Passport: The Hidden Manual
- Intro
- Passport class
- passport.initialize()
- passport.session(options)
- passport.authenticate(strategyName, options, callback)
- passport.authorize(strategyName, options, callback)
- passport.use(strategyName, strategy)
- passport.serializeUser(fn(user, done) | fn(req, user, done))
- passport.deserializeUser(fn(serializedUser, done) | fn(req, serializedUser, done))
- Strategies
- Functions added to the Request
- Passport and Sessions
The official passport documentation has a long, example driven style. Some people like that. Some people, on the other hand, want to know "when I call this function, what's it going to do?" This is for those people.
If you find inaccuracies, please feel free to open an issue or a PR.
When you import 'passport'
, you get back an instance of the "Passport" class. You can create new passport instances:
import passport from 'passport';
const myPassport = new passport.Passport();
You'd want to do this if you want to use Passport in a library, and you don't want to polute the "global" passport with your authentication strategies.
Returns a middleware which must be called at the start of connect or express based apps. This sets req._passport
, which passport uses all over the place. Calling app.use(passport.initialize())
for more than one passport instance will cause problems.
This will also set up req.login()
and req.logout()
.
"If your application uses persistent login sessions, passport.session()
middleware must also be used." Should be after your session middleware.
This returns a middleware which will try to read a user out of the session; if one is there, it will store the user in req.user
, if not, it will do nothing. Behind the scenes, this:
app.use(passport.session());
is actually the same as:
app.use(passport.authenticate('session'));
which is using the built-in "session strategy". You can customize this behavior by registering your own session strategy.
session()
does take an 'options' object. You can set pass {pauseStrem: true}
to turn on a hacky work-around for problems with really old node.js versions (pre-v0.10). Never set this true.
strategyName is the name of a strategy you've previously registered with passport.use(name, ...)
. This can be an array, in which case the first strategy to succeed, redirect, or error will halt the chain. Auth failures will proceed through each strategy in series, failing if all fail.
This function returns a middleware which runs the strategies. If one of the strategies succeeds, this will set req.user
. If you pass no options or callback, and all strategies fail, this will write a 401 to the response. Note that some strategies may also cause a redirect (OAuth, for example).
Valid options:
- successRedirect - path to redirect to on a success.
- failureRedirect - path to redirect to on a failure (instead of 401).
- failureFlash - True to flash failure messages or a string to use as a flash message for failures (overrides any from the strategy itself).
- successFlash - True to flash success messages or a string to use as a flash message for success (overrides any from the strategy itself).
- successMessage - True to store success message in req.session.messages, or a string to use as override message for success.
- failureMessage - True to store failure message in req.session.messages, or a string to use as override message for failure.
- session - boolean, enables session support (default true)
- failWithError - On failure, call next() with an AuthenticationError instead of just writing a 401.
Note that the entire options
object will be passed on to the strategy as well, so there may be extra options you can pass here defined by the strategy. For example, you can pass a callbackURL
along to an oauth strategy.
callback is an (err, user, info) function. No req, res, or next, because you're supposed to get them from the closure. If authentication fails, user will be false. If authentication succeeds, your callback is called and req.user
is NOT set. You need to set it yourself, via req.login()
:
app.post('/login', function(req, res, next) {
passport.authenticate('local', function(err, user, info) {
if (err) { return next(err); }
if (!user) { return res.redirect('/login'); }
// NEED TO CALL req.login()!!!
req.login(user, next);
})(req, res, next);
});
Don't just set req.user = user
, since this won't update your session.
This isn't really well named, as it has nothing to do with authorization. This function is exactly like passport.authenticate()
, but instead of setting req.user
, it sets req.account
, and it doesn't make any changes to the session.
This is here so if you want to do something like "Link my account to OtherService", you can have a user who is already logged in, and use Passport to retreive their OtherService credentials. Useful for linking to social media platforms and such.
Configure a strategy. Strategies have a "default name" assigned to them, so you don't have to give them a name.
Passport will call this to serialize the user to the session. Should call done(null, user.id).
Undocumented: fn() can be a fn(req, user, done)
. If multiple serializers are registered, they are called in order. Can return 'pass' as err to skip to next serialize.
Passport will call this to deserialize the user from the session. Should call done(null, user).
It can happen that a user is stored in the session, but that user is no longer in your database (maybe the user was deleted, or did something to invalidate their session). In this case, the deserialize function should pass null
or false
for the user, not undefined
.
Undocumented: fn() can be a fn(req, id, done)
. As with serializeUser, serializers are called in order.
Write a custom strategy by extending the SessionStrategy
class from passport-strategy. You can unit test a strategy in isolation with passport-strategy-runner.
import Strategy from 'passport-strategy';
export default class SessionStrategy extends Strategy {
constructor() {
super();
// Set the default name of our strategy
this.name = 'session';
}
/**
* Authenticate a request.
*
* This function should call exactly one of `this.success(user, info)`, `this.fail(challenge, status)`,
* `this.redirect(url, status)`, `this.pass()`, or `this.error(err)`.
* See https://github.com/jaredhanson/passport-strategy#augmented-methods.
*
* @param {Object} req - Request.
* @param {Object} options - The options object passed to `passport.authenticate()`.
* @return {void}
*/
authenticate(req, options) {
if(req.cookie.apikey === '6398d011-d80f-4db1-a36a-5dcee2e259d0') {
this.success({username: 'dave'});
} else {
this.fail();
}
}
}
Note when calling fail()
, the challenge
should be either a challenge string as defined by RFC 7235 S2.1, suitable for including in a WWW-Authenticate header, or else a {message, type}
object, were message
is the message to use a a "flash message", and type
is the flash type (defaults to 'error').
Passport strategies require a verify callback, which is generally a (err, user, options?)
object. options.message
can be used to give a flash message. user
should be false
if the user does not authenticate. err
is meant to indicate a server error, like when your DB is unavailable; you shouldn't set err
if a user fails to authenticate.
Log a user in (causes passport to serialize the user to the session). On completion, req.user will be set.
Removes req.user, and clears the session.
Passport creates a key in the session called session.passport
.
When a request comes in to the passport.session()
middleware, passport runs the built-in 'session' strategy - this calls deserializeUser(session.passport.user, done)
to read the user out of the session, and stores it in req.user.
You can override how passport deserializes a session by creating a new strategy called 'session' and registering it with passport.use()
.
When you call req.login()
, or when a strategy successfully authenticates a user, passport uses the session manager, and essentially does:
serializeUser(req.user, (err, user) => {
if(err) {return done(err);}
session.passport.user = user;
});
Although it's more verbose about it. You can override the session manager by creating your own implementation and setting passport._sm
, but this is not documented or supported, so use at your own risk.