Authentication for microservices. This is collection of the following modules:
Authentic is a collection of modules to help your various services authenticate a user. Put more concretely, Authentic does the following:
- Allow your users to "sign up", "confirm", "log in", and "change password" with their email address and a chosen password (persisted to a db of your choice), and provide an authentication token (JWT) on successful log in.
- Easily protect access to your microservice by decrypting a user's authentication token.
- Help make requests from the browser to
authentic-server
for sign up/confirm/login/password reset, as well as automatically including the authentication token in requests to your microservices.
There's also a more full introduction to Authentic.
Let's pretend you work at ScaleHaus (Uber meets Airbnb for lizards). You have a web app at admin.scalehaus.io
(client-side SPA) that is an interface to various microservices (like reporting.scalehaus.io
). You want to make sure that only employees with a @scalehaus.io
email address have access to your app and microservices. Here's how you can do it:
-
Create an authentication server with authentic-server available at
auth.scalehaus.io
. -
Add views to
admin.scalehaus.io
for signup/confirm/login/reset-password and use authentic-client for those actions and for requests to your microservices. -
In your microservice(s), e.g.
reports.scalehaus.io
, use authentic-service to decrypt the authentication token provided in the request and verify the user's identity and that their email ends in@scalehaus.io
.
It's best to install each module individually in the project that needs it. In theory, you could have a single project that needs to be the server, client, and service -- in that case feel free to npm install --save authentic
. Otherwise use npm install --save authentic-server
, npm install --save authentic-service
, or npm install --save authentic-client
depending on your project.
var fs = require('fs')
var http = require('http')
var Authentic = require('authentic').server
var auth = Authentic({
db: './userdb',
publicKey: fs.readFileSync('/rsa-public.pem'),
privateKey: fs.readFileSync('/rsa-private.pem'),
sendEmail: function (email, cb) {
// send the email however you'd like and call cb()
}
})
http.createServer(auth).listen(1337)
console.log('Authentic Server listening on port', 1337)
Authentic provides a token decrypt function for easy use, but since everything is standard JWT, feel free to use your own (authentic-server
exposes its public-key by default at /auth/public-key
).
var http = require('http')
var Authentic = require('authentic').service
var auth = Authentic({
server: 'https://auth.scalehaus.io'
})
http.createServer(function (req, res) {
// Step 1: decrypt the token
auth(req, res, function (err, authData) {
if (err) return console.error(err)
// Step 2: if we get an email and it's one we like, let them in!
if (authData && authData.email.match(/@scalehaus\.io$/)) {
res.writeHead(200)
res.end('You\'re in!')
// otherwise, keep them out!
} else {
res.writeHead(403)
res.end('Nope.')
}
})
}).listen(1338)
console.log('Protected microservice listening on port', 1338)
Authentic provides a HTTP JSON client for easy use, but since everything is standard JWT, feel free to use your own.
var Authentic = require('authentic').client
var auth = Authentic({
server: 'https://auth.scalehaus.io'
})
var creds = {
email: 'chet@scalehaus.io',
password: 'notswordfish'
}
// Step 1: log in
auth.login(creds, function (err) {
if (err) return console.error(err)
// Step 2: make a JSON request with authentication
var url = 'https://reporting.scalehaus.io/report'
auth.get(url, function (err, data) {
if (err) return console.error(err)
// show that report
console.log(data)
})
})
MIT