@tinacms/auth
This package contains all the Next.js specific code for TinaCloud
Authorize user function
The authorize user function Reaches out to TinaCloud and returns the current user if one exists. The reason for this is to allow one to work with external services and only let those with a TinaCloud account access the backend code.
An example use case might be allowing logged-in users to upload images to cloudinary or S3.
Backend code / Serverless function.
In Next.js you can write backend code in the pages/api/ folder. For more information checkout the Next.js docs.
For our example lets make a file called pages/api/upload.ts.
import { NextApiHandler } from 'next'
import { isAuthorized } from '@tinacms/auth'
const apiHandler: NextApiHandler = async (req, res) => {
const user = await isAuthorized(req)
if (user && user.verified) {
console.log('this user is logged in')
await imageUploadFunction(req, res)
res.json({
validUser: true,
})
return
} else {
console.log('this user NOT is logged in')
res.json({
validUser: false,
})
}
}
export default apiHandler
The isAuthorized function takes in the req and returns undefined if there is no user and returns a TinaCloudUser if the user is logged in.
interface TinaCloudUser {
id: string
email: string
verified: boolean
role: 'admin' | 'user'
enabled: boolean
fullName: string
}
Frontend code
Now in our media manager, or someone in the frontend code that is wrapped with TinaCloudAuthWall we can do the following.
const cms = useCMS()
const tinaCloudClient: Client = cms.api.tina
const uploadImage = async () => {
const req = await tinaCloudClient.fetchWithToken(`/api/upload?clientID=${tinaCloudClient.clientId}`)
console.log({ test: await test.json() })
}
The fetchWithToken function is just the normal fetch function but adds the authorization header with the correct token.
You also have to add two query Params to the request; org which is the current organization and clientID. Both of these can be found in the cms.api.tina.