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@rownd/node
Advanced tools
Use this library to integrate Rownd into your Node.js application. Convenience wrappers are provided for common server implementations.
Use this library to integrate Rownd into your Node.js application. Convenience wrappers are provided for common server implementations.
npm i @rownd/node
Don't see your framework of choice? Open an issue and request it, or contribute it via pull request!
An authenticate
function is provided for use as Express middleware.
It takes the usual req, res, next
arguments and will call next()
if authentication
succeeds or next(err)
if it fails.
Upon successful authentication, the request will be augmented with a tokenInfo
property containing
details about the authenticated token. req.isAuthenticated
will also be set to true
.
Each user's information is cached in memory for a short period of time to speed up subsequent requests.
See the Express example for a working implementation.
Here's an example protecting one route:
const { rownd } = require('@rownd/node');
const { authenticate } = rownd.express;
app.get('/protected-route', authenticate(), (req, res) => {
res.send({
message: 'You are authenticated!',
tokenObj: req.tokenObj,
});
});
Here's an example protecting multiple routes on a certain path prefix:
const { rownd } = require('@rownd/node');
const { authenticate } = rownd.express;
app.use('/protected-path', authenticate());
The authenticate()
function accepts an optional options
object containing the following properties:
fetchUserInfo: boolean (default: false)
- If true
, the user's data will be fetched from the Rownd API and annotated on the request object as req.user
. When present, it will contain a set of key/value pairs that match your application's schema. The user's data will be cached for a short period of time to speed up subsequent requests.errOnInvalidToken: boolean (default: true)
- When true
, the an error will be passed to next(err)
if the token fails to validate. When false
, the token will still be validated, but next()
will be called without an error. req.isAuthenticated
will be false
and req.tokenInfo
will be null
.The SDK exposes the following methods to help you validate user tokens, create or update user records, generate sign-in links, and so on.
Here's a basic usage example:
const Rownd = require("@rownd/node");
const rownd = Rownd.createInstance({
app_key: 'YOUR_ROWND_APP_KEY',
app_secret: 'YOUR_ROWND_APP_SECRET'
});
try {
// Receive a Rownd bearer token within your request headers (e.g., Authorization: Bearer <token>)
let token = headers['authorization'].replace(/^bearer /i, '');
let tokenInfo = await rownd.validateToken(token);
// Available properties: decoded_token, user_id, access_token (the same token you passed into `validateToken()`)
// If you want to grab the user's profile from Rownd
let userInfo = await rownd.fetchUserInfo({ user_id: tokenInfo.user_id });
console.log(userInfo.data); // Print user profile to console
} catch (err) {
// Something went wrong--probably the token was invalid, expired, etc.
}
Most methods return a Promise that will resolve with the result of the call or will reject (throw) if an error occurs, so you should be prepared to handle any errors.
Creates a new instance of the Rownd client. It requires the following object properties as a single argument:
app_key
- Your Rownd application key.app_secret
- Your Rownd application secret.Optionally, you can also pass in the following properties:
timeout
- The number of milliseconds to wait before timing out a request. Defaults to 10 seconds. If you're on a slow network and see any "Request timed out" errors, try increasing this value.Example:
const rownd = Rownd.createInstance({
app_key: 'YOUR_ROWND_APP_KEY',
app_secret: 'YOUR_ROWND_APP_SECRET'
})
Once you have an instance, you can use it to call various Rownd APIs or leverage supported frameworks.
Provides convenience handlers for the Express framework. See the usage section on Express for more information on how to use it.
Validates a Rownd bearer token. Returns a promise that resolves to a token validation payload.
In many cases, you'll retrieve a token from your REST API's Authorization
header. Be sure to strip off the Bearer
portion of the header and just pass the raw token to this method.
If the validation is successful, the resulting object will look approximately like this:
{
decoded_token: {
"jti": "345b7a0f-1ab4-482b-99e7-4466b1cac0ad",
"aud": [
"app:290167281732813315",
],
"sub": "rownd|61f3053251f2420069455976",
"iat": 1660056446,
"https://auth.rownd.io/app_user_id": "71f6ceeb-ee0a-4437-9b44-e6229defbab8",
"https://auth.rownd.io/is_verified_user": true,
"iss": "https://api.dev.rownd.io",
"exp": 1660060046
},
user_id: "71f6ceeb-ee0a-4437-9b44-e6229defbab8",
access_token: "eyJhbGciOiJ....EluFfu9Dg",
}
Retrieves a user's profile from Rownd containing fields that match your Rownd application's schema.
Creates or updates a user's profile in Rownd. The user object must contain an id
property. If the user already exists, the existing profile will be updated. If the user does not exist, a new user/profile will be created.
Example:
let user = await instance.createOrUpdateUser({
id: '71f6ceeb-ee0a-4437-9b44-e6229defbab8',
data: {
first_name: 'Juliet',
email: 'juliet@rose.com'
}
})
Deletes a user and all associated data from Rownd.
Creates a sign-in "magic" link that will automatically sign in a user based on their email address, phone number, etc when they click the link.
Example:
let signInLink = await instance.createSignInLink({
redirect_url: 'https://example.com/dashboard',
email: 'juliet@rose.com',
data: {
first_name: 'Juliet',
}
});
FAQs
Use this library to integrate Rownd into your Node.js application. Convenience wrappers are provided for common server implementations.
The npm package @rownd/node receives a total of 129 weekly downloads. As such, @rownd/node popularity was classified as not popular.
We found that @rownd/node demonstrated a not healthy version release cadence and project activity because the last version was released a year ago. It has 4 open source maintainers collaborating on the project.
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