This is an example of how to protect API endpoints with auth0, JSON Web Tokens (jwt) and a custom authorizer lambda function.
Custom Authorizers allow you to run an AWS Lambda Function before your targeted AWS Lambda Function. This is useful for Microservice Architectures or when you simply want to do some Authorization before running your business logic.
- Protect API routes for authorized users
- Rate limiting APIs
-
npm install
json web token dependencies -
Setup an auth0 client and get your
client id
andclient secrets
from auth0. -
Plugin your
AUTH0_CLIENT_ID
andAUTH0_CLIENT_SECRET
in a new file calledsecrets.json
. These will be used by the JSON web token decoder to validate private api access. -
Deploy the service with
serverless-deploy
and grab the public and private endpoints. -
Plugin your
AUTH0_CLIENT_ID
,AUTH0_DOMAIN
, and thePUBLIC_ENDPOINT
+PRIVATE_ENDPOINT
from aws in top of thefrontend/app.js
file.
/* frontend/app.js */
// replace these values in app.js
const AUTH0_CLIENT_ID = 'your-auth0-client-id-here';
const AUTH0_DOMAIN = 'your-auth0-domain-here.auth0.com';
const PUBLIC_ENDPOINT = 'https://your-aws-endpoint-here.amazonaws.com/dev/api/public';
const PRIVATE_ENDPOINT = 'https://your-aws-endpoint-here.us-east-1.amazonaws.com/dev/api/private';
- Deploy Frontend to host of your choosing and make sure to configure the
Allowed Callback URL
andAllowed Origins
in your auth0 client in the auth0 dashboard. We usedhttp://auth0-serverless-protected-routes-demo.surge.sh/
for our demo.
Custom authorizers functions are executed before a Lambda function is executed and return an Error or a Policy document.
The Custom authorizer function is passed an event
object as below:
{
"type": "TOKEN",
"authorizationToken": "<Incoming bearer token>",
"methodArn": "arn:aws:execute-api:<Region id>:<Account id>:<API id>/<Stage>/<Method>/<Resource path>"
}
The frontend is a bare bones vanilla javascript implementation.
You can replace it with whatever frontend framework you like =)
If you do implement in another framework, please consider adding it our growing list of examples!
API calls are made with the browser's native fetch
api.