache backend store guide.
Will halt connection if no current user is not present in assigns. Expects an :error_handler
option.
Will halt connection if a current user is present in assigns. Expects an :error_handler
option.
If you're currently using Coherence, you can migrate your app to use Pow instead. Follow the instructions in Coherence migration guide.
See security practices.
PowAssent - Multi-provider support for Pow with strategies for Twitter, Github, Google, Facebook and more
Please read CONTRIBUTING.md.
(The MIT License)
Copyright (c) 2018-2019 Dan Schultzer & the Contributors
Permission is hereby granted, free of charge, to any person obtaining a copy of this software and associated documentation files (the 'Software'), to deal in the Software without restriction, including without limitation the rights to use, copy, modify, merge, publish, distribute, sublicense, and/or sell copies of the Software, and to permit persons to whom the Software is furnished to do so, subject to the following conditions:
The above copyright notice and this permission notice shall be included in all copies or substantial portions of the Software.
THE SOFTWARE IS PROVIDED 'AS IS', WITHOUT WARRANTY OF ANY KIND, EXPRESS OR IMPLIED, INCLUDING BUT NOT LIMITED TO THE WARRANTIES OF MERCHANTABILITY, FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE AND NONINFRINGEMENT. IN NO EVENT SHALL THE AUTHORS OR COPYRIGHT HOLDERS BE LIABLE FOR ANY CLAIM, DAMAGES OR OTHER LIABILITY, WHETHER IN AN ACTION OF CONTRACT, TORT OR OTHERWISE, ARISING FROM, OUT OF OR IN CONNECTION WITH THE SOFTWARE OR THE USE OR OTHER DEALINGS IN THE SOFTWARE.