Awesome
Doorman
Modules and functions to make authentication with Plug/Phoenix and Ecto easy without tons of configuration or boxing users into rigid framework.
The primary goal of Doorman is to build an opinionated interface and easy to use API on top of flexible modules that can also be used directly.
You can find more in-depth documentation here.
Installation
Add doorman to your dependencies in mix.exs
.
def deps do
[{:doorman, "~> 0.6.2"}]
end
Then add the configuration to config/config.exs
.
config :doorman,
repo: MyApp.Repo,
secure_with: Doorman.Auth.Bcrypt,
user_module: MyApp.User
Phoenix Quick Start
First generate a user model with a hashed_password
and session_secret
field.
$ mix phoenix.gen.model User users email hashed_password session_secret
Please note: we recommend using citext (or equivalent for non-postgres databases) for the email column so that your email is case insensitive.
Next, use Doorman.Auth.Bcrypt
in your new User
module and add a virtual
password
field. hash_password/1
is used in the changeset to hash our
password and put it into the changeset as hashed_password
.
defmodule MyApp.User do
use MyApp.Web, :model
import Doorman.Auth.Bcrypt, only: [hash_password: 1]
schema "users" do
field :email, :string
field :hashed_password, :string
field :password, :string, virtual: true
field :session_secret, :string
timestamps
end
def create_changeset(struct, params \\ %{}) do
struct
|> cast(params, ~w(email password))
|> hash_password
end
end
Finally, we can add our plug so we can have access to current_user
on
conn.assigns
. 99% of the time that means adding the Doorman.Login.Session
plug to your :browser
pipeline:
pipeline :browser do
# ...
plug Doorman.Login.Session
# ...
end
Creating Users
To create a user we can use the MyApp.create_changeset/2
function we defined. Here we'll also add the session_secret
to the user, which is only needed when creating an user or in case of compromised sessions.
defmodule MyApp.UserController do
use MyApp.Web, :controller
alias Doorman.Auth.Secret
alias MyApp.User
def new(conn, _params) do
changeset = User.create_changeset(%User{})
conn |> render("new.html", changeset: changeset)
end
def create(conn, %{"user" => user_params}) do
changeset =
%User{}
|> User.create_changeset(user_params)
|> Secret.put_session_secret()
case Repo.insert(changeset) do
{:ok, user} ->
conn |> redirect(to: "/")
{:error, changeset} ->
conn |> render("new.html", changeset: changeset)
end
end
end
Logging in users
To login users we can use Doorman.authenticate
and Doorman.Login.Session.login/2
.
defmodule MyApp.SessionController do
use Myapp.Web, :controller
import Doorman.Login.Session, only: [login: 2]
def create(conn, %{"session" => %{"email" => email, "password" => password}}) do
if user = Doorman.authenticate(email, password) do
conn
|> login(user) # Sets :user_id and :session_secret on conn's session
|> put_flash(:notice, "Successfully logged in")
|> redirect(to: "/")
else
conn
|> put_flash(:error, "No user found with the provided credentials")
|> render("new.html")
end
end
end
Requiring Authentication
To require a user to be authenticated you can build a simple plug around
Doorman.logged_in?/1
.
defmodule MyApp.RequireLogin do
import Plug.Conn
def init(opts), do: opts
def call(conn, _opts) do
if Doorman.logged_in?(conn) do
conn
else
conn
|> Phoenix.Controller.redirect(to: "/login")
|> halt
end
end
end