An Elixir Authentication System for Plug-based Web Applications
Ueberauth is two-phase authentication framework that provides a clear API - allowing for many strategies to be created and shared within the community. It is heavily inspired by Omniauth. You could call it a port but it is significantly different in operation - but almost the same by concept. Huge hat tip to Intridea.
Ueberauth provides only the initial authentication challenge, (initial OAuth flow, collecting the information from a login form, etc). It does not authenticate each request, that's up to your application. You could issue a token or put the result into a session for your applications needs. Libraries like Guardian can help you with that aspect of authentication.
The two phases are request
and callback
. These phases are implemented by
Strategies.
Strategies are plugs that decorate or intercept requests (or both).
Strategies implement the two phases and then may allow the request to flow through to your downstream plugs. Implementing the request and callback phases is optional depending on the strategies requirements. If a strategy does not redirect, the request will be decorated with Ueberauth information and allowed to carry on through the pipeline.
See the full list of the strategies on the Wiki.
The request phase is where you request information about the user. This could
be a redirect to an OAuth2 authorization url or a form for collecting username
and password. The request phase is concerned with only the collection of
information. When a request comes in on the request phase url the relevant
strategy will receive the handle_request!
call.
In some cases (default) the application using Ueberauth is responsible for implementing the request phase. That is, you should setup a route to receive the request phase and provide a form etc. In some cases, like OAuth, the request phase is used to redirect your user to a 3rd party site to fulfill the request.
For example, an OAuth strategy for GitHub will receive the request phase url and stop the request, redirecting you to GitHub’s OAuth challenge url with some query parameters. Once you complete the GitHub OAuth flow, the user will be redirected back to the host site to the callback URL.
Another example is simple email/password authentication. A request is made by
the client to the request phase path and the host application displays a form.
The strategy will likely not do anything with the incoming handle_request!
request and simply pass through to the application. Once the form is completed,
the POST should go to the callback url where it is handled (passwords checked,
users created / authenticated).
The callback phase is where the fun happens. Once a successful request phase has been completed, the request phase provider (OAuth provider or host site, etc)
should call the callback URL. The strategy will intercept the request via the callback_phase!
. If successful, it should prepare the connection so the Ueberauth.Auth
struct can be created, or set errors to indicate a failure.
See Ueberauth.Strategy
for more information on constructing the Ueberauth.Auth struct.
Looking for an example? Take a look ueberauth/ueberauth_example.
# mix.exs
def application do
# Add the application to your list of applications.
# This will ensure that it will be included in a release.
[applications: [:logger, :ueberauth]]
end
defp deps do
# Add the dependency
[{:ueberauth, "~> 0.6"}]
end
mix deps.get
In your configuration file (config/config.exs
) provide a list of the providers you intend to use. For example:
config :ueberauth, Ueberauth,
providers: [
facebook: { Ueberauth.Strategy.Facebook, [ opt1: "value", opts2: "value" ] },
github: { Ueberauth.Strategy.Github, [ opt1: "value", opts2: "value" ] }
]
This will define two providers for you. The general structure of the providers value is:
config :ueberauth, Ueberauth,
providers: [
<provider name>: { <Strategy Module>, [ <strategy options> ] }
]
We use the configuration options for defining these to allow for dependency
injection in different environments. The provider name will be used to construct
request and response paths (by default) but will also be returned in the
Ueberauth.Auth
struct as the provider
field.
Once you've setup your providers, in your router you need to configure the plug to run. The plug should run before your application routes.
In phoenix, plug this module in your controller:
defmodule MyApp.AuthController do
use MyApp.Web, :controller
plug Ueberauth
...
end
Its URL matching is done via pattern matching rather than explicit runtime checks so your strategies will only fire for relevant requests.
Now that you have this, your strategies will intercept relevant requests for each strategy for both request and callback phases. The default urls are (for our Facebook & GitHub example)
# Request phase paths
/auth/facebook
/auth/github
# Callback phase paths
/auth/facebook/callback
/auth/github/callback
These paths can be configured on a per strategy basis by setting options on the provider.
Note: These paths are absolute
config :ueberauth, Ueberauth,
base_path: "/login", # default is "/auth"
providers: [
identity: {Ueberauth.Strategies.Identity, [request_path: "/login/identity",
callback_path: "/login/identity/callback"]}
]
Your json serializer can be configured depending on what you have installed in your application. Defaults to Jason.
config :ueberauth, Ueberauth,
json_library: Poison # default is Jason
By default, all callback urls are only available via the "GET"
method. You
can override this via options to your strategy.
providers: [
identity: {Ueberauth.Strategies.Identity, [callback_methods: ["POST"]]}
]
All options that are passed into your strategy are available at runtime to modify the behaviour of the strategy.
See LICENSE.