Simple Token Authentication
Token authentication support has been removed from Devise for security reasons. In this gist, Devise's José Valim explains how token authentication should be performed in order to remain safe (see important warning below).
This gem packages the content of the gist and provides a set of convenient options for increased flexibility.
DISCLAIMER: I am not José Valim, nor has he been involved in the gem bundling process. Implementation errors, if any, are mine; and contributions are welcome. -- GB
Security notice
Security notice: As the name of the gem indicates, it provides a very basic mechanism for token authentication. If your tokens are not discarded after a single use, or you don't know how to mitigate replay attacks, then you should look at alternatives. (Simple Token Authentication doesn't mitigate those attacks for you.)
In other words: if you don't know why Simple Token Authentication is safe to use in your specific use case, then it probably isn't.
So... what does the gem do? Simple Token Authentication allows to generate, revoke, and safely compare tokens for authentication purposes. That's not the only thing you need to implement a safe authentication protocol, but it can be a part of it.
Personal note: I've used the gem to manage single-use sign-in links sent by email (that's what I created it for). I would use it again for that purpose. Please do your research and check carefully if this tool is adequate to your level of experience and threat model. -- GB
Installation
In a nutshell
First install Devise and configure it with any modules you want, then add the gem to your Gemfile
and bundle install
:
gem 'simple_token_authentication', '~> 1.0'
Once that done, only two steps are required to setup token authentication:
- Make one or more models token authenticatable (ActiveRecord and Mongoid are supported)
- Allow controllers to handle token authentication (Rails, Rails API, and
ActionController::Metal
are supported)
If you want more details about how the gem works, keep reading! We'll get to these two steps after the overview.
Overview
Simple Token Authentication provides the ability to manage an authentication_token
from your model instances. A model with that ability enabled is said to be token authenticatable (typically, the User
model will be made token authenticatable).
The gem also provides the ability for any controller to handle token authentication for one or multiple token authenticatable models. That ability allows, for example, to automatically sign in an user
when the correct credentials are provided with a request. A controller with that ability enabled is said to behave as a token authentication handler.
The token authentication credentials for a given request can be provided either in the form of query params, or HTTP headers. By default, the required credentials are the user's email and their authentication token.
What happens when a request is provided with no credentials or incorrect credentials is highly configurable (some scenarios may require access to be denied, other may allow unauthenticated access, or provide others strategies to authenticate users). By default, when token authentication fails, Devise is used as a fallback to ensure a consistent behaviour with controllers that do not handle token authentication.
Make models token authenticatable
ActiveRecord
First define which model or models will be token authenticatable (typ. User
):
class User < ActiveRecord::Base
acts_as_token_authenticatable
devise :invitable, :database_authenticatable,
:recoverable, :rememberable, :trackable, :validatable,
:lockable
end
If the model or models you chose have no :authentication_token
attribute, add them one (with a unique index):
rails g migration add_authentication_token_to_users "authentication_token:string{30}:uniq"
rake db:migrate
Mongoid
Define which model or models will be token authenticatable (typ. User
):
class User
include Mongoid::Document
devise :database_authenticatable, :registerable,
:recoverable, :rememberable, :trackable, :validatable
acts_as_token_authenticatable
field :authentication_token
end
Allow controllers to handle token authentication
Finally define which controllers will handle token authentication (typ. ApplicationController
) for which token authenticatable models:
class ApplicationController < ActionController::Base
acts_as_token_authentication_handler_for User
end
Configuration
Some aspects of the behavior of Simple Token Authentication can be customized with an initializer.
The file below contains examples of the patterns that token authentication handlers will watch for credentials (e.g. user_email
, X-SuperAdmin-Token
) and how to customize them:
SimpleTokenAuthentication.configure do |config|
end
Usage
Tokens Generation
Assuming user
is an instance of User
, which is token authenticatable: each time user
will be saved, and user.authentication_token.blank?
it receives a new and unique authentication token (via Devise.friendly_token
).
Token Request
Simple Token Authentication only provides the functionality to authenticate a user based on their authentication_token.
For example how to setup your controller to get the token at first please check this wiki
Authentication Method 1: Query Params
You can authenticate passing the user_email
and user_token
params as query params:
GET https://secure.example.com?user_email=alice@example.com&user_token=1G8_s7P-V-4MGojaKD7a
The token authentication handler (e.g. ApplicationController
) will perform the user sign in if both are correct.
You can also use request headers (which may be simpler when authenticating against an API):
X-User-Email alice@example.com
X-User-Token 1G8_s7P-V-4MGojaKD7a
In fact, you can mix both methods and provide the user_email
with one and the user_token
with the other, even if it would be a freak thing to do.
Integration with other authentication and authorization methods
If sign-in is successful, no other authentication method will be run, but if it doesn't (the authentication params were missing, or incorrect) then Devise takes control and tries to authenticate_user!
with its own modules. That behaviour can however be modified for any controller through the fallback option (which defaults to fallback: :devise
).
When fallback: :exception
is set, then an exception is raised on token authentication failure. The resulting controller behaviour is very similar to the behaviour induced by using the Devise authenticate_user!
callback instead of authenticate_user
. That setting allows, for example, to prevent unauthenticated users to accede API controllers while disabling the default fallback to Devise.
Important: Please do notice that controller actions without CSRF protection must disable the Devise fallback for security reasons (both fallback: :exception
and fallback: :none
will disable the Devise fallback). Since Rails enables CSRF protection by default, this configuration requirement should only affect controllers where you have disabled it specifically, which may be the case of API controllers.
To use no fallback when token authentication fails, set fallback: :none
.
Hooks
One hook is currently available to trigger custom behaviour after an user has been successfully authenticated through token authentication. To use it, implement or mixin a module with an after_successful_token_authentication
method that will be ran after authentication from a token authentication handler:
class ApplicationController < ActiveController::Base
acts_as_token_authentication_handler_for User
private
def after_successful_token_authentication
renew_authentication_token!
end
end
Testing
Here is an example of how you can test-drive your configuration using Minitest:
class SomeControllerTest < ActionController::TestCase
test "index with token authentication via query params" do
get :index, { user_email: "alice@example.com", user_token: "1G8_s7P-V-4MGojaKD7a" }
assert_response :success
end
test "index with token authentication via request headers" do
@request.headers['X-User-Email'] = "alice@example.com"
@request.headers['X-User-Token'] = "1G8_s7P-V-4MGojaKD7a"
get :index
assert_response :success
end
end
Documentation
Frequently Asked Questions
Any question? Please don't hesitate to open a new issue to get help. I keep questions tagged to make possible to review the open questions, while closed questions are organized as a sort of FAQ.
Change Log
Releases are commented to provide a brief change log, details can be found in the CHANGELOG
file.
Development
Testing and documentation
This gem development has been test-driven since v1.0.0
. Until v1.5.1
, the gem behaviour was described using Cucumber and RSpec in a dummy app generated by Aruba. Since v1.5.2
it is described using Rspec alone and Appraisal is used since v1.13.0
for regression testing.
RSpec tags are used to categorize the spec examples.
Spec examples that are tagged as public
describe aspects of the gem public API, and MAY be considered as the gem documentation.
The private
or protected
specs are written for development purpose only. Because they describe internal behaviour which may change at any moment without notice, they are only executed as a secondary task by the continuous integration service and SHOULD be ignored.
Run rake spec:public
to print the gem public documentation.
Contributions
Contributions are welcome! I'm not personally maintaining any list of contributors for now, but any PR which references us all will be welcome.
Please be sure to review the open issues and contribute with your ideas or code in the issue best suited to the topic. Keeping discussions in a single place makes easier to everyone interested in that topic to keep track of the contributions.
Finally, please note that this project is released with a Contributor Code of Conduct. By participating in this project you agree to abide by its terms.
Credits
It may sound a bit redundant, but this gem wouldn't exist without this gist, nor without the comments and contributions of many people. Thank them if you see them!
License
Simple Token Authentication
Copyright (C) 2013‒2022 Gonzalo Bulnes Guilpain
This program is free software: you can redistribute it and/or modify
it under the terms of the GNU General Public License as published by
the Free Software Foundation, either version 3 of the License, or
(at your option) any later version.
This program is distributed in the hope that it will be useful,
but WITHOUT ANY WARRANTY; without even the implied warranty of
MERCHANTABILITY or FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE. See the
GNU General Public License for more details.
You should have received a copy of the GNU General Public License
along with this program. If not, see <http://www.gnu.org/licenses/>.