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PlugAuth

PlugAuth is a collection of authentication-related plugs. It currently performs two tasks:

  • Authentication
  • Access control

Usage

Add PlugAuth as a dependency in your mix.exs file.

defp deps do
  [{:plug_auth, ">= 0.0.0"}]
end

You should also update your applications list to include a webserver (e.g. cowboy), plug and plug_auth:

def application do
  [applications: [:cowboy, :plug, :plug_auth]]
end

After you are done, run mix deps.get in your shell to fetch the dependencies.

Authentication

Currently two authentication methods are supported: HTTP Basic and Token-based. In both cases you will first have to add valid credentials in the credential store. Multiple credentials can be added. The plugs provide convenience methods for this task.

HTTP Basic Example

creds = PlugAuth.Authentication.Basic.encode_credentials("Admin", "SecretPass")
PlugAuth.CredentialStore.Agent.put_credentials(creds, %{role: :admin})

Token Example

token = PlugAuth.Authentication.Token.generate_token
PlugAuth.CredentialStore.Agent.put_credentials(token, %{role: :admin})

The last argument in both cases can be any term, except nil. On successful authentication it will be stored by the authentication plug in the assign map of the connection with the :authenticated_user atom as key (unless specified otherwise, see: Plugs Composition Example). You can retrieve it using

PlugAuth.Authentication.Utils.get_authenticated_user(conn)

The content of this term is not used for authentication purposes, but can be useful to store application specific information about the user (for example, the user id, its role, etc).

To perform authentication, you can add either plug to your pipeline.

HTTP Basic Example

plug PlugAuth.Authentication.Basic, realm: "Secret"

The realm parameter is optional and can be omitted. By default "Restricted Area" will be used as realm name. You can also pass the error parameter, which should be a string or a function. If a string is passed, that string will be sent instead of the default message "HTTP Authentication Required" on authentication failure (with status code 401). If a function is passed, that function will be called with one argument, conn.

Token Example

plug PlugAuth.Authentication.Token, source: :params, param: "auth_token", error: ~s'{"error":"authentication required"}'

The error parameter is optional and is treated as in the example above. The source parameter defines how to retrieve the token from the connection. Currently, the three acceptable values are: :params, :header and :session. Their name is self-explainatory. The param parameter defines the name of the parameter/HTTP header/session key where the token is stored. This should cover most cases, but if retrieving the token is more complex than that, you can pass a tuple for the source parameter. The tuple must be in the form {MyModule, :my_function, ["param1", 42]}. The function must accept a connection as its first argument (which will be injected as the head of the given parameter list) and any other number of parameters, which must be given in the third element of the tuple. If no additional arguments are needed, an empty list must be given.

Custom Credential Store

plug PlugAuth.Authentication.Basic, realm: "Secret", store: MyApp.MyCredentialStore
defmodule MyApp.MyCredentialStore do
  @behaviour PlugAuth.CredentialStore

  def get_user_data(_credentials) do
    :joe
  end

By default, PlugAuth.CredentialStore.Agent is a bare GenServer interface, thus no state persistence is provided between application restarts.

A custom credentials store is a module implementing PlugAuth.CredentialStore behaviour, which effectively narrows down to one function: get_user_data/1. The returned value must be anything but nil for the authentication to be considered successful and for the data to appear in connection assigns.

In order to use a custom module, a store option must be passed along with other Plug initialization parameters, as shown in the example above.

Access control

PlugAuth currently provides role-based access control, which can be performed after authentication. You would use it like this

plug PlugAuth.Authentication.Basic, realm: "Secret"
plug PlugAuth.Access.Role, roles: [:admin, :developer]

In the example above HTTP basic authentication is used, but you could use any other authentication plug as well. The roles parameter specifies which user roles are granted access. On authentication failure the HTTP status code 403 will be sent, together with an error message which can be set using the error parameter (just like in the Authentication examples).

The role of the currently authenticated user, is read from the :authenticated_user assign of the connection. If when adding credentials you passed a map or structure as the user data and this map has a :role, "role", :roles or "roles" key, then everything will work automatically. If your user data is not a map or a structure, or it does not contain the role key, you can implemented the PlugAuth.Access.RolesAdapter protocol instead.

Plugs Composition Example

For situations when you need both Basic Auth and Token Auth subsequently, you are free to compose them into a single plug. To differentiate between the authentication levels, you should parametrize both of the plugs with assign_key. This designates the key name that will be used in Plug.Conn assigns to store the data obtained from CredentialStore.

defmodule BasicWithTokenPlug do
  use Plug.Builder
  import Plug.Conn

  plug PlugAuth.Authentication.Basic,
    realm: "Secret",
    assign_key: :basic_user

  plug PlugAuth.Authentication.Token,
    source: :header,
    param: "x-auth-token",
    error: ~s'{"error":"authentication required"}',
    assign_key: :token_user
  plug :index

  defp index(conn, _opts), do: send_resp(conn, 200, "Authorized")
end

Redirect Example

You may wish to redirect unauthorized users to a login page. This can be achieved by passing a function to the error parameter of a plug. This works for PlugAuth.Authentication's Basic and Token as well as PlugAuth.Access.Role. The function cannot be private. The following example demonstrates a simple implementation of this:

defmodule RedirectPlug do
  use Plug.Builder
  import Plug.Conn

  plug PlugAuth.Authentication.Basic,
    realm: "Secret",
    error: &RedirectPlug.unauthorized/1
  plug :index

  @doc """
    Redirect an unauthorized user to the login page.
  """
  def unauthorized(conn), do: conn |> redirect(to: "/login")

  defp index(conn, _opts), do: send_resp(conn, 200, "Authorized")
end

License

Copyright (c) 2014, Bitgamma OÜ [email protected]

Permission to use, copy, modify, and/or distribute this software for any purpose with or without fee is hereby granted, provided that the above copyright notice and this permission notice appear in all copies.

THE SOFTWARE IS PROVIDED "AS IS" AND THE AUTHOR DISCLAIMS ALL WARRANTIES WITH REGARD TO THIS SOFTWARE INCLUDING ALL IMPLIED WARRANTIES OF MERCHANTABILITY AND FITNESS. IN NO EVENT SHALL THE AUTHOR BE LIABLE FOR ANY SPECIAL, DIRECT, INDIRECT, OR CONSEQUENTIAL DAMAGES OR ANY DAMAGES WHATSOEVER RESULTING FROM LOSS OF USE, DATA OR PROFITS, WHETHER IN AN ACTION OF CONTRACT, NEGLIGENCE OR OTHER TORTIOUS ACTION, ARISING OUT OF OR IN CONNECTION WITH THE USE OR PERFORMANCE OF THIS SOFTWARE.

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A collection of authentication-related plugs

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