This is an example Hapi application to demonstrate usage of the hapi-auth-token plugin with users from a SQL database.
It uses sequelize
to connect to an RDBMS, which is assumed to be Postgre by default.
But you can obviously connect to any other database by installing the appropriate database adapters, and updating config/database.json
to point to that DB.
This example generates a random cryptographic hash and uses that as the auth token. See hapi-auth-token-jwt-example for an example that shows how to use JWT tokens instead.
- Create a database called
api_development
- Create
config/database.json
fromconfig/database.example.json
and update it to point to the newly created database yarn install
- Run migrations to create the relevant tables
yarn run migrate
- Run seeds to create an initial user
yarn run seed
- Run the server
yarn start
- Navigate to http://localhost:3000/documentation to access Swagger documentation for the API and play around with it
In App.js
, we begin by registering the HapiAuthToken
plugin, and in the _configureAuth
method, we configure an authentication strategy using the plugin.
The authentication strategy overrides some of the cookie options to set the auth cookie name to __AUTH
, and marks it an insecure cookie (to allow it to be accessed over HTTP in the demo application).
You can turn off cookie authentication by simply setting cookie: false
in these options.
Similarly, header: false
and query: false
will respectively turn off Authorization
header and query parameter token authentication.
The most important options in strategy configuration are the validateToken
and buildAuthCredentials
functions.
The plugin will extract an authentication token from the request, and call validateToken
with it.
validateToken
is expected to validate this token and respond back with a boolean indicating whether the token is valid.
If validateToken
returns true, then the plugin calls the buildAuthCredentials
function with the same auth token.
buildAuthCredentials
is expected to return a JSON object, which will be set as the auth credentials for the current request.
This object will be accessible as request.auth.credentials
in the route endpoints (if the token was successfully validated).
The app has a User
and UserSession
models. UserSession
keeps track of session/auth tokens that have been issued to a user.
These models are used during authentication, and for validating tokens extracted from the request (in validateToken
).
AuthenticationController
has a login
route which tries to match the supplied username
and password
against the users
table.
If a match is found:
- it creates a new
UserSession
for the user - returns session token from
UserSession
as the auth token - also sets this token on the auth cookie
This is just an example implementation. The key here is the authentication strategy configuration, and particularly the validateToken
and buildAuthCredentials
methods.
In your implementation, you just have to implement these to work with your DB model.
In addition, if you choose to support cookie authentication, then remember to set the session/auth token on your auth cookie in your authentication controller (see AuthenticationController#_create
for example).
- Start the server (
yarn start
) - Open the swagger documentation (http://localhost:3000/documentation)
- Invoke the
/login
endpoint with:{ "username": "aUser", "password": "aPassword" }
- Take note of the token returned by this request
- Invoke
/protected
with this token in either the authorization header (Authorization: Token <token-value>
) or thetoken
query parameter /protected
should respond back with a200