fastify-jwt
JWT utils for Fastify, internally uses jsonwebtoken.
Install
npm i fastify-jwt --save
Usage
Register as a plugin. This will decorate your fastify
instance with the standard jsonwebtoken methods decode
, sign
, and verify
; refer to their documentation to find how to use the utilities. It will also register request.jwtVerify
and reply.jwtSign
. You must pass a secret
when registering the plugin.
const fastify = require('fastify')
fastify.register(require('fastify-jwt'), {
secret: 'supersecret'
})
fastify.post('/signup', (req, reply) => {
const token = fastify.jwt.sign({ payload })
reply.send({ token })
})
fastify.listen(3000, err => {
if (err) throw err
})
For verifying & accessing the decoded token inside your services, you can use a global onRequest
hook to define the verification process like so:
const fastify = require('fastify')
fastify.register(require('fastify-jwt'), {
secret: 'supersecret'
})
fastify.addHook("onRequest", async (request, reply) => {
try {
await request.jwtVerify()
} catch (err) {
reply.send(err)
}
})
Aftewards, just use request.user
in order to retrieve the user information:
module.exports = async function(fastify, opts) {
fastify.get("/", async function(request, reply) {
return request.user
})
}
However, most of the time we want to protect only some of the routes in our application. To achieve this you can wrap your authentication logic into a plugin like
const fp = require("fastify-plugin")
module.exports = fp(async function(fastify, opts) {
fastify.register(require("fastify-jwt"), {
secret: "supersecret"
})
fastify.decorate("authenticate", async function(request, reply) {
try {
await request.jwtVerify()
} catch (err) {
reply.send(err)
}
})
})
Then use the preValidation
of a route to protect it & access the user information inside:
module.exports = async function(fastify, opts) {
fastify.get(
"/",
{
preValidation: [fastify.authenticate]
},
async function(request, reply) {
return request.user
}
)
}
Make sure that you also check fastify-auth plugin for composing more complex strategies.
Auth0 tokens verification
If you need to verify Auth0 issued HS256 or RS256 JWT tokens, you can use fastify-auth0-verify, which is based on top of this module.
API Spec
fastify-jwt
fastify-jwt
is a fastify plugin. You must pass a secret
to the options
parameter. The secret
can be a primitive type String, a function that returns a String or an object { private, public }
.
In this object { private, public }
the private
key is a string, buffer or object containing either the secret for HMAC algorithms or the PEM encoded private key for RSA and ECDSA. In case of a private key with passphrase an object { private: { key, passphrase }, public }
can be used (based on crypto documentation), in this case be sure you pass the algorithm
inside the signing options prefixed by the sign
key of the plugin registering options).
In this object { private, public }
the public
key is a string or buffer containing either the secret for HMAC algorithms, or the PEM encoded public key for RSA and ECDSA.
Function based secret
is supported by the request.jwtVerify()
and reply.jwtSign()
methods and is called with request
, token
, and callback
parameters.
Example
const { readFileSync } = require('fs')
const path = require('path')
const fastify = require('fastify')()
const jwt = require('fastify-jwt')
fastify.register(jwt, { secret: 'supersecret' })
fastify.register(jwt, {
secret: function (request, token, callback) {
callback(null, 'supersecret')
}
})
fastify.register(jwt, {
secret: {
private: readFileSync(`${path.join(__dirname, 'certs')}/private.key`, 'utf8'),
public: readFileSync(`${path.join(__dirname, 'certs')}/public.key`, 'utf8')
},
sign: { algorithm: 'RS256' }
})
fastify.register(jwt, {
secret: {
private: {
key: readFileSync(`${path.join(__dirname, 'certs')}/private.pem`),
passphrase: 'super secret passphrase'
},
public: readFileSync(`${path.join(__dirname, 'certs')}/public.pem`)
},
sign: { algorithm: 'ES256' }
})
Optionally you can define global default options that will be used by fastify-jwt
API if you don't override them.
Additionally, it is also possible to reject tokens selectively (i.e: black-listing) by providing the option trusted
with the following signature: (request, decodedToken) => true|false|Promise<true|false>
where request
is a FastifyRequest
and decodedToken
is the parsed (and verified) token information and its result should be true
or Promise<true>
if the token should be accepted and false
or Promise<false>
if the token should be rejected.
Example
const { readFileSync } = require('fs')
const path = require('path')
const fastify = require('fastify')()
const jwt = require('fastify-jwt')
fastify.register(jwt, {
secret: {
private: readFileSync(`${path.join(__dirname, 'certs')}/private.pem`, 'utf8')
public: readFileSync(`${path.join(__dirname, 'certs')}/public.pem`, 'utf8')
},
decode: { complete: true },
sign: {
algorithm: 'ES256',
issuer: 'api.example.tld'
},
verify: { issuer: 'api.example.tld' }
})
fastify.get('/decode', async (request, reply) => {
let altSignOptions = Object.assign({}, fastify.jwt.options.sign)
altSignOptions.issuer = 'another.example.tld'
const token = await reply.jwtSign({ foo: 'bar' })
const tokenAlt = await reply.jwtSign({ foo: 'bar' }, altSignOptions)
const decodedToken = fastify.jwt.decode(token)
const decodedTokenAlt = fastify.jwt.decode(tokenAlt, { complete: false })
return { decodedToken, decodedTokenAlt }
})
fastify.listen(3000, err => {
if (err) throw err
})
Example using cookie
In some situations you may want to store a token in a cookie. This allows you to drastically reduce the attack surface of XSS on your webapp with the httpOnly
and secure
flags. Cookies can be susceptible to CSRF. You can mitigate this by either setting the sameSite
flag to strict
, or by using a CSRF library such as fastify-csrf
.
Note: This plugin will look for a decorated request with the cookies
property. fastify-cookie
supports this feature, and therefore you should use it when using the cookie feature. The plugin will fallback to looking for the token in the authorization header if either of the following happens (even if the cookie option is enabled):
- The request has both the authorization and cookie header
- Cookie is empty, authorization header is present
const fastify = require('fastify')()
const jwt = require('fastify-jwt')
fastify.register(jwt, {
secret: 'foobar'
cookie: {
cookieName: 'token'
}
})
fastify
.register(require('fastify-cookie'))
fastify.get('/cookies', async (request, reply) => {
const token = await reply.jwtSign({
name: 'foo',
role: ['admin', 'spy']
})
reply
.setCookie('token', token, {
domain: 'your.domain',
path: '/',
secure: true,
httpOnly: true,
sameSite: true
})
.code(200)
.send('Cookie sent')
})
fastify.addHook('onRequest', (request) => request.jwtVerify())
fastify.get('/verifycookie', (request, reply) => {
reply.send({ code: 'OK', message: 'it works!' })
})
fastify.listen(3000, err => {
if (err) throw err
})
Example trusted tokens
const fastify = require('fastify')()
fastify.register(require('fastify-jwt'), {
secret: 'foobar',
trusted: validateToken
})
fastify.addHook('onRequest', (request) => request.jwtVerify())
fastify.get('/', (request, reply) => {
reply.send({ code: 'OK', message: 'it works!' })
})
fastify.listen(3000, (err) => {
if (err) {
throw err
}
})
async function validateToken(request, decodedToken) {
const blacklist = ['token1', 'token2']
return blacklist.includes(decodedToken.jti)
}
fastify.jwt.sign(payload [,options] [,callback])
The sign
method is an implementation of jsonwebtoken .sign()
. Can be used asynchronously by passing a callback function; synchronously without a callback.
fastify.jwt.verify(token, [,options] [,callback])
The verify
method is an implementation of jsonwebtoken .verify()
. Can be used asynchronously by passing a callback function; synchronously without a callback.
Example
const token = fastify.jwt.sign({ foo: 'bar' })
const decoded = fastify.jwt.verify(token)
fastify.jwt.verify(token, (err, decoded) => {
if (err) fastify.log.error(err)
fastify.log.info(`Token verified. Foo is ${decoded.foo}`)
})
fastify.jwt.decode(token [,options])
The decode
method is an implementation of jsonwebtoken .decode()
. Can only be used synchronously.
Example
const token = fastify.jwt.sign({ foo: 'bar' })
const decoded = fastify.jwt.decode(token)
fastify.log.info(`Decoded JWT: ${decoded}`)
fastify.jwt.options
For your convenience, the decode
, sign
, verify
and messages
options you specify during .register
are made available via fastify.jwt.options
that will return an object { decode, sign, verify, messages }
containing your options.
Example
const { readFileSync } = require('fs')
const path = require('path')
const fastify = require('fastify')()
const jwt = require('fastify-jwt')
fastify.register(jwt, {
secret: {
private: readFileSync(`${path.join(__dirname, 'certs')}/private.key`),
public: readFileSync(`${path.join(__dirname, 'certs')}/public.key`)
},
sign: {
algorithm: 'RS256',
audience: 'foo',
issuer: 'example.tld'
},
verify: {
audience: 'foo',
issuer: 'example.tld',
}
})
fastify.get('/', (request, reply) => {
const globalOptions = fastify.jwt.options
let modifiedVerifyOptions = Object.assign({}, fastify.jwt.options.verify)
modifiedVerifyOptions.audience = 'bar'
modifiedVerifyOptions.subject = 'test'
return { globalOptions, modifiedVerifyOptions }
})
fastify.listen(3000, err => {
if (err) throw err
})
decode options
json
: force JSON.parse on the payload even if the header doesn't contain "typ":"JWT"
.complete
: return an object with the decoded payload and header.
sign options
algorithm
(default: HS256
)expiresIn
: expressed in seconds or a string describing a time span zeit/ms. Eg: 60
, "2 days"
, "10h"
, "7d"
. A numeric value is interpreted as a seconds count. If you use a string be sure you provide the time units (days, hours, etc), otherwise milliseconds unit is used by default ("120"
is equal to "120ms"
).notBefore
: expressed in seconds or a string describing a time span zeit/ms. Eg: 60
, "2 days"
, "10h"
, "7d"
. A numeric value is interpreted as a seconds count. If you use a string be sure you provide the time units (days, hours, etc), otherwise milliseconds unit is used by default ("120"
is equal to "120ms"
).audience
issuer
jwtid
subject
noTimestamp
header
keyid
mutatePayload
: if true, the sign function will modify the payload object directly. This is useful if you need a raw reference to the payload after claims have been applied to it but before it has been encoded into a token.
verify options
algorithms
: List of strings with the names of the allowed algorithms. For instance, ["HS256", "HS384"]
.audience
: if you want to check audience (aud
), provide a value here. The audience can be checked against a string, a regular expression or a list of strings and/or regular expressions. Eg: "urn:foo"
, /urn:f[o]{2}/
, [/urn:f[o]{2}/, "urn:bar"]
issuer
(optional): string or array of strings of valid values for the iss
field.ignoreExpiration
: if true
do not validate the expiration of the token.ignoreNotBefore
...subject
: if you want to check subject (sub
), provide a value hereclockTolerance
: number of seconds to tolerate when checking the nbf
and exp
claims, to deal with small clock differences among different serversmaxAge
: the maximum allowed age for tokens to still be valid. It is expressed in seconds or a string describing a time span zeit/ms. Eg: 1000
, "2 days"
, "10h"
, "7d"
. A numeric value is interpreted as a seconds count. If you use a string be sure you provide the time units (days, hours, etc), otherwise milliseconds unit is used by default ("120"
is equal to "120ms"
).clockTimestamp
: the time in seconds that should be used as the current time for all necessary comparisons.extractToken(request): token
: Callback function allowing to use custom logic to extract the JWT token from the request.
messages options
For your onvenience, you can override the default HTTP response messages sent when an unauthorized or bad request error occurs. You can choose the specific messages to override and the rest will fallback to the default messages. The object must be in the format specified in the example below.
Example
const fastify = require('fastify')
const myCustomMessages = {
badRequestErrorMessage: 'Format is Authorization: Bearer [token]',
noAuthorizationInHeaderMessage: 'Autorization header is missing!',
authorizationTokenExpiredMessage: 'Authorization token expired',
authorizationTokenInvalid: (err) => {
return `Authorization token is invalid: ${err.message}`
}
}
fastify.register(require('fastify-jwt'), {
secret: 'supersecret',
messages: myCustomMessages
})
fastify.jwt.secret
For your convenience, the secret
you specify during .register
is made available via fastify.jwt.secret
. request.jwtVerify()
and reply.jwtSign()
will wrap non-function secrets in a callback function. request.jwtVerify()
and reply.jwtSign()
use an asynchronous waterfall method to retrieve your secret. It's recommended that your use these methods if your secret
method is asynchronous.
fastify.jwt.cookie
For your convenience, request.jwtVerify()
will look for the token in the cookies property of the decorated request. You must specify cookieName
. Refer to the cookie example to see sample usage and important caveats.
reply.jwtSign(payload, [options,] callback)
request.jwtVerify([options,] callback)
These methods are very similar to their standard jsonwebtoken counterparts.
Example
const fastify = require('fastify')()
const jwt = require('fastify-jwt')
const request = require('request')
fastify.register(jwt, {
secret: function (request, reply, callback) {
callback(null, 'supersecret')
}
})
fastify.post('/sign', function (request, reply) {
reply.jwtSign(request.body.payload, function (err, token) {
return reply.send(err || { 'token': token })
})
})
fastify.get('/verify', function (request, reply) {
request.jwtVerify(function (err, decoded) {
return reply.send(err || decoded)
})
})
fastify.listen(3000, function (err) {
if (err) fastify.log.error(err)
fastify.log.info(`Server live on port: ${fastify.server.address().port}`)
request({
method: 'POST',
headers: {
'Content-Type': 'application/json'
},
body: {
payload: {
foo: 'bar'
}
},
uri: `http://localhost:${fastify.server.address().port}/sign`,
json: true
}, function (err, response, body) {
if (err) fastify.log.error(err)
fastify.log.info(`JWT token is ${body.token}`)
request({
method: 'GET',
headers: {
'Content-Type': 'application/json',
authorization: 'Bearer ' + body.token
},
uri: 'http://localhost:' + fastify.server.address().port + '/verify',
json: true
}, function (err, response, body) {
if (err) fastify.log.error(err)
fastify.log.info(`JWT verified. Foo is ${body.foo}`)
})
})
})
Algorithms supported
The following algorithms are currently supported by jsonwebtoken that is internally used by fastify-jwt
.
algorithm(s) Parameter Value | Digital Signature or MAC Algorithm |
---|
HS256 | HMAC using SHA-256 hash algorithm |
HS384 | HMAC using SHA-384 hash algorithm |
HS512 | HMAC using SHA-512 hash algorithm |
RS256 | RSASSA using SHA-256 hash algorithm |
RS384 | RSASSA using SHA-384 hash algorithm |
RS512 | RSASSA using SHA-512 hash algorithm |
ES256 | ECDSA using P-256 curve and SHA-256 hash algorithm |
ES384 | ECDSA using P-384 curve and SHA-384 hash algorithm |
ES512 | ECDSA using P-521 curve and SHA-512 hash algorithm |
none | No digital signature or MAC value included |
Acknowledgements
This project is kindly sponsored by:
License
Licensed under MIT.