*I am completely new to ember.js.
I'm building a dashboard that requires an login (authentication page). I'd want to find a secure way to send credentials via an api call to the server side code, and I will be expecting a session token as a response, and I'd like to store that session token in a cookie.
I've looked into ember-auth, but I feel like it's for apps where the front end and the back end are in the same repo, but that's not my case.
What suggestions do you guys have?
My only restriction is that it has to be done in ember.js
Ember-auth isn't necessarily just for apps. You can configure the endpoints like signInEndPoint and signOutEndPoint to point to the urls that need to be hit on your server to do authentication.
Also there isn't any reason to bundle the client-side and server-side in the same repository here. The demo does this because the asset pipeline support in rails is very convenient for demoing, typically for avoiding a front-end build step.
You can treat it as just a library file that you include alongside ember.
Related
I've been trying to learn the inner workings of OAuth 2.0 in my own RESTful app, and I can't seem to find any good explanation of how my Javascript client handles the process.
At this point, I have the client (an Angular 2 SPA) ask the user for their username and password (running Django Rest Framework along with Django Oauth Toolkit). The client makes an AJAX post to the server (specifically to /o/token), and using the resource owner password credentials flow is authenticated and receives the response with the token.
Now, assuming I'm doing everything correctly up to this point, I'm unsure how to properly handle the token from that point forward.
At this point, I'm having my Angular app save the token in a variable and attach the authorization header (with the token) to the calls made to the API. This works as far as granting the correct permissions, but im having a hard time understanding how to maintain persistence of the header (so if the user navigates to a different page, the token is still callable). Initially I stored it in a cookie, but I have concerns with security.
So, first, am I understanding all this correctly? What kind of security concerns should I take into account here? And, of course, how can I save the token on the client?
Yes, you need to store access tokens as user session data because they should be persistent. For example if user leaves your site and then reopens he expects to see himself logged in.
It will be better if you make your sessions server-side: user-agent will store only session ID and all user data will be in your database. User don't need his access token, only your application does.
Instructions for implementation of server-side sessions for Django look pretty simple:
If you want to use a database-backed session, you need to add 'django.contrib.sessions' to your INSTALLED_APPS setting.
Once you have configured your installation, run manage.py migrate to install the single database table that stores session data.
I'm using Django Rest Framework and Token Authentication. Everything works great so far.
http://www.django-rest-framework.org/api-guide/authentication#tokenauthentication
But I'm realizing that anyone could create a third party app that hooks into my API. There'd be no way for me to detect it or stop it.
Am I missing something? I followed the directions, and I:
Send "username=blah&password=blah" to https://example.com/api/auth/, and receive a Token in return. Anyone could do this from a third party app.
That token is passed in the authentication header to retrieve data from the API. Anyone could do this if they have their user token.
Even if a user knows their own Token, I only want them to be able to access the API through the official native app.
1. How do I secure my API (using Token authentication) and make sure that only MY apps can connect to it?
2. Could I include some kind of secret key in a header? I'm using HTTPS in production, are headers as well as form data (username/password) interceptable/readable? (By the person running the app).
Still learning, thank you.
Perhaps I don't understand you question fully, but:
yes, everyone with a username and a password in your application can create tokens, if you added obtain_auth_token to your urlconfig (what you don't have to).
So you can:
only give your apps username and password
or deactivate the obtain_auth_token view and create the tokens in the admin or manually.
To answer your HTTPS question:
HTTPS encryption is between the client and the server and lies between TCP and HTTP. So everyone in between (a man in the middle) can't see any headers, data, or even the path. When using SNI the hostname (Host header) is visible, but nothing else.
Hope this helps a little.
I need to use Active Directory Federation Services (ADFS) authentication in a Django application. I will create an authentication backend, but which tool would someone recommend me to make it as fast as possible, or would it be better to implement authentication from scratch?
I have read some articles from the Microsoft website, and have checked:
http://claimsid.codeplex.com/
http://msdn.microsoft.com/en-us/library/ff359102.aspx
But even though they explain some core concepts and ideas about ADFS and SSO, the examples are in my opinion more .NET stack focused.
Writing a basic client in .NET and sniffing the traffic would give you all necessary clues to actually implement the flow in any technology.
Basically, your django app has an endpoint adfs uses to return back. You register the endpoint in adfs (like https://myapp.com/authgateway).
Then, your application initializes the flow by redirecting to https://adfs.address/adfs/ls?wa=wsignin1.0&wtrealm=https://myapp.com/authgateway
Adfs picks the request and validates credentials. Then it creates a SAML token and redirects back to your application with a POST request containing the token.
Then comes the difficult part, the SAML token is a plain xml you can use to establish a local user session. One of the claims contains user name provided by adfs, other claims can contain roles, the email, whatever you configure at the adfs side.
But, to prevent forging, you need to validate the token. The validation consist in checking the XMLdsig signature and verifying that the signing certificate thumbprint matches the thumbprint of the adfs signing certificate. Depending on how much knowledge on x509 certificates and xml validation you have this can be easy or difficult. Try to find any support in django community.
Anyway, as you can see the basic flow is simple, is a matter of two redirects, a 302 from your application to adfs and a POST back from adfs to your application. Although we do this daily in .net, our partners do it in php/java under our guidance.
There's a package available for this here:
http://django-auth-adfs.readthedocs.org/en/latest/
I am building a web application with a services layer. The services layer is going to be built using a RESTful design. The thinking is that some time in the future we may build other applications (iPhone, Android, etc.) that use the same services layer as the web application. My question is this - how do I implement login? I think I am having trouble moving from a more traditional verb based design to a resource based design. If I was building this with SOAP I would probably have a method called Login. In REST I should have a resource. I am having difficulty understanding how I should construct my URI for a login. Should it be something like this:
http://myservice/{username}?p={password}
EDIT: The front end web application uses the traditional ASP.NET framework for authentication. However at some point in the authentication process I need to validate the supplied credentials. In a traditional web application I would do a database lookup. But in this scenario I am calling a service instead of doing a database lookup. So I need something in the service that will validate the supplied credentials. And in addition to validating the supplied credentials I probably also need some sort of information about the user after they have successfully authenticated - things like their full name, their ID, etc. I hope this makes the question clearer.
Or am I not thinking about this the right way? I feel like I am having difficulty describing my question correctly.
Corey
As S.Lott pointed out already, we have a two folded things here: Login and authentication
Authentication is out-of-scope here, as this is widely discussed and there is common agreement. However, what do we actually need for a client successfully authenticate itself against a RESTful web service? Right, some kind of token, let's call it access-token.
Client) So, all I need is an access-token, but how to get such RESTfully?
Server) Why not simply creating it?
Client) How comes?
Server) For me an access-token is nothing else than a resource. Thus, I'll create one for you in exchange for your username and password.
Thus, the server could offer the resource URL "/accesstokens", for POSTing the username and password to, returning the link to the newly created resource "/accesstokens/{accesstoken}".
Alternatively, you return a document containing the access-token and a href with the resource's link:
<access-token
id="{access token id goes here; e.g. GUID}"
href="/accesstokens/{id}"
/>
Most probably, you don't actually create the access-token as a subresource and thus, won't include its href in the response.
However, if you do so, the client could generate the link on its behalf or not? No!
Remember, truly RESTful web services link resources together in a way that the client can navigate itself without the need for generating any resource links.
The final question you probably have is if you should POST the username and password as a HTML form or as a document, e.g. XML or JSON - it depends... :-)
You don't "login". You "authenticate". World of difference.
You have lots of authentication alternatives.
HTTP Basic, Digest, NTLM and AWS S3 Authentication
HTTP Basic and Digest authentication. This uses the HTTP_AUTHORIZATION header. This is very nice, very simple. But can lead to a lot of traffic.
Username/Signature authentication. Sometimes called "ID and KEY" authentication. This can use a query string.
?username=this&signature=some-big-hex-digest
This is what places like Amazon use. The username is the "id". The "key" is a digest, similar to the one used for HTTP Digest authentication. Both sides have to agree on the digest to proceed.
Some kind of cookie-based authentication. OpenAM, for example, can be configured as an agent to authenticate and provide a cookie that your RESTful web server can then use. The client would authenticate first, and then provide the cookie with each RESTful request.
Great question, well posed. I really like Patrick's answer. I use something like
-/users/{username}/loginsession
With POST and GET being handled. So I post a new login session with credentials and I can then view the current session as a resource via the GET.
The resource is a login session, and that may have an access token or auth code, expiry, etc.
Oddly enough, my MVC caller must itself present a key/bearer token via a header to prove that it has the right to try and create new login sessions since the MVC site is a client of the API.
Edit
I think some other answers and comments here are solving the issue with an out-of-band shared secret and just authenticating with a header. That's fine in many situations or for service-to-service calls.
The other solution is to flow a token, OAuth or JWT or otherwise, which means the "login" has already taken place by another process, probably a normal login UI in a browser which is based around a form POST.
My answer is for the service that sits behind that UI, assuming you want login and auth and user management placed in a REST service and not in the site MVC code. It IS the user login service.
It also allows other services to "login" and get an expiring token, instead of using a pre-shared key, as well as test scripts in a CLI or Postman.
Since quite a bit has changed since 2011...
If you're open to using a 3rd party tool, and slightly deviating from REST slightly for the web UI, consider http://shiro.apache.org.
Shiro basically gives you a servlet filter purposed for authentication as well as authorization. You can utilize all of the login methods listed by #S.Lott, including a simple form based authentication.
Filter the rest URLs that require authentication, and Shiro will do the rest.
I'm currently using this in my own project and it has worked pretty well for me thus far.
Here's something else people may be interested in.
https://github.com/PE-INTERNATIONAL/shiro-jersey#readme
The first thing to understand about REST is that its a Token based resource access.Unlike traditional ways, access is granted based on token validation. In simple words if you have right token, you can access resources.Now there is lot of whole other stuff for token creation and manipulation.
For your first question, you can design a Restfull API. Credentials(Username and password) will be passed to your service layer.Service layer then validates these credentials and grant a token.Credentials can be either simple username/password or can be SSL certificates. SSL certificates uses the OAUTH protocol and are more secure.
You can design your URI like this-
URI for token request-> http://myservice/some-directory/token?
(You can pass Credentilals in this URI for Token)
To use this token for resource access you can add this [Authorization:Bearer (token)] to your http header.
This token can be utilized by the customer to access different component of your service layer. You can also change the expiry period of this token to prevent misuse.
For your second question one thing you can do is that you grant different token to access different resource components of your service layer. For this you can specify resource parameter in your token, and grand permission based on this field.
You can also follow these links for more information-
http://www.codeproject.com/Articles/687647/Detailed-Tutorial-for-Building-ASP-NET-WebAPI-REST
http://www.vinaysahni.com/best-practices-for-a-pragmatic-restful-api
I have faced the same problem before. Login does not translate nicely to resource based design.
The way I usually handle it is by having Login resource and passing username and password on the parameter string, basically doing
GET on http://myservice/login?u={username}&p={password}
The response is some kind of session or auth string that can then be passed to other APIs for validation.
An alternative to doing GET on the login resource is doing a POST, REST purists will probably not like me now :), and passing in the creds in the body. The response would be the same.
everyone.
I have a problem securing my REST web service. It's part of Java EE web application. To secure the pages I used login-config tag and set up "FORM" authentication. Now I don't know how to secure web services, because "FORM" is not appropriate for it and I can't have two login-config tags for app. I considered splitting into 2 apps, but don't think it's a good idea. Any suggestions?
This has info on how to create secured web services using NetBeans: http://netbeans.org/kb/docs/websvc/wsit.html
Many web service providers use an api key to authenticate access to the service. You may want to consider doing something similar for your service.
It is pretty common for the REST API to have a separate subpath - that way you can specify the auth constraint just to the URL's specific to your application and for the URI's corresponding to your REST API implement authentication using jersey OAuth filter or something else.
In case your app is all written in Jersey and you would like to expose exactly the same URI's for REST clients as well as browser (and differentiate just based on the requested media type), you can have a "login" URL (for displaying a login page) and only that you could protect using FORM authentication. Then again you would add Jersey OAuth filter (or other auth filter) which would not kick in unless there is OAuth header in the request, and another filter where you would check if ContainerRequest.getUserPrincipal() is null. If it is null, you could return Response.seeOther(UriBuilder.fromPath("/login").queryParam("redirect", request.getAbsolutePath()).build()).build() - that will redirect to the login (for oauth this would not kick in, since either the oauth request would succeed, or the previous filter would fail and return Unauthorized or Bad Request status codes). In the login resource you can use the redirect query parameter to redirect back to the original page once successfully logged in.