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πŸ” JSON Server Auth

JWT authentication middleware for JSON Server

Because you also need a fake authentication & authorization flow for your prototyping.

Getting started

Install both JSON Server and JSON Server Auth :

# NPM
npm install -D json-server json-server-auth

# Yarn
yarn add -D json-server json-server-auth

Create a db.json file with a users collection :

{
  "users": []
}

Start JSON server (with JSON server Auth as middleware) :

json-server db.json -m ./node_modules/json-server-auth
# with json-server installed globally and json-server-auth installed locally
πŸ“’ but wait !

As a convenience, json-server-auth CLI exposes json-server bundled with its middlewares :

json-server-auth db.json
# with json-server-auth installed globally

It exposes and works the same for all JSON Server flags.

Authentication flow πŸ”‘

JSON Server Auth adds a simple JWT based authentication flow.

Register πŸ‘₯

Any of the following routes registers a new user :

  • POST /register
  • POST /signup
  • POST /users

email and password are required in the request body :

POST /register
{
  "email": "olivier@mail.com",
  "password": "bestPassw0rd"
}

The password is encrypted by bcryptjs.

The response contains the JWT access token (expiration time of 1 hour), and the user data (without the password) :

201 Created
{
  "accessToken": "xxx.xxx.xxx",
  "user": {
    "id": 1,
    "email": "olivier@mail.com"
  }
}
Other properties

Any other property can be added to the request body without being validated :

POST /register
{
  "email": "olivier@mail.com",
  "password": "bestPassw0rd",
  "firstname": "Olivier",
  "lastname": "Monge",
  "age": 32
}
Update

Any update to an existing user (via PATCH or PUT methods) will go through the same process for email and password.

Login πŸ›‚

Any of the following routes logs an existing user in :

  • POST /login
  • POST /signin

email and password are required, of course :

POST /login
{
  "email": "olivier@mail.com",
  "password": "bestPassw0rd"
}

The response contains the JWT access token (expiration time of 1 hour), and the user data (without the password) :

200 OK
{
  "accessToken": "xxx.xxx.xxx",
  "user": {
    "id": 1,
    "email": "olivier@mail.com",
    "firstname": "Olivier",
    "lastname": "Monge"
  }
}

JWT payload πŸ“‡

The access token has the following claims :

  • sub : the user id (as per the JWT specs).
  • email : the user email.

Authorization flow πŸ›‘οΈ

JSON Server Auth provides generic guards as route middlewares.

To handle common use cases, JSON Server Auth draws inspiration from Unix filesystem permissions, especialy the numeric notation.

  • We add 4 for read permission.
  • We add 2 for write permission.

Of course CRUD is not a filesystem, so we don't add 1 for execute permission.

Similarly to Unix, we then have three digits to match each user type :

  • First digit are the permissions for the resource owner.
  • Second digit are the permissions for the logged-in users.
  • Third digit are the permissions for the public users.

For example, 640 means that only the owner can write the resource, logged-in users can read the resource, and public users cannot access the resource at all.

The resource owner πŸ›€

A user is the owner of a resource if that resource has a userId property that matches his id property. Example:

// The owner of
{ id: 8, text: 'blabla', userId: 1 }
// is
{ id: 1, email: 'olivier@mail.com' }

Private guarded routes will use the JWT sub claim (which equals the user id) to check if the user actually owns the requested resource, by comparing sub with the userId property.

Except for the actual users collection, where the JWT sub claim must match the id property.

Guarded routes πŸš₯

Guarded routes exist at the root and can restrict access to any resource you put after them :

Route Resource permissions
/664/* User must be logged to write the resource.
Everyone can read the resource.
/660/* User must be logged to write or read the resource.
/644/* User must own the resource to write the resource.
Everyone can read the resource.
/640/* User must own the resource to write the resource.
User must be logged to read the resource.
/600/* User must own the resource to write or read the resource.
/444/* No one can write the resource.
Everyone can read the resource.
/440/* No one can write the resource.
User must be logged to read the resource.
/400/* No one can write the resource.
User must own the resource to read the resource.

Examples

  • Public user (not logged-in) does the following requests :
Request Response
GET /664/posts 200 OK
POST /664/posts
{text: 'blabla'}
401 UNAUTHORIZED
  • Logged-in user with id: 1 does the following requests :
Request Response
GET /600/users/1
Authorization: Bearer xxx.xxx.xxx
200 OK
GET /600/users/23
Authorization: Bearer xxx.xxx.xxx
403 FORBIDDEN

Setup permissions πŸ’‘

Of course, you don't want to directly use guarded routes in your requests. We can take advantage of JSON Server custom routes feature to setup resource permissions ahead.

Create a routes.json file :

{
  "/users*": "/600/users$1",
  "/messages*": "/640/messages$1"
}

Then :

json-server db.json -m ./node_modules/json-server-auth -r routes.json
# with json-server installed globally and json-server-auth installed locally
πŸ“’ but wait !

As a convenience, json-server-auth CLI allows you to define permissions in a more succinct way :

{
  "users": 600,
  "messages": 640
}

Then :

json-server-auth db.json -r routes.json
# with json-server-auth installed globally

You can still add any other normal custom routes :

{
  "users": 600,
  "messages": 640,
  "/posts/:category": "/posts?category=:category"
}

Module usage πŸ”©

If you go the programmatic way and use JSON Server as a module, there is an extra step to properly integrate JSON Server Auth :

⚠️ You must bind the router property db to the created app, like the JSON Server CLI does, and you must apply the middlewares in a specific order.

const jsonServer = require('json-server')
const auth = require('json-server-auth')

const app = jsonServer.create()
const router = jsonServer.router('db.json')

// /!\ Bind the router db to the app
app.db = router.db

// You must apply the auth middleware before the router
app.use(auth)
app.use(router)
app.listen(3000)

Permisssions Rewriter

The custom rewriter is accessible via a subproperty :

const auth = require('json-server-auth')

const rules = auth.rewriter({
  // Permission rules
  users: 600,
  messages: 640,
  // Other rules
  '/posts/:category': '/posts?category=:category',
})

// You must apply the middlewares in the following order
app.use(rules)
app.use(auth)
app.use(router)

TODO πŸ“œ

  • Use JSON Server id and foreignKeySuffix parameters
  • Handle query params in list requests to secure guarded routes more precisely
  • Allow configuration of :
    • Users collection name
    • Minimum password length
    • JWT expiry time
    • JWT property name in response
  • Implement JWT Refresh Token
  • Possibility to disable password encryption ?