Tiddle provides Devise strategy for token authentication in API-only Ruby on Rails applications. Its main feature is support for multiple tokens per user.
Tiddle is lightweight and non-configurable. It does what it has to do and leaves some manual implementation to you.
Add this line to your application's Gemfile:
gem 'tiddle'
And then execute:
$ bundle
- Add
:token_authenticatable
inside your Devise-enabled model:
class User < ActiveRecord::Base
devise :database_authenticatable, :registerable,
:recoverable, :trackable, :validatable,
:token_authenticatable
end
- Generate the model which stores authentication tokens. The model name is not important, but the Devise-enabled model should have association called
authentication_tokens
.
rails g model AuthenticationToken body:string:index user:references last_used_at:datetime expires_in:integer ip_address:string user_agent:string
class User < ActiveRecord::Base
has_many :authentication_tokens
end
body
, last_used_at
, ip_address
and user_agent
fields are required.
- Customize
Devise::SessionsController
. You need to create and return token in#create
and expire the token in#destroy
.
class Users::SessionsController < Devise::SessionsController
def create
user = warden.authenticate!(auth_options)
token = Tiddle.create_and_return_token(user, request)
render json: { authentication_token: token }
end
def destroy
Tiddle.expire_token(current_user, request) if current_user
render json: {}
end
private
# this is invoked before destroy and we have to override it
def verify_signed_out_user
end
end
- Require authentication for some controller:
class PostsController < ApplicationController
before_action :authenticate_user!
def index
render json: Post.all
end
end
- Send
X-USER-EMAIL
andX-USER-TOKEN
as headers of every request which requires authentication.
You can read more in a blog post dedicated to Tiddle - http://adamniedzielski.github.io/blog/2015/04/04/token-authentication-with-tiddle/
The safest solution in API-only application is not to rely on Rails session at all and disable it. Put this line in your application.rb
:
config.middleware.delete ActionDispatch::Session::CookieStore
More: http://adamniedzielski.github.io/blog/2015/04/04/token-authentication-with-tiddle/#rails-session
Change config.authentication_keys
in Devise intitializer and Tiddle will use this value.
Usually it makes sense to remove user's tokens after a password change. Depending on the project and on your taste, this can be done using various methods like running user.authentication_tokens.destroy_all
after the password change or with an after_save
callback in your model which runs authentication_tokens.destroy_all if encrypted_password_changed?
.
In case of a security breach, remove all existing tokens.
Tokens are expiring after certain period of inactivity. This behavior is optional. If you want your token to expire, create it passing expires_in
option:
token = Tiddle.create_and_return_token(user, request, expires_in: 1.month)