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
2015-05-07 11:49:00 +02:00
example update example 2014-06-14 19:01:34 -03:00
lib Add an "additionnal" option (Function(decoded, onSuccess, onError)). When the token is parser and validated the callback is triggered and allow addition of extra logic (e.g. validate the user status against database). 2015-05-07 11:49:00 +02:00
test test fixes 2014-07-16 19:14:07 -06:00
.gitignore .gitignore 2015-05-06 17:52:49 +02:00
CHANGELOG.md Adding CHANGELOG.md 2015-04-22 11:32:06 -03:00
LICENSE.md add license, close #2 2014-03-14 20:31:04 -03:00
package.json 4.0.0 2015-04-22 11:32:17 -03:00
README.md Added example of handling token expiration 2014-09-04 13:47:17 +08:00

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.