Huge News!Announcing our $40M Series B led by Abstract Ventures.Learn More
Socket
Sign inDemoInstall
Socket

@jmondi/oauth2-server

Package Overview
Dependencies
Maintainers
1
Versions
108
Alerts
File Explorer

Advanced tools

Socket logo

Install Socket

Detect and block malicious and high-risk dependencies

Install

@jmondi/oauth2-server

[![GitHub Workflow Status](https://img.shields.io/github/workflow/status/jasonraimondi/typescript-oauth2-server/Tests?label=tests&style=flat-square)](https://github.com/jasonraimondi/typescript-oauth2-server) [![Test Coverage](https://api.codeclimate.com/

  • 0.2.0-beta.4
  • npm
  • Socket score

Version published
Maintainers
1
Created
Source

@jmondi/oauth2-server

GitHub Workflow Status Test Coverage Maintainability GitHub package.json version NPM Downloads

@jmondi/oauth2-server is a standards compliant implementation of an OAuth 2.0 authorization server for Node, written in TypeScript.

Requires node >= 12

Out of the box it supports the following grants:

The following RFCs are implemented:

@TODO

:construction_worker: This project is under development :construction:

  • fix: output structure being uploaded to npm
  • feat: flag for require code_challenge for public clients
  • feat: token introspection
  • chore: documentation

Installing

npm install @jmondi/oauth2-server

Implementation

about entity interfaces

about repository interfaces

then authorization server

then enable grants

// this should go last as example implemenations See the In Memory example that uses Express

The server uses two endpoints, GET /authorize and POST /token.

const authorizationServer = new AuthorizationServer();
authorizationServer.enableGrantType(new ClientCredentialsGrant(...);
authorizationServer.enableGrantType(new AuthCodeGrant(...);
authorizationServer.enableGrantType(new RefreshTokenGrant(...);

Using in Express

const app = Express();

app.use(json());
app.use(urlencoded({ extended: false }));

The /token endpoint

The /token endpoint is a back channel endpoint that issues a useable access token.

app.post("/token", async (req: Express.Request, res: Express.Response) => {
  const response = new OAuthResponse(res);
  try {
    const oauthResponse = await authorizationServer.respondToAccessTokenRequest(req, response);
    return handleResponse(req, res, oauthResponse);
  } catch (e) {
    handleError(e, res);
    return;
  }
});

The /authorize endpoint

The /authorize endpoint is a front channel endpoint that issues an authorization code. The authorization code can then be exchanged to the AuthorizationServer endpoint for a useable access token.

The endpoint should redirect the user to login, and then to accept the scopes requested by the application, and only when the user accepts, should it send the user back to the clients redirect uri.

app.get("/authorize", async (req: Express.Request, res: Express.Response) => {
  const request = new OAuthRequest(req);

  try {
    // Validate the HTTP request and return an AuthorizationRequest object.
    const authRequest = await authorizationServer.validateAuthorizationRequest(request);

    // The auth request object can be serialized and saved into a user's session.
    // You will probably want to redirect the user at this point to a login endpoint.

    // Once the user has logged in set the user on the AuthorizationRequest
    console.log("Once the user has logged in set the user on the AuthorizationRequest");
    const user = { identifier: "abc", email: "user@example.com" };
    authRequest.user = user;

    // At this point you should redirect the user to an authorization page.
    // This form will ask the user to approve the client and the scopes requested.

    // Once the user has approved or denied the client update the status
    // (true = approved, false = denied)
    authRequest.isAuthorizationApproved = true;

    // Return the HTTP redirect response
    const oauthResponse = await authorizationServer.completeAuthorizationRequest(authRequest);
    return handleResponse(req, res, oauthResponse);
  } catch (e) {
    handleError(e, res);
  }
});

Which Grant?

Deciding which grant to use depends on the type of client the end user will be using.

+-------+
| Start |
+-------+
    V
    |
    
    |
+------------------------+              +-----------------------+
| Have a refresh token?  |>----Yes----->|  Refresh Token Grant  |
+------------------------+              +-----------------------+
    V
    |
    No
    |
+---------------------+                
|     Who is the      |                  +--------------------------+
| Access token owner? |>---A Machine---->| Client Credentials Grant |
+---------------------+                  +--------------------------+
    V
    |
    |
   A User
    |
    |
+----------------------+                
| What type of client? |   
+----------------------+     
    |
    |                                 +---------------------------+
    |>-----------Server App---------->| Auth Code Grant with PKCE |
    |                                 +---------------------------+
    |
    |                                 +---------------------------+
    |>-------Browser Based App------->| Auth Code Grant with PKCE |
    |                                 +---------------------------+
    |
    |                                 +---------------------------+
    |>-------Native Mobile App------->| Auth Code Grant with PKCE |
                                      +---------------------------+

Client Credentials Grant

For machine to machine communications

When applications request an access token to access their own resources, not on behalf of a user.

POST /token HTTP/1.1
Host: example.com
 
grant_type=client_credentials
&client_id=xxxxxxxxxx
&client_secret=xxxxxxxxxx 

Token Response:

HTTP/1.1 200 OK
Content-Type: application/json
Cache-Control: no-store
Pragma: no-cache
 
{
  "access_token":"f",
  "token_type":"bearer",
  "expires_in":3600,
  "refresh_token":"IwOGYzYTlmM2YxOTQ5MGE3YmNmMDFkNTVk",
  "scope":"create"
}

Authorization Code Grant with PKCE

A temporary code that the client will exchange for an access token. The user authorizes the application, they are redirected back to the application with a temporary code in the URL. The application exchanges that code for the access token.

If the client is unable to keep a secret, the client secret should be undefined and should not be used during the authorization_code flow.

  • response_type=code – indicates that your server expects to receive an authorization code
  • client_id= – The client ID you received when you first created the application
  • redirect_uri= – Indicates the URL to return the user to after authorization is complete, such as org.example.app://redirect
  • state=1234zyx – A random string generated by your application, which you’ll verify later
  • code_challenge=XXXXXXXXX – The code challenge generated as previously described
  • code_challenge_method=S256 – Either plain or S256, depending on whether the challenge is the plain verifier string or the SHA256 hash of the string. If this parameter is omitted, the server will assume plain.
const code_verifier = base64urlencode(crypto.randomBytes(40));
const code_challenge = base64urlencode(crypto.createHash("sha256").update(codeVerifier).digest("hex"));

A complete authorization request will include the following parameters

GET /authorize HTTP/1.1
Host: example.com
 
id=123
&response_type=code
&client_id=xxxxxxx
&redirect_uri=http://localhost
&scope=xxxx
&state=xxxx
&code_challenge=xxxx
&code_challenge_method=s256

A complete access token request will include the following parameters:

POST /token HTTP/1.1
Host: example.com
 
grant_type=authorization_code
&code=xxxxxxxxx
&redirect_uri=xxxxxxxxxx
&client_id=xxxxxxxxxx
&code_verifier=xxxxxxxxxx

Refresh Token Grant

Access tokens eventually expire. The refresh_token enables the client to refresh the access token.

A complete refresh token request will include the following parameters:

POST /token HTTP/1.1
Host: example.com
Authorization: Basic Y4NmE4MzFhZGFkNzU2YWRhN
 
grant_type=refresh_token
&refresh_token=xxxxxxxxx
&client_id=xxxxxxxxx
&client_secret=only-required-if-client-has-secret
&scope=xxxxxxxxxx

Implicit Grant

// @todo document

Industry best practice recommends using the Authorization Code Grant without a client secret for native and browser-based apps.

Password Grant

// @todo document

Token Introspection Endpoint

Request

POST /token_info HTTP/1.1
Host: example.com
Authorization: Basic Y4NmE4MzFhZGFkNzU2YWRhN
 
token=MTQ0NjJkZmQ5OTM2NDE1ZTZjNGZmZjI3

Response

HTTP/1.1 200 OK
Host: example.com
Content-Type: application/json; charset=utf-8
 
{
  "active": true,
  "scope": "read write email",
  "client_id": "J8NFmU4tJVgDxKaJFmXTWvaHO",
  "username": "aaronpk",
  "exp": 1437275311
}

Sources

This project was heavily influenced by the PHP League OAuth2 Server and shares a lot of the same ideas.

https://github.com/thephpleague/oauth2-server

https://tools.ietf.org/html/rfc6749#section-4.4

https://www.oauth.com/oauth2-servers/access-tokens/client-credentials/

https://www.oauth.com/oauth2-servers/access-tokens/access-token-response/

https://tools.ietf.org/html/rfc6749#section-4.1

https://tools.ietf.org/html/rfc7636

https://www.oauth.com/oauth2-servers/pkce/

https://www.oauth.com/oauth2-servers/pkce/authorization-request/

FAQs

Package last updated on 01 Oct 2020

Did you know?

Socket

Socket for GitHub automatically highlights issues in each pull request and monitors the health of all your open source dependencies. Discover the contents of your packages and block harmful activity before you install or update your dependencies.

Install

Related posts

SocketSocket SOC 2 Logo

Product

  • Package Alerts
  • Integrations
  • Docs
  • Pricing
  • FAQ
  • Roadmap
  • Changelog

Packages

npm

Stay in touch

Get open source security insights delivered straight into your inbox.


  • Terms
  • Privacy
  • Security

Made with ⚡️ by Socket Inc