2
1
mirror of https://github.com/Thream/socketio-jwt.git synced 2024-07-21 09:38:31 +02:00
Authenticate socket.io incoming connections with JWTs. https://www.npmjs.com/package/@thream/socketio-jwt
Go to file
2015-07-18 19:23:02 -07:00
example update example 2014-06-14 19:01:34 -03:00
lib add support for namespace authentication 2015-07-18 19:23:02 -07:00
test improve tests 2015-05-29 09:39:49 -03:00
.gitignore .gitignore 2015-05-06 17:52:49 +02:00
.travis.yml add travis config 2015-05-29 09:42:19 -03:00
CHANGELOG.md update changelo 2015-05-17 22:06:10 -03:00
LICENSE.md add license, close #2 2014-03-14 20:31:04 -03:00
package.json 4.2.1 2015-07-06 11:11:30 -03:00
README.md minor. closes #43 2015-05-29 09:49:31 -03:00

Build Status

Authenticate socket.io incoming connections with JWTs. This is useful if you are build a single page application and you are not using cookies as explained in this blog post: Cookies vs Tokens. Getting auth right with Angular.JS.

Installation

npm install socketio-jwt

Example usage

// set authorization for socket.io
io.sockets
  .on('connection', socketioJwt.authorize({
    secret: 'your secret or public key',
    timeout: 15000 // 15 seconds to send the authentication message
  })).on('authenticated', function(socket) {
    //this socket is authenticated, we are good to handle more events from it.
    console.log('hello! ' + socket.decoded_token.name);
  });

Note: If you are using a base64-encoded secret (e.g. your Auth0 secret key), you need to convert it to a Buffer: Buffer('your secret key', 'base64')

Client side:

var socket = io.connect('http://localhost:9000');
socket.on('connect', function (socket) {
  socket
    .on('authenticated', function () {
      //do other things
    })
    .emit('authenticate', {token: jwt}); //send the jwt
});

One roundtrip

The previous approach uses a second roundtrip to send the jwt, there is a way you can authenticate on the handshake by sending the JWT as a query string, the caveat is that intermediary HTTP servers can log the url.

var io            = require("socket.io")(server);
var socketioJwt   = require("socketio-jwt");

//// With socket.io < 1.0 ////
io.set('authorization', socketioJwt.authorize({
  secret: 'your secret or public key',
  handshake: true
}));
//////////////////////////////

//// With socket.io >= 1.0 ////
io.use(socketioJwt.authorize({
  secret: 'your secret or public key',
  handshake: true
}));
///////////////////////////////

io.on('connection', function (socket) {
  // in socket.io < 1.0
  console.log('hello!', socket.handshake.decoded_token.name);

  // in socket.io 1.0
  console.log('hello! ', socket.decoded_token.name);
})

For more validation options see auth0/jsonwebtoken.

Client side:

Append the jwt token using query string:

var socket = io.connect('http://localhost:9000', {
  'query': 'token=' + your_jwt
});

Handling token expiration

Server side:

When you sign the token with an expiration time:

var token = jwt.sign(user_profile, jwt_secret, {expiresInMinutes: 60});

Your client-side code should handle it as below.

Client side:

socket.on("error", function(error) {
  if (error.type == "UnauthorizedError" || error.code == "invalid_token") {
    // redirect user to login page perhaps?
    console.log("User's token has expired");
  }
});

Contribute

You are always welcome to open an issue or provide a pull-request!

Also check out the unit tests:

npm test

License

Licensed under the MIT-License. 2013 AUTH10 LLC.