A Passport strategy for authenticating with a JSON Web Token.
This module lets you authenticate endpoints using a JSON web token. It is intended to be used to secure RESTful endpoints without sessions.
npm install passport-jwt
The JWT authentication strategy is constructed as follows:
new JwtStrategy(options, verify)
options
is an object literal containing options to control how the token is
extracted from the request or verified.
-
secretOrKey
is a REQUIRED string or buffer containing the secret (symmetric) or PEM-encoded public key (asymmetric) for verifying the token's signature. -
jwtFromRequest
(REQUIRED) Function that accepts a request as the only parameter and returns either the JWT as a string or null. See Extracting the JWT from the request for more details. -
issuer
: If defined the token issuer (iss) will be verified against this value. -
audience
: If defined, the token audience (aud) will be verified against this value. -
algorithms
: List of strings with the names of the allowed algorithms. For instance, ["HS256", "HS384"]. -
ignoreExpiration
: if true do not validate the expiration of the token. -
passReqToCallback
: If true the request will be passed to the verify callback. i.e. verify(request, jwt_payload, done_callback).
verify
is a function with the parameters verify(jwt_payload, done)
jwt_payload
is an object literal containing the decoded JWT payload.done
is a passport error first callback accepting arguments done(error, user, info)
An example configuration which reads the JWT from the http Authorization header with the scheme 'JWT':
var JwtStrategy = require('passport-jwt').Strategy,
ExtractJwt = require('passport-jwt').ExtractJwt;
var opts = {}
opts.jwtFromRequest = ExtractJwt.fromAuthHeader();
opts.secretOrKey = 'secret';
opts.issuer = "accounts.examplesoft.com";
opts.audience = "yoursite.net";
passport.use(new JwtStrategy(opts, function(jwt_payload, done) {
User.findOne({id: jwt_payload.sub}, function(err, user) {
if (err) {
return done(err, false);
}
if (user) {
done(null, user);
} else {
done(null, false);
// or you could create a new account
}
});
}));
There are a number of ways the JWT may be included in a request. In order to remain as flexible as
possible the JWT is parsed from the request by a user-supplied callback passed in as the
jwtFromRequest
parameter. This callback, from now on referred to as an extractor,
accepts a request object as an argument and returns the encoded JWT string or null.
A number of extractor factory functions are provided in passport-jwt.ExtractJwt. These factory functions return a new extractor configured with the given parameters.
fromHeader(header_name)
creates a new extractor that looks for the JWT in the given http headerfromBodyField(field_name)
creates a new extractor that looks for the JWT in the given body field. You must have a body parser configured in order to use this method.fromUrlQueryParameter(param_name)
creates a new extractor that looks for the JWT in the given URL query parameter.fromAuthHeaderWithScheme(auth_scheme)
creates a new extractor that looks for the JWT in the authorization header, expecting the scheme to match auth_scheme.fromAuthHeader()
creates a new extractor that looks for the JWT in the authorization header with the scheme 'JWT'
If the supplied extractors don't meet your needs you can easily provide your own callback. For example, if you are using the cookie-parser middleware and want to extract the JWT in a cookie you could use the following function as the argument to the jwtFromRequest option:
var cookieExtractor = function(req) {
var token = null;
if (req && req.cookies)
{
token = req.cookies['jwt'];
}
return token;
};
Use passport.authenticate()
specifying 'JWT'
as the strategy.
app.post('/profile', passport.authenticate('jwt', { session: false}),
function(req, res) {
res.send(req.user.profile);
}
);
The strategy will first check the request for the standard Authorization
header. If this header is present and the scheme matches options.authScheme
or 'JWT' if no auth scheme was specified then the token will be retrieved from
it. e.g.
Authorization: JWT JSON_WEB_TOKEN_STRING.....
If the authorization header with the expected scheme is not found, the request
body will be checked for a field matching either options.tokenBodyField
or
auth_token
if the option was not specified.
Finally, the URL query parameters will be checked for a field matching either
options.tokenQueryParameterName
or auth_token
if the option was not
specified.
The v2 API is not backwards compatible with v1, specifically with regards to the introduction
of the concept of JWT extractor functions. If you require the legacy behavior in v1 you can use
the extractor function versionOneCompatibility(options)
options is an object with any of the three custom JWT extraction options present in the v1 constructor:
tokenBodyField
: Field in a request body to search for the JWT. Default is auth_token.tokenQueryParameterName
: Query parameter name containing the token. Default is auth_token.authScheme
: Expected authorization scheme if token is submitted through the HTTP Authorization header. Defaults to JWT
If in v1 you constructed the strategy like this:
var JwtStrategy = require('passport-jwt').Strategy;
var opts = {}
opts.tokenBodyField = "MY_CUSTOM_BODY_FIELD";
opts.secretOrKey = 'secret';
opts.issuer = "accounts.examplesoft.com";
opts.audience = "yoursite.net";
passport.use(new JwtStrategy(opts, verifyFunction));
Identical behavior can be achieved under v2 with the versionOneCompatibility extractor:
var JwtStrategy = require('passport-jwt').Strategy,
ExtractJwt = require('passport-jwt').ExtractJwt;
var opts = {}
opts.jwtFromRequest = ExtractJwt.versionOneCompatibility({ tokenBodyField = "MY_CUSTOM_BODY_FIELD" });
opts.opts.secretOrKey = 'secret';
opts.issuer = "accounts.examplesoft.com";
opts.audience = "yoursite.net";
passport.use(new JwtStrategy(opts, verifyFunction));
npm install
npm test
To generate test-coverage reports:
npm install -g istanbul
npm run-script testcov
istanbul report
The MIT License
Copyright (c) 2015 Mike Nicholson