mikker / passwordless

🗝 Authentication for your Rails app without the icky-ness of passwords
MIT License
1.29k stars 88 forks source link
authentication engine passwordless rails ruby

Passwordless

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Add authentication to your Rails app without all the icky-ness of passwords. Magic link authentication, if you will. We call it passwordless.

Installation

Add to your bundle and copy over the migrations:

$ bundle add passwordless
$ bin/rails passwordless_engine:install:migrations

Upgrading

See Upgrading to Passwordless 1.0 for more details.

Usage

Passwordless creates a single model called Passwordless::Session, so it doesn't come with its own user model. Instead, it expects you to provide one, with an email field in place. If you don't yet have a user model, check out the wiki on creating the user model.

Enable Passwordless on your user model by pointing it to the email field:

class User < ApplicationRecord
  # your other code..

  passwordless_with :email # <-- here! this needs to be a column in `users` table

  # more of your code..
end

Then mount the engine in your routes:

Rails.application.routes.draw do
  passwordless_for :users

  # other routes
end

Getting the current user, restricting access, the usual

Passwordless doesn't give you current_user automatically. Here's how you could add it:

class ApplicationController < ActionController::Base
  include Passwordless::ControllerHelpers # <-- This!

  # ...

  helper_method :current_user

  private

  def current_user
    @current_user ||= authenticate_by_session(User)
  end

  def require_user!
    return if current_user
    save_passwordless_redirect_location!(User) # <-- optional, see below
    redirect_to root_path, alert: "You are not worthy!"
  end
end

Et voilà:

class VerySecretThingsController < ApplicationController
  before_action :require_user!

  def index
    @things = current_user.very_secret_things
  end
end

Providing your own templates

To make Passwordless look like your app, override the bundled views by adding your own. You can manually copy the specific views that you need or copy them to your application with rails generate passwordless:views.

Passwordless has 2 action views and 1 mailer view:

# the form where the user inputs their email address
app/views/passwordless/sessions/new.html.erb
# the form where the user inputs their just received token
app/views/passwordless/sessions/show.html.erb
# the email with the token and magic link
app/views/passwordless/mailer/sign_in.text.erb

See the bundled views.

Registering new users

Because your User record is like any other record, you create one like you normally would. Passwordless provides a helper method to sign in the created user after it is saved – like so:

class UsersController < ApplicationController
  include Passwordless::ControllerHelpers # <-- This!
  # (unless you already have it in your ApplicationController)

  def create
    @user = User.new(user_params)

    if @user.save
      sign_in(create_passwordless_session(@user)) # <-- This!
      redirect_to(@user, flash: { notice: 'Welcome!' })
    else
      render(:new)
    end
  end

  # ...
end

URLs and links

By default, Passwordless uses the resource name given to passwordless_for to generate its routes and helpers.

passwordless_for :users
  # <%= users_sign_in_path %> # => /users/sign_in

passwordless_for :users, at: '/', as: :auth
  # <%= auth_sign_in_path %> # => /sign_in

Also be sure to specify ActionMailer's default_url_options.host and tell the routes as well:

# config/application.rb for example:
config.action_mailer.default_url_options = {host: "www.example.com"}
routes.default_url_options[:host] ||= "www.example.com"

Note as well that passwordless_for accepts a custom controller. One possible application of this is to add a before_action that redirects authenticated users from the sign-in routes, as in this example:

# config/routes.rb
passwordless_for :users, controller: "sessions"
# app/controllers/sessions_controller.rb

class SessionsController < Passwordless::SessionsController
  before_action :require_unauth!, only: %i[new show]

  private

  def require_unauth!
    return unless current_user
    redirect_to("/", notice: "You are already signed in.")
  end
end

Route constraints

With constraints you can restrict access to certain routes. Passwordless provides Passwordless::Constraint and it's negative counterpart Passwordless::ConstraintNot for this purpose.

To limit a route to only authenticated Users:

constraints Passwordless::Constraint.new(User) do
  # ...
end

The constraint takes a second if: argument, that expects a block and is passed the authenticatable record, (ie. User):

constraints Passwordless::Constraint.new(User, if: -> (user) { user.email.include?("john") }) do
  # ...
end

The negated version has the same API but with the opposite result, ie. ensuring authenticated user don't have access:

constraints Passwordless::ConstraintNot.new(User) do
  get("/no-users-allowed", to: "secrets#index")
end

Configuration

To customize Passwordless, create a file config/initializers/passwordless.rb.

The default values are shown below. It's recommended to only include the ones that you specifically want to modify.

Passwordless.configure do |config|
  config.default_from_address = "CHANGE_ME@example.com"
  config.parent_controller = "ApplicationController"
  config.parent_mailer = "ActionMailer::Base"
  config.restrict_token_reuse = true # Can a token/link be used multiple times?
  config.token_generator = Passwordless::ShortTokenGenerator.new # Used to generate magic link tokens.

  config.expires_at = lambda { 1.year.from_now } # How long until a signed in session expires.
  config.timeout_at = lambda { 10.minutes.from_now } # How long until a token/magic link times out.

  config.redirect_back_after_sign_in = true # When enabled the user will be redirected to their previous page, or a page specified by the `destination_path` query parameter, if available.
  config.redirect_to_response_options = {} # Additional options for redirects.
  config.success_redirect_path = '/' # After a user successfully signs in
  config.failure_redirect_path = '/' # After a sign in fails
  config.sign_out_redirect_path = '/' # After a user signs out

  config.paranoid = false # Display email sent notice even when the resource is not found.

  config.after_session_confirm = ->(request, session) {} # Called after a session is confirmed.
end

Delivery method

By default, Passwordless sends emails. See Providing your own templates. If you need to customize this further, you can do so in the after_session_save callback.

In config/initializers/passwordless.rb:

Passwordless.configure do |config|
  config.after_session_save = lambda do |session, request|
    # Default behavior is
    # Passwordless::Mailer.sign_in(session).deliver_now

    # You can change behavior to do something with session model. For example,
    # SmsApi.send_sms(session.authenticatable.phone_number, session.token)
  end
end

After Session Confirm Hook

An after_session_confirm hook is called after a successful session confirmation – in other words: after a user signs in successfully.

Passwordless.configure do |config|
  config.after_session_confirm = ->(session, request) {
    user = session.authenticatable
    user.update!(
      email_verified: true.
      last_login_ip: request.remote_ip
    )
  }
end
### Token generation

By default Passwordless generates short, 6-digit, alpha numeric tokens. You can change the generator using `Passwordless.config.token_generator` to something else that responds to `call(session)` eg.:

```ruby
Passwordless.configure do |config|
  config.token_generator = lambda do |session|
    "probably-stupid-token-#{session.user_agent}-#{Time.current}"
  end
end

Passwordless will keep generating tokens until it finds one that hasn't been used yet. So be sure to use some kind of method where matches are unlikely.

Timeout and Expiry

The timeout is the time by which the generated token and magic link is invalidated. After this the token cannot be used to sign in to your app and the user will need to request a new token.

The expiry is the expiration time of the session of a logged in user. Once this is expired, the user is signed out.

Note: Passwordless' session relies on Rails' own session and so will never live longer than that.

To configure your Rails session, in config/initializers/session_store.rb:

Rails.application.config.session_store :cookie_store,
  expire_after: 1.year,
  # ...

Redirection after sign-in

By default Passwordless will redirect back to where the user wanted to go if it knows where that is -- so you'll have to help it. Passwordless::ControllerHelpers provide a method:

class ApplicationController < ActionController::Base
  include Passwordless::ControllerHelpers # <-- Probably already have this!

  # ...

  def require_user!
    return if current_user
    save_passwordless_redirect_location!(User) # <-- this one!
    redirect_to root_path, alert: "You are not worthy!"
  end
end

This can also be turned off with Passwordless.config.redirect_back_after_sign_in = false.

Looking up the user

By default Passwordless uses the passwordless_with column to case insensitively fetch the user resource.

You can override this by defining a class method fetch_resource_for_passwordless in your user model. This method will be called with the down-cased, stripped email and should return an ActiveRecord instance.

class User < ApplicationRecord
  def self.fetch_resource_for_passwordless(email)
    find_or_create_by(email: email)
  end
end

Test helpers

To help with testing, a set of test helpers are provided.

If you are using RSpec, add the following line to your spec/rails_helper.rb:

require "passwordless/test_helpers"

If you are using TestUnit, add this line to your test/test_helper.rb:

require "passwordless/test_helpers"

Then in your controller, request, and system tests/specs, you can utilize the following methods:

passwordless_sign_in(user) # signs you in as a user
passwordless_sign_out # signs out user

Security considerations

There's no reason that this approach should be less secure than the usual username/password combo. In fact this is most often a more secure option, as users don't get to choose the horrible passwords they can't seem to stop using. In a way, this is just the same as having each user go through "Forgot password" on every login.

But be aware that when everyone authenticates via emails, the way you send those mails becomes a weak spot. Email services usually provide a log of all the mails you send so if your email delivery provider account is compromised, every user in the system is as well. (This is the same for "Forgot password".) Reddit was once compromised using this method.

Ideally you should set up your email provider to not log these mails. And be sure to turn on non-SMS 2-factor authentication if your provider supports it.

Alternatives

License

MIT