📚 jwt-auth - Awesome Go Library for Authentication and OAuth
JWT middleware for Golang http servers with many configuration options.
Detailed Description of jwt-auth
jwt-auth
jwt auth middleware in goLang.
If you're interested in using sessions, check out my sessions library!
README Contents:
Quickstart
package main
import (
"net/http"
"log"
"time"
"github.com/adam-hanna/jwt-auth/jwt"
)
var restrictedRoute jwt.Auth
var restrictedHandler = http.HandlerFunc(func(w http.ResponseWriter, r *http.Request) {
w.Write([]byte("Welcome to the secret area!"))
})
var regularHandler = http.HandlerFunc(func(w http.ResponseWriter, r *http.Request) {
w.Write([]byte("Hello, World!"))
})
func main() {
authErr := jwt.New(&restrictedRoute, jwt.Options{
SigningMethodString: "RS256",
PrivateKeyLocation: "keys/app.rsa", // `$ openssl genrsa -out app.rsa 2048`
PublicKeyLocation: "keys/app.rsa.pub", // `$ openssl rsa -in app.rsa -pubout > app.rsa.pub`
RefreshTokenValidTime: 72 * time.Hour,
AuthTokenValidTime: 15 * time.Minute,
Debug: false,
IsDevEnv: true,
})
if authErr != nil {
log.Println("Error initializing the JWT's!")
log.Fatal(authErr)
}
http.HandleFunc("/", regularHandler)
// this will never be available because we never issue tokens
// see login_logout example for how to provide tokens
http.Handle("/restricted", restrictedRoute.Handler(restrictedHandler))
log.Println("Listening on localhost:3000")
http.ListenAndServe("127.0.0.1:3000", nil)
}
Performance
YMMV
$ cd jwt && go test -bench=.
BenchmarkBaseServer-2 10000 137517 ns/op
BenchmarkValidAuthTokenWithCookies-2 5000 303160 ns/op
BenchmarkExpiredAuthTokenWithCookies-2 5000 323933 ns/op
PASS
ok github.com/adam-hanna/jwt-auth/jwt 15.463s
Goals
It is important to understand the objective of this auth architecture. It certainly is not an applicable design for all use cases. Please read and understand the goals, below, and make changes to your own workflow to suit your specific needs.
- Protection of non-critical API's (e.g. not meant for financial, healthcare, gov't, etc. services)
- Stateless
- User sessions
- CSRF protection
- Web and/or mobile
Design
The design of this auth system is based on the three major components, listed below.
- Short-lived (minutes) JWT Auth Token
- Longer-lived (hours/days) JWT Refresh Token
- CSRF secret string
1. Short-lived (minutes) JWT Auth Token
The short-lived jwt auth token allows the user to make stateless requests to protected API endpoints. It has an expiration time of 15 minutes by default and will be refreshed by the longer-lived refresh token.
2. Longer-lived (hours/days) JWT Refresh Token
This longer-lived token will be used to update the auth tokens. These tokens have a 72 hour expiration time by default which will be updated each time an auth token is refreshed.
These refresh tokens contain an id that can be revoked by an authorized client.
3. CSRF Secret String
A CSRF secret string will be provided to each client and will be identical to the CSRF secret in the auth and refresh tokens and will change each time an auth token is refreshed. These secrets will live in an "X-CSRF-Token" response header, by default, but the header key can be set as an option. These secrets will be sent along with the auth and refresh tokens on each API request.
When requests are made to a protected endpoint, this CSRF secret needs to be sent to the server either as a hidden form value with a name of "X-CSRF-Token", in the request header with the key of "X-CSRF-Token", or in the "Authorization" request header with a value of "Bearer " + token. This secret will be checked against the secret provided in the auth token in order to prevent CSRF attacks. It will be refreshed each time the auth token is refreshed from the refresh token.
Cookies or Bearer Tokens?
This API is set up to either use cookies (default) or bearer tokens. To use bearer tokens, set the BearerTokens option equal to true in the config settings.
When using bearer tokens, you'll need to include the auth and (optionally [the]) refresh jwt's (along with your csrf secret) in each request. Include them in the request headers. The keys can be defined in the auth options, but default to "X-Auth-Token" and "X-Refresh-Token", respectively. See the bearerTokens example for sample code of both.
Ideally, if using bearer tokens, they should be stored in a location that cannot be accessed with javascript. You want to be able to separate your csrf secret from your jwt's. If using web, I suggest using cookies. If using mobile, store these in a secure manner!
If you are using cookies, the auth and refresh jwt's will automatically be included. You only need to include the csrf token.
API
Create a new jwt middleware
var restrictedRoute jwt.Auth
JWT middleware options
type Options struct {
SigningMethodString string // one of "HS256", "HS384", "HS512", "RS256", "RS384", "RS512", "ES256", "ES384", "ES512"
PrivateKeyLocation string // only for RSA and ECDSA signing methods; only required if VerifyOnlyServer is false
PublicKeyLocation string // only for RSA and ECDSA signing methods
HMACKey []byte // only for HMAC-SHA signing method
VerifyOnlyServer bool // false = server can verify and issue tokens (default); true = server can only verify tokens
BearerTokens bool // false = server uses cookies to transport jwts (default); true = server uses request headers
RefreshTokenValidTime time.Duration
AuthTokenValidTime time.Duration
AuthTokenName string // defaults to "AuthToken" for cookies and "X-Auth-Token" for bearer tokens
RefreshTokenName string // defaults to "RefreshToken" for cookies and "X-Refresh-Token" for bearer tokens
CSRFTokenName string // defaults to "X-CSRF-Token"
Debug bool // true = more logs are shown
IsDevEnv bool // true = in development mode; this sets http cookies (if used) to insecure; false = production mode; this sets http cookies (if used) to secure
}
ClaimsType
type ClaimsType struct {
// Standard claims are the standard jwt claims from the ietf standard
// https://tools.ietf.org/html/rfc7519
jwt.StandardClaims
Csrf string
CustomClaims map[string]interface{}
}
Note that there is a "CustomClaims" map that allows you to set whatever you want. See "IssueTokenClaims" and "GrabTokenClaims", below, for more.
Initialize new JWT middleware
authErr := jwt.New(&restrictedRoute, jwt.Options{
SigningMethodString: "RS256",
PrivateKeyLocation: "keys/app.rsa", // `$ openssl genrsa -out app.rsa 2048`
PublicKeyLocation: "keys/app.rsa.pub", // `$ openssl rsa -in app.rsa -pubout > app.rsa.pub`
RefreshTokenValidTime: 72 * time.Hour,
AuthTokenValidTime: 15 * time.Minute,
Debug: false,
IsDevEnv: true,
})
if authErr != nil {
log.Println("Error initializing the JWT's!")
log.Fatal(authErr)
}
Handle a restricted route (see below for integration with popular frameworks)
// outside of main()
var restrictedHandler = http.HandlerFunc(func(w http.ResponseWriter, r *http.Request) {
csrfSecret := w.Header().Get("X-CSRF-Token")
claims, err := restrictedRoute.GrabTokenClaims(r)
log.Println(claims)
if err != nil {
http.Error(w, "Internal Server Error", 500)
} else {
templates.RenderTemplate(w, "restricted", &templates.RestrictedPage{ csrfSecret, claims.CustomClaims["Role"].(string) })
}
})
func main() {
...
http.Handle("/restricted", restrictedRoute.Handler(restrictedHandler))
log.Println("Listening on localhost:3000")
http.ListenAndServe("127.0.0.1:3000", nil)
}
Issue new tokens and CSRF secret (for instance, when a user provides valid login credentials)
// in a handler func
claims := jwt.ClaimsType{}
claims.StandardClaims.Id = "fakeTokenId123"
claims.CustomClaims = make(map[string]interface{})
claims.CustomClaims["Role"] = "user"
err := restrictedRoute.IssueNewTokens(w, &claims)
if err != nil {
http.Error(w, "Internal Server Error", 500)
}
w.WriteHeader(http.StatusOK)
Note: a token Id must be provided if you'd later like the ability to revoke this token!
Get a CSRF secret from a response
// in a handler func
// note: this works because if the middleware has made it this far, the JWT middleware has written a CSRF secret to the response writer (w)
csrfSecret := w.Header().Get("X-CSRF-Token")
Get the expiration time of the refresh token, in Unix time
// in a handler func
// note: this works because if the middleware has made it this far, the JWT middleware has written this to the response writer (w)
// note: also, this won't be exact and might be a few milliseconds off from the token's actual expiry
refreshExpirationTime := w.Header().Get("Refresh-Expiry")
Get the expiration time of the auth token, in Unix time
// in a handler func
// note: this works because if the middleware has made it this far, the JWT middleware has written this to the response writer (w)
// note: also, this won't be exact and might be a few milliseconds off from the token's actual expiry
authExpirationTime := w.Header().Get("Auth-Expiry")
Get claims from a request
// in a handler func
claims, err := restrictedRoute.GrabTokenClaims(r)
log.Println(claims)
Nullify auth and refresh tokens (for instance, when a user logs out)
// in a handler func
err = restrictedRoute.NullifyTokens(w, r)
if err != nil {
http.Error(w, "Internal Server Error", 500)
return
}
http.Redirect(w, r, "/login", 302)
Token Id checker
A function is used to check if a refresh token id has been revoked. You can either use a blacklist of revoked tokens, or a whitelist of allowed tokens. Your call. This function simply needs to return true if the token id has not been revoked. This function is run every time an auth token is refreshed.
var restrictedRoute jwt.Auth
// create a database of refresh tokens
// map key is the jti (json token identifier)
// the val doesn't represent anything but could be used to hold "valid", "revoked", etc.
// in the real world, you would store these in your db. This is just an example.
var refreshTokens map[string]string
restrictedRoute.SetCheckTokenIdFunction(CheckRefreshToken)
func CheckRefreshToken(jti string) bool {
return refreshTokens[jti] != ""
}
Token Id revoker
A function that adds a token id to a blacklist of revoked tokens, or revokes it from a whitelist of allowed tokens (however you'd like to do it).
var restrictedRoute jwt.Auth
// create a database of refresh tokens
// map key is the jti (json token identifier)
// the val doesn't represent anything but could be used to hold "valid", "revoked", etc.
// in the real world, you would store these in your db. This is just an example.
var refreshTokens map[string]string
restrictedRoute.SetRevokeTokenFunction(DeleteRefreshToken)
func DeleteRefreshToken(jti string) error {
delete(refreshTokens, jti)
return nil
}
500 error handling
Set the response to a 500 error.
var restrictedRoute jwt.Auth
restrictedRoute.SetErrorHandler(myErrorHandler)
var myErrorHandler = http.HandlerFunc(func(w http.ResponseWriter, r *http.Request) {
http.Error(w, "I pitty the fool who has a 500 internal server error", 500)
return
})
401 unauthorized handling
Set the response to a 401 unauthorized request
var restrictedRoute jwt.Auth
restrictedRoute.SetUnauthorizedHandler(MyUnauthorizedHandler)
var MyUnauthorizedHandler = http.HandlerFunc(func(w http.ResponseWriter, r *http.Request) {
http.Error(w, "I pitty the fool who is unauthorized", 401)
return
})
Integration with popular goLang web Frameworks (untested)
The architecture of this package was inspired by Secure, so I believe the integrations, below, should work. But they are untested.
Echo
package main
import (
"log"
"net/http"
"time"
"github.com/adam-hanna/jwt-auth/jwt"
"github.com/labstack/echo"
)
var restrictedRoute jwt.Auth
func main() {
authErr := jwt.New(&restrictedRoute, jwt.Options{
SigningMethodString: "RS256",
PrivateKeyLocation: "keys/app.rsa", // `$ openssl genrsa -out app.rsa 2048`
PublicKeyLocation: "keys/app.rsa.pub", // `$ openssl rsa -in app.rsa -pubout > app.rsa.pub`
RefreshTokenValidTime: 72 * time.Hour,
AuthTokenValidTime: 15 * time.Minute,
Debug: false,
IsDevEnv: true,
})
if authErr != nil {
log.Println("Error initializing the JWT's!")
log.Fatal(authErr)
}
e := echo.New()
e.GET("/public", func(c echo.Context) error {
c.String(http.StatusOK, "Hello, world!")
return nil
})
e.GET("/restricted", func(c echo.Context) error {
c.String(http.StatusOK, "Restricted")
return nil
}, echo.WrapMiddleware(restrictedRoute.Handler))
e.Logger.Fatal(e.Start(":1323"))
}
Gin
// main.go
package main
import (
"log"
"github.com/gin-gonic/gin"
"github.com/adam-hanna/jwt-auth/jwt"
)
var restrictedRoute jwt.Auth
func main() {
authErr := jwt.New(&restrictedRoute, jwt.Options{
SigningMethodString: "RS256",
PrivateKeyLocation: "keys/app.rsa", // `$ openssl genrsa -out app.rsa 2048`
PublicKeyLocation: "keys/app.rsa.pub", // `$ openssl rsa -in app.rsa -pubout > app.rsa.pub`
RefreshTokenValidTime: 72 * time.Hour,
AuthTokenValidTime: 15 * time.Minute,
Debug: false,
IsDevEnv: true,
})
if authErr != nil {
log.Println("Error initializing the JWT's!")
log.Fatal(authErr)
}
restrictedFunc := func() gin.HandlerFunc {
return func(c *gin.Context) {
err := restrictedRoute.Process(c.Writer, c.Request)
// If there was an error, do not continue.
if err != nil {
return
}
c.Next()
}
}()
router := gin.Default()
router.Use(restrictedFunc)
router.GET("/", func(c *gin.Context) {
c.String(200, "Restricted")
})
router.Run("127.0.0.1:3000")
}
Goji
// main.go
package main
import (
"net/http"
"log"
"github.com/adam-hanna/jwt-auth/jwt"
"github.com/zenazn/goji"
"github.com/zenazn/goji/web"
)
var restrictedRoute jwt.Auth
func main() {
authErr := jwt.New(&restrictedRoute, jwt.Options{
SigningMethodString: "RS256",
PrivateKeyLocation: "keys/app.rsa", // `$ openssl genrsa -out app.rsa 2048`
PublicKeyLocation: "keys/app.rsa.pub", // `$ openssl rsa -in app.rsa -pubout > app.rsa.pub`
RefreshTokenValidTime: 72 * time.Hour,
AuthTokenValidTime: 15 * time.Minute,
Debug: false,
IsDevEnv: true,
})
if authErr != nil {
log.Println("Error initializing the JWT's!")
log.Fatal(authErr)
}
goji.Get("/", func(c web.C, w http.ResponseWriter, req *http.Request) {
w.Write([]byte("Restricted"))
})
goji.Use(restrictedRoute.Handler)
goji.Serve() // Defaults to ":8000".
}
Iris
//main.go
package main
import (
"log"
"github.com/kataras/iris"
"github.com/adam-hanna/jwt-auth/jwt"
)
var restrictedRoute jwt.Auth
func main() {
authErr := jwt.New(&restrictedRoute, jwt.Options{
SigningMethodString: "RS256",
PrivateKeyLocation: "keys/app.rsa", // `$ openssl genrsa -out app.rsa 2048`
PublicKeyLocation: "keys/app.rsa.pub", // `$ openssl rsa -in app.rsa -pubout > app.rsa.pub`
RefreshTokenValidTime: 72 * time.Hour,
AuthTokenValidTime: 15 * time.Minute,
Debug: false,
IsDevEnv: true,
})
if authErr != nil {
log.Println("Error initializing the JWT's!")
log.Fatal(authErr)
}
iris.UseFunc(func(c *iris.Context) {
err := restrictedRoute.Process(c.ResponseWriter, c.Request)
// If there was an error, do not continue.
if err != nil {
return
}
c.Next()
})
iris.Get("/home", func(c *iris.Context) {
c.SendStatus(200,"Restricted")
})
iris.Listen(":8080")
}
Negroni
Note this implementation has a special helper function called HandlerFuncWithNext
.
// main.go
package main
import (
"net/http"
"log"
"github.com/codegangsta/negroni"
"github.com/adam-hanna/jwt-auth/jwt"
)
var restrictedRoute jwt.Auth
func main() {
mux := http.NewServeMux()
mux.HandleFunc("/", func(w http.ResponseWriter, req *http.Request) {
w.Write([]byte("Restricted"))
})
authErr := jwt.New(&restrictedRoute, jwt.Options{
SigningMethodString: "RS256",
PrivateKeyLocation: "keys/app.rsa", // `$ openssl genrsa -out app.rsa 2048`
PublicKeyLocation: "keys/app.rsa.pub", // `$ openssl rsa -in app.rsa -pubout > app.rsa.pub`
RefreshTokenValidTime: 72 * time.Hour,
AuthTokenValidTime: 15 * time.Minute,
Debug: false,
IsDevEnv: true,
})
if authErr != nil {
log.Println("Error initializing the JWT's!")
log.Fatal(authErr)
}
n := negroni.Classic()
n.Use(negroni.HandlerFunc(restrictedRoute.HandlerFuncWithNext))
n.UseHandler(mux)
n.Run("127.0.0.1:3000")
}
TODO
- Clean up the tests
Test Coverage
$ cd jwt && go test -coverprofile=test/coverage.out
coverage: 84.7% of statements
$ go tool cover -html=test/coverage.out
License
The MIT License (MIT)
Copyright (c) 2016 Adam Hanna
Permission is hereby granted, free of charge, to any person obtaining a copy
of this software and associated documentation files (the "Software"), to deal
in the Software without restriction, including without limitation the rights
to use, copy, modify, merge, publish, distribute, sublicense, and/or sell
copies of the Software, and to permit persons to whom the Software is
furnished to do so, subject to the following conditions:
The above copyright notice and this permission notice shall be included in all
copies or substantial portions of the Software.
THE SOFTWARE IS PROVIDED "AS IS", WITHOUT WARRANTY OF ANY KIND, EXPRESS OR
IMPLIED, INCLUDING BUT NOT LIMITED TO THE WARRANTIES OF MERCHANTABILITY,
FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE AND NON-INFRINGEMENT. IN NO EVENT SHALL THE
AUTHORS OR COPYRIGHT HOLDERS BE LIABLE FOR ANY CLAIM, DAMAGES, OR OTHER
LIABILITY, WHETHER IN AN ACTION OF CONTRACT, TORT OR OTHERWISE, ARISING FROM,
OUT OF OR IN CONNECTION WITH THE SOFTWARE OR THE USE OR OTHER DEALINGS IN THE
SOFTWARE.