Implementation of JSON Web Tokens in Rust.
- HS256
- HS384
- HS512
- RS256
- RS384
- RS512
- ES256
- ES384
- ES512
- Sign
- Verify
- iss (issuer) check
- sub (subject) check
- aud (audience) check
- exp (expiration time) check
- nbf (not before time) check
- iat (issued at) check
- jti (JWT id) check
Put this into your Cargo.toml
:
[dependencies]
frank_jwt = "<current version of frank_jwt>"
And this in your crate root:
extern crate frank_jwt;
#[macro_use] extern crate serde_json;
use frank_jwt::{Algorithm, encode, decode};
//HS256
let mut payload = json!({
"key1": "val1",
"key2": "val2"
});
let mut header = json!({});
let secret = "secret123";
let jwt = encode(&header, secret.to_string(), &payload, Algorithm::HS256);
//RS256
use std::env;
let mut payload = json!({
"key1": "val1",
"key2": "val2"
});
let mut header = json!({});
let mut keypath = env::current_dir().unwrap();
keypath.push("some_folder");
keypath.push("my_rsa_2048_key.pem");
let jwt = encode(&header, &keypath.to_path_buf(), &payload, Algorithm::RS256);
let (header, payload) = decode(&jwt, &keypath.to_path_buf(), Algorithm::RS256, &ValidationOptions::default());
The ValidationOptions structure allows for control over which checks should be preformed when decoding a JWT. Calling new on this will provide a default set of values. There is also a dangerous function that will return validation options that doesn't perform any checking.
The default values are:
- Perform expiry check
- Allow 0 leeway for the expiry check.
It's worth noting that if the expiry check is requested and an exp claim is not within the JWT the check will fail validation.
Apache 2.0
cargo test
TODO