A turn key library that uses ldap-authentication with Passport and local database (MongoDB) to authenticate and save users
When an application needs to authenticate a user against an LDAP server, it normally also needs to
save the user into local MongoDB for further references. express-passport-ldap-mongoose
is designed
to handle this requirement with a simple wrapper layer on top of expressjs, passportjs,
ldap-authentication,
and MongoDB.
- node Express
- Mongoose (optional)
- Passport
- ldap-authentication
- The login submit field names should be
username
for username, andpassword
for password
Using npm: npm install --save express-passport-ldap-mongoose
or using yarn: yarn add express-passport-ldap-mongoose
express-passport-ldap-mongoose
configures passportjs and adds the login and logout route to
your express app or router. All you need to do is call the initialize
function of the library
and everything else is taken care of.
const LdapAuth = require('express-passport-ldap-mongoose')
app.use(express.json())
app.use(sessionMiddleWare)
LdapAuth.initialize(options, app, findUserFunc, upsertUserFunc, loginPath, logoutPath)
Since version 3.1.0, you can still use
init()
but it is deprecated. Useinitialize()
instead which is simpler.
When search for a user by its username in LDAP, a usernameAttribute
is needed.
The User
model in local MongoDB must have the same key as the value of usernameAttribute
that maps to the LDAP attribute. In some cases, and in the example we are using uid
.
it is used to uniquely identify a user and equals to the user's login username.
-
options
: If the first parameter is an object, it is the options object to pass toldap-authentication
'sauthenticate()
function. If is a string (deprecated), is the ldap search base (for backward compatible) If options is an object, literal{{username}}
in theuserDn
will be replaced with the value inreq.body.username
which will be the user input username. See ldap-authentication for detail explanation on each options.String Example (deprecated):
dc=example.com,dc=com
Options object Example:
let options = { ldapOpts: { url: 'ldap://localhost' }, // note in this example it only use the user to directly // bind to the LDAP server. You can also use an admin // here. See the document of ldap-authentication. userDn: `uid=${req.body.username},${ldapBaseDn}`, userPassword: req.body.password, userSearchBase: ldapBaseDn, usernameAttribute: 'uid', username: req.body.username }
-
app
: Express app or router -
findUserFunc
:function(id)
. A function takes a string id and return a promise that resolves to a user or null. This function is called everytime passport do deserialization. It is normally aFindOne
orFindById
call against local mongo database. Example:(id) => {return User.findOne({ uid: id }).exec()}
. However, it does not have to be any database related. It is just a functin that can return a user from a user id. -
upsertUserFunc
:function(user)
. A function take a user object (obtained from ldap server and saved in expressreq
) and upsert into local database; returns a promise that resolves to a local db user object. Again, it does not have to be any database related. It is essentially a function that update some internal record of a user. Example:(user) => {return User.findOneAndUpdate({ uid: user.uid }, user, { upsert: true, new: true }).exec()}
-
loginPath
: (optional, default/login
) The login path for express to parse the login posted json data. The posted data must be in json format, and withusername
andpassword
as the key names. Anapp.post(loginPath, loginHandler)
will be automatically added and handled by the library. -
logoutPath
: (optional, default/logout
) The logout path for express to parse the logout request. Anapp.get(logoutPath, logoutHandler)
will be automatically added and handled by the library.
Complete example is in the example folder.
Another example on how to use Passport and ldap-authentication can be found in passport-ldap-example.
const mongoose = require('mongoose')
mongoose.Promise = Promise
mongoose.connect('mongodb://localhost/ldaptest')
const session = require('express-session')
const MongoStore = require('connect-mongo')(session)
const express = require('express')
const app = express()
const User = require('./model').User
const LdapAuth = require('express-passport-ldap-mongoose')
var sessionMiddleWare = session({
secret: 'top session secret',
store: new MongoStore({ mongooseConnection: mongoose.connection }),
resave: true,
saveUninitialized: true,
unset: 'destroy',
cookie: {
httpOnly: false,
maxAge: 1000 * 3600 * 24,
secure: false, // this need to be false if https is not used. Otherwise, cookie will not be sent.
}
})
// The order of the following middleware is very important!!
app.use(express.json())
app.use(sessionMiddleWare)
// use the library express-passport-ldap-mongoose
let usernameAttributeName = 'uid'
LdapAuth.initialize({
ldapOpts: {
url: 'ldap://localhost'
},
// note in this example it only use the user to directly
// bind to the LDAP server. You can also use an admin
// here. See the document of ldap-authentication.
userDn: `uid={{username}},${ldapBaseDn}`,
userSearchBase: ldapBaseDn,
usernameAttribute: usernameAttributeName
},
app,
async (id) => {
let user = await User.findOne({ usernameAttributeName: id }).exec()
return user
},
async (user) => {
let foundUser = await User.findOneAndUpdate({ username: user[usernameAttributeName] }, user, { upsert: true, new: true }).exec()
return foundUser
})
// serve static pages (where login.html resides)
app.use(express.static('public'))
// Start server
app.listen(4000, '127.0.0.1')