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Token based authentication for Rails JSON APIs. Designed to work with jToker and ng-token-auth.

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Simple, secure token based authentication for Rails.

This gem provides the following features:

Live Demos

Here is a demo of this app running with the ng-token-auth module and AngularJS.

Here is a demo of this app using the jToker plugin and React.

The fully configured api used in these demos can be found here.

Troubleshooting

Please read the issue reporting guidelines before posting issues.

Table of Contents

Dependencies

This project leverages the following gems:

Installation

Add the following to your Gemfile:

gem 'devise_token_auth'

Then install the gem using bundle:

bundle install

Configuration TL;DR

You will need to create a user model, define routes, include concerns, and you may want to alter some of the default settings for this gem. Run the following command for an easy one-step installation:

rails g devise_token_auth:install [USER_CLASS] [MOUNT_PATH]

Example:

rails g devise_token_auth:install User auth

This generator accepts the following optional arguments:

Argument Default Description
USER_CLASS User The name of the class to use for user authentication.
MOUNT_PATH auth The path at which to mount the authentication routes. Read more.

The following events will take place when using the install generator:

  • An initializer will be created at config/initializers/devise_token_auth.rb. Read more.

  • A model will be created in the app/models directory. If the model already exists, a concern will be included at the top of the file. Read more.

  • Routes will be appended to file at config/routes.rb. Read more.

  • A concern will be included by your application controller at app/controllers/application_controller.rb. Read more.

  • A migration file will be created in the db/migrate directory. Inspect the migrations file, add additional columns if necessary, and then run the migration:

    rake db:migrate

You may also need to configure the following items:

  • OmniAuth providers when using 3rd party oauth2 authentication. Read more.
  • Cross Origin Request Settings when using cross-domain clients. Read more.
  • Email when using email registration. Read more.
  • Multiple model support may require additional steps. Read more.

Jump here for more configuration information.

Usage TL;DR

The following routes are available for use by your client. These routes live relative to the path at which this engine is mounted (auth by default). These routes correspond to the defaults used by the ng-token-auth module for AngularJS and the jToker plugin for jQuery.

path method purpose
/ POST Email registration. Accepts email, password, and password_confirmation params. A verification email will be sent to the email address provided. Accepted params can be customized using the devise_parameter_sanitizer system.
/ DELETE Account deletion. This route will destroy users identified by their uid and auth_token headers.
/ PUT Account updates. This route will update an existing user's account settings. The default accepted params are password and password_confirmation, but this can be customized using the devise_parameter_sanitizer system.
/sign_in POST Email authentication. Accepts email and password as params. This route will return a JSON representation of the User model on successful login.
/sign_out DELETE Use this route to end the user's current session. This route will invalidate the user's authentication token.
/:provider GET Set this route as the destination for client authentication. Ideally this will happen in an external window or popup. Read more.
/:provider/callback GET/POST Destination for the oauth2 provider's callback uri. postMessage events containing the authenticated user's data will be sent back to the main client window from this page. Read more.
/validate_token GET Use this route to validate tokens on return visits to the client. Accepts uid and auth_token as params. These values should correspond to the columns in your User table of the same names.
/password POST Use this route to send a password reset confirmation email to users that registered by email. Accepts email and redirect_url as params. The user matching the email param will be sent instructions on how to reset their password. redirect_url is the url to which the user will be redirected after visiting the link contained in the email.
/password PUT Use this route to change users' passwords. Accepts password and password_confirmation as params. This route is only valid for users that registered by email (OAuth2 users will receive an error).
/password/edit GET Verify user by password reset token. This route is the destination URL for password reset confirmation. This route must contain reset_password_token and redirect_url params. These values will be set automatically by the confirmation email that is generated by the password reset request.

Jump here for more usage information.

Configuration cont.

Initializer settings

The following settings are available for configuration in config/initializers/devise_token_auth.rb:

Name Default Description
change_headers_on_each_request true By default the access-token header will change after each request. The client is responsible for keeping track of the changing tokens. Both ng-token-auth and jToker do this out of the box. While this implementation is more secure, it can be difficult to manage. Set this to false to prevent the access-token header from changing after each request. Read more.
token_lifespan 2.weeks Set the length of your tokens' lifespans. Users will need to re-authenticate after this duration of time has passed since their last login.
batch_request_buffer_throttle 5.seconds Sometimes it's necessary to make several requests to the API at the same time. In this case, each request in the batch will need to share the same auth token. This setting determines how far apart the requests can be while still using the same auth token. Read more.
omniauth_prefix "/omniauth" This route will be the prefix for all oauth2 redirect callbacks. For example, using the default '/omniauth' setting, the github oauth2 provider will redirect successful authentications to '/omniauth/github/callback'. Read more.
default_confirm_success_url nil By default this value is expected to be sent by the client so that the API knows where to redirect users after successful email confirmation. If this param is set, the API will redirect to this value when no value is provided by the cilent.
default_password_reset_url nil By default this value is expected to be sent by the client so that the API knows where to redirect users after successful password resets. If this param is set, the API will redirect to this value when no value is provided by the cilent.
redirect_whitelist nil As an added security measure, you can limit the URLs to which the API will redirect after email token validation (password reset, email confirmation, etc.). This value should be an array containing exact matches to the client URLs to be visited after validation.

OmniAuth authentication

If you wish to use omniauth authentication, add all of your desired authentication provider gems to your Gemfile.

OmniAuth example using github, facebook, and google:

gem 'omniauth-github'
gem 'omniauth-facebook'
gem 'omniauth-google-oauth2'

Then run bundle install.

List of oauth2 providers

OmniAuth provider settings

In config/initializers/omniauth.rb, add the settings for each of your providers.

These settings must be obtained from the providers themselves.

Example using github, facebook, and google:

# config/initializers/omniauth.rb
Rails.application.config.middleware.use OmniAuth::Builder do
  provider :github,        ENV['GITHUB_KEY'],   ENV['GITHUB_SECRET'],   scope: 'email,profile'
  provider :facebook,      ENV['FACEBOOK_KEY'], ENV['FACEBOOK_SECRET']
  provider :google_oauth2, ENV['GOOGLE_KEY'],   ENV['GOOGLE_SECRET']
end

The above example assumes that your provider keys and secrets are stored in environmental variables. Use the figaro gem (or dotenv or secrets.yml or equivalent) to accomplish this.

OmniAuth callback settings

The "Callback URL" setting that you set with your provider must correspond to the omniauth prefix setting defined by this app. This will be different than the omniauth route that is used by your client application.

For example, the demo app uses the default omniauth_prefix setting /omniauth, so the "Authorization callback URL" for github must be set to "http://devise-token-auth-demo.herokuapp.com**/omniauth**/github/callback".

Github example for the demo site: password reset flow

The url for github authentication will be different for the client. The client should visit the API at /[MOUNT_PATH]/:provider for omniauth authentication.

For example, given that the app is mounted using the following settings:

# config/routes.rb
mount_devise_token_auth_for 'User', at: 'auth'

The client configuration for github should look like this:

Angular.js setting for authenticating using github:

angular.module('myApp', ['ng-token-auth'])
  .config(function($authProvider) {
    $authProvider.configure({
      apiUrl: 'http://api.example.com'
      authProviderPaths: {
        github: '/auth/github' // <-- note that this is different than what was set with github
      }
    });
  });

**jToker settings for github should look like this:

$.auth.configure({
  apiUrl: 'http://api.example.com',
  authProviderPaths: {
    github: '/auth/github' // <-- note that this is different than what was set with github
  }
});

This incongruence is necessary to support multiple user classes and mounting points.

Note for pow and xip.io users

If you receive redirect-uri-mismatch errors from your provider when using pow or xip.io urls, set the following in your development config:

# config/environments/development.rb

# when using pow
OmniAuth.config.full_host = "http://app-name.dev"

# when using xip.io
OmniAuth.config.full_host = "http://xxx.xxx.xxx.app-name.xip.io"

Email authentication

If you wish to use email authentication, you must configure your Rails application to send email. Read here for more information.

I recommend using mailcatcher for development.

mailcatcher development example configuration:
# config/environments/development.rb
Rails.application.configure do
  config.action_mailer.default_url_options = { :host => 'your-dev-host.dev' }
  config.action_mailer.delivery_method = :smtp
  config.action_mailer.smtp_settings = { :address => 'your-dev-host.dev', :port => 1025 }
end

CORS

If your API and client live on different domains, you will need to configure your Rails API to allow cross origin requests. The rack-cors gem can be used to accomplish this.

The following dangerous example will allow cross domain requests from any domain. Make sure to whitelist only the needed domains.

Example rack-cors configuration:
# gemfile
gem 'rack-cors', :require => 'rack/cors'

# config/application.rb
module YourApp
  class Application < Rails::Application
    config.middleware.use Rack::Cors do
      allow do
        origins '*'
        resource '*',
          :headers => :any,
          :expose  => ['access-token', 'expiry', 'token-type', 'uid', 'client'],
          :methods => [:get, :post, :options, :delete, :put]
      end
    end
  end
end

Make extra sure that the Access-Control-Expose-Headers includes access-token, expiry, token-type, uid, and client (as is set in the example above by the:expose param). If your client experiences erroneous 401 responses, this is likely the cause.

CORS may not be possible with older browsers (IE8, IE9). I usually set up a proxy for those browsers. See the ng-token-auth readme or the jToker readme for more information.

Usage cont.

Mounting Routes

The authentication routes must be mounted to your project. This gem includes a route helper for this purpose:

mount_devise_token_auth_for - similar to devise_for, this method is used to append the routes necessary for user authentication. This method accepts the following arguments:

Argument Type Default Description
class_name string 'User' The name of the class to use for authentication. This class must include the model concern described here.
options object {at: 'auth'} The routes to be used for authentication will be prefixed by the path specified in the at param of this object.

Example:

# config/routes.rb
mount_devise_token_auth_for 'User', at: 'auth'

Any model class can be used, but the class will need to include DeviseTokenAuth::Concerns::User for authentication to work properly.

You can mount this engine to any route that you like. /auth is used by default to conform with the defaults of the ng-token-auth module and the jToker plugin.

Controller Methods

Concerns

This gem includes a Rails concern called DeviseTokenAuth::Concerns::SetUserByToken. Include this concern to provide access to controller methods such as authenticate_user!, user_signed_in?, etc.

The concern also runs an after_action that changes the auth token after each request.

It is recommended to include the concern in your base ApplicationController so that all children of that controller include the concern as well.

Concern example:
# app/controllers/application_controller.rb
class ApplicationController < ActionController::Base
  include DeviseTokenAuth::Concerns::SetUserByToken
end

Methods

This gem provides access to all of the following devise helpers:

Method Description
before_action :authenticate_user! Returns a 401 error unless a User is signed-in.
current_user Returns the currently signed-in User, or nil if unavailable.
user_signed_in? Returns true if a User is signed in, otherwise false.
devise_token_auth_group Operate on multiple user classes as a group. Read more

Note that if the model that you're trying to access isn't called User, the helper method names will change. For example, if the user model is called Admin, the methods would look like this:

  • before_action :authenticate_admin!
  • admin_signed_in?
  • current_admin
Example: limit access to authenticated users
# app/controllers/test_controller.rb
class TestController < ApplicationController
  before_action :authenticate_user!

  def members_only
    render json: {
      data: {
        message: "Welcome #{current_user.name}",
        user: current_user
      }
    }, status: 200
  end
end

Token Header Format

The authentication information should be included by the client in the headers of each request. The headers follow the RFC 6750 Bearer Token format:

Authentication headers example:
"access-token": "wwwww",
"token-type":   "Bearer",
"client":       "xxxxx",
"expiry":       "yyyyy",
"uid":          "zzzzz"

The authentication headers consists of the following params:

param description
access-token This serves as the user's password for each request. A hashed version of this value is stored in the database for later comparison. This value should be changed on each request.
client This enables the use of multiple simultaneous sessions on different clients. (For example, a user may want to be authenticated on both their phone and their laptop at the same time.)
expiry The date at which the current session will expire. This can be used by clients to invalidate expired tokens without the need for an API request.
uid A unique value that is used to identify the user. This is necessary because searching the DB for users by their access token will make the API susceptible to timing attacks.

The authentication headers required for each request will be available in the response from the previous request. If you are using the ng-token-auth AngularJS module or the jToker jQuery plugin, this functionality is already provided.

Model Concerns

DeviseTokenAuth::Concerns::User

Typical use of this gem will not require the use of any of the following model methods. All authentication should be handled invisibly by the controller concerns described above.

Models that include the DeviseTokenAuth::Concerns::User concern will have access to the following public methods (read the above section for context on token and client):

  • valid_token?: check if an authentication token is valid. Accepts a token and client as arguments. Returns a boolean.

    Example:

    # extract token + client_id from auth header
    client_id = request.headers['client']
    token = request.headers['access-token']
    
    @user.valid_token?(token, client_id)
  • create_new_auth_token: creates a new auth token with all of the necessary metadata. Accepts client as an optional argument. Will generate a new client if none is provided. Returns the authentication headers that should be sent by the client as an object.

    Example:

    # extract client_id from auth header
    client_id = request.headers['client']
    
    # update token, generate updated auth headers for response
    new_auth_header = @user.create_new_auth_token(client_id)
    
    # update response with the header that will be required by the next request
    response.headers.merge!(new_auth_header)
  • build_auth_header: generates the auth header that should be sent to the client with the next request. Accepts token and client as arguments. Returns a string.

    Example:

    # create client id and token
    client_id = SecureRandom.urlsafe_base64(nil, false)
    token     = SecureRandom.urlsafe_base64(nil, false)
    
    # store client + token in user's token hash
    @user.tokens[client_id] = {
      token: BCrypt::Password.create(token),
      expiry: (Time.now + DeviseTokenAuth.token_lifespan).to_i
    }
    
    # generate auth headers for response
    new_auth_header = @user.build_auth_header(token, client_id)
    
    # update response with the header that will be required by the next request
    response.headers.merge!(new_auth_header)

Using multiple models

View Live Multi-User Demos

This gem supports the use of multiple user models. One possible use case is to authenticate visitors using a model called User, and to authenticate administrators with a model called Admin. Take the following steps to add another authentication model to your app:

  1. Run the install generator for the new model.
rails g devise_token_auth:install Admin admin_auth

This will create the Admin model and define the model's authentication routes with the base path /admin_auth.

  1. Define the routes to be used by the Admin user within a devise_scope.

Example:

Rails.application.routes.draw do
  # when using multiple models, controllers will default to the first available
  # devise mapping. routes for subsequent devise mappings will need to defined
  # within a `devise_scope` block

  # define :users as the first devise mapping:
  mount_devise_token_auth_for 'User', at: 'auth'

  # define :admins as the second devise mapping. routes using this class will
  # need to be defined within a devise_scope as shown below
  mount_devise_token_auth_for "Admin", at: 'admin_auth'

  # this route will authorize requests using the User class
  get 'demo/members_only', to: 'demo#members_only'

  # routes within this block will authorize requests using the Admin class
  devise_scope :admin do
    get 'demo/admins_only', to: 'demo#admins_only'
  end
end
  1. Configure any Admin restricted controllers. Controllers will now have access to the methods described here:
  • before_action: :authenticate_admin!
  • current_admin
  • admin_signed_in?

Group access

It is also possible to control access to multiple user types at the same time using groups. The following example shows how to limit controller access to both User and Admin users.

Example: group authentication
class DemoGroupController < ApplicationController
  devise_token_auth_group :member, contains: [:user, :admin]
  before_action :authenticate_member!

  def members_only
    render json: {
      data: {
        message: "Welcome #{current_member.name}",
        user: current_member
      }
    }, status: 200
  end
end

In the above example, the following methods will be available (in addition to current_user, current_admin, etc.):

  • before_action: :authenticate_member!
  • current_member
  • member_signed_in?

Excluding Modules

By default, almost all of the Devise modules are included:

You may not want all of these features enabled in your app. That's OK! You can mix and match to suit your own unique style.

The following example shows how to disable email confirmation.

Example: disable email confirmation

Just list the devise modules that you want to include before including the DeviseTokenAuth::Concerns::User model concern.

# app/models/user.rb
class User < ActiveRecord::Base

  # notice this comes BEFORE the include statement below
  # also notice that :confirmable is not included in this block
  devise :database_authenticatable, :recoverable,
         :trackable, :validatable, :registerable,
         :omniauthable

  # note that this include statement comes AFTER the devise block above
  include DeviseTokenAuth::Concerns::User
end

Some features include routes that you may not want mounted to your app. The following example shows how to disable OAuth and its routes.

Example: disable OAuth authentication

First instruct the model not to include the omniauthable module.

# app/models/user.rb
class User < ActiveRecord::Base

  # notice that :omniauthable is not included in this block
  devise :database_authenticatable, :confirmable,
         :recoverable, :trackable, :validatable,
         :registerable

  include DeviseTokenAuth::Concerns::User
end

Now tell the route helper to skip mounting the omniauth_callbacks controller:

Rails.application.routes.draw do
  # config/routes.rb
  mount_devise_token_auth_for 'User', at: 'auth', skip: [:omniauth_callbacks]
end

Custom Controller Overrides

The built-in controllers can be overridden with your own custom controllers.

For example, the default behavior of the validate_token method of the TokenValidationController is to return the User object as json (sans password and token data). The following example shows how to override the validate_token action to include a model method as well.

Example: controller overrides
# config/routes.rb
Rails.application.routes.draw do
  ...  
  mount_devise_token_auth_for 'User', at: 'auth', controllers: {
    token_validations:  'overrides/token_validations'
  }
end

# app/controllers/overrides/token_validations_controller.rb
module Overrides
  class TokenValidationsController < DeviseTokenAuth::TokenValidationsController

    def validate_token
      # @user will have been set by set_user_by_token concern
      if @user
        render json: {
          data: @user.as_json(methods: :calculate_operating_thetan)
        }
      else
        render json: {
          success: false,
          errors: ["Invalid login credentials"]
        }, status: 401
      end
    end
  end
end
Example: all :controller options with default settings:
mount_devise_token_auth_for 'User', at: 'auth', controllers: {
  confirmations:      'devise_token_auth/confirmations',
  passwords:          'devise_token_auth/passwords',
  omniauth_callbacks: 'devise_token_auth/omniauth_callbacks',
  registrations:      'devise_token_auth/registrations',
  sessions:           'devise_token_auth/sessions',
  token_validations:  'devise_token_auth/token_validations'
}

Note: Controller overrides must implement the expected actions of the controllers that they replace.

Passing blocks to Controllers

It may be that you simply want to add behavior to existing controllers without having to re-implement their behavior completely. In this case, you can do so by creating a new controller that inherits from any of DeviseTokenAuth's controllers, overriding whichever methods you'd like to add behavior to by passing a block to super:

class Custom::RegistrationsController < DeviseTokenAuth::RegistrationsController

  def create
    super do |resource|
      resource.do_something(extra)
    end
  end

end

Your block will be performed just before the controller would usually render a successful response.

Email Template Overrides

You will probably want to override the default email templates for email sign-up and password-reset confirmation. Run the following command to copy the email templates into your app:

rails generate devise_token_auth:install_views

This will create two new files:

  • app/views/devise/mailer/reset_password_instructions.html.erb
  • app/views/devise/mailer/confirmation_instructions.html.erb

These files may be edited to suit your taste.

Note: if you choose to modify these templates, do not modify the link_to blocks unless you absolutely know what you are doing.

Issue Reporting

When posting issues, please include the following information to speed up the troubleshooting process:

  • Version: which version of this gem (and ng-token-auth / jToker if applicable) are you using?
  • Request and response headers: these can be found in the "Network" tab of your browser's web inspector.
  • Rails Stacktrace: this can be found in the log/development.log of your API.
  • Environmental Info: How is your application different from the reference implementation? This may include (but is not limited to) the following details:
    • Routes: are you using some crazy namespace, scope, or constraint?
    • Gems: are you using MongoDB, Grape, RailsApi, ActiveAdmin, etc.?
    • Custom Overrides: what have you done in terms of custom controller overrides?
    • Custom Frontend: are you using ng-token-auth, jToker, or something else?

FAQ

Can I use this gem alongside standard Devise?

Yes! But you will need to use separate routes for standard Devise. So do something like this:

Rails.application.routes.draw do

  # standard devise routes available at /users
  # NOTE: make sure this comes first!!!
  devise_for :users

  # token auth routes available at /api/v1/auth
  namespace :api do
    scope :v1 do
      mount_devise_token_auth_for 'User', at: 'auth'
    end
  end

end

Why are the new routes included if this gem doesn't use them?

Removing the new routes will require significant modifications to devise. If the inclusion of the new routes is causing your app any problems, post an issue in the issue tracker and it will be addressed ASAP.

I'm having trouble using this gem alongside ActiveAdmin...

For some odd reason, ActiveAdmin extends from your own app's ApplicationController. This becomes a problem if you include the DeviseTokenAuth::Concerns::SetUserByToken concern in your app's ApplicationController.

The solution is to use two separate ApplicationController classes - one for your API, and one for ActiveAdmin. Something like this:

# app/controllers/api_controller.rb
# API routes extend from this controller
class ApiController < ActionController::Base
  include DeviseTokenAuth::Concerns::SetUserByToken
end

# app/controllers/application_controller.rb
# leave this for ActiveAdmin, and any other non-api routes
class ApplicationController < ActionController::Base
end

Conceptual

None of the following information is required to use this gem, but read on if you're curious.

About token management

Tokens should be invalidated after each request to the API. The following diagram illustrates this concept:

password reset flow

During each request, a new token is generated. The access-token header that should be used in the next request is returned in the access-token header of the response to the previous request. The last request in the diagram fails because it tries to use a token that was invalidated by the previous request.

The only case where an expired token is allowed is during batch requests.

These measures are taken by default when using this gem.

About batch requests

By default, the API should update the auth token for each request (read more). But sometimes it's neccessary to make several concurrent requests to the API, for example:

#####Batch request example

$scope.getResourceData = function() {

  $http.get('/api/restricted_resource_1').success(function(resp) {
    // handle response
    $scope.resource1 = resp.data;
  });

  $http.get('/api/restricted_resource_2').success(function(resp) {
    // handle response
    $scope.resource2 = resp.data;
  });
};

In this case, it's impossible to update the access-token header for the second request with the access-token header of the first response because the second request will begin before the first one is complete. The server must allow these batches of concurrent requests to share the same auth token. This diagram illustrates how batch requests are identified by the server:

batch request overview

The "5 second" buffer in the diagram is the default used this gem.

The following diagram details the relationship between the client, server, and access tokens used over time when dealing with batch requests:

batch request detail

Note that when the server identifies that a request is part of a batch request, the user's auth token is not updated. The auth token will be updated for the first request in the batch, and then that same token will be returned in the responses for each subsequent request in the batch (as shown in the diagram).

This gem automatically manages batch requests. You can change the time buffer for what is considered a batch request using the batch_request_buffer_throttle parameter in config/initializers/devise_token_auth.rb.

Security

This gem takes the following steps to ensure security.

This gem uses auth tokens that are:

These measures were inspired by this stackoverflow post.

This gem further mitigates timing attacks by using this technique.

But the most important step is to use HTTPS. You are on the hook for that.

Callouts

Thanks to the following contributors:

Contributing

  1. Create a feature branch with your changes.
  2. Write some test cases.
  3. Make all the tests pass.
  4. Issue a pull request.

I will grant you commit access if you send quality pull requests.

To run the test suite do the following:

  1. Clone this repo
  2. Run bundle install
  3. Run rake db:migrate
  4. Run RAILS_ENV=test rake db:migrate
  5. Run guard

The last command will open the guard test-runner. Guard will re-run each test suite when changes are made to its corresponding files.

License

This project uses the WTFPL

About

Token based authentication for Rails JSON APIs. Designed to work with jToker and ng-token-auth.

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