Home

Awesome

WebAuthn

Latest Version on Packagist Latest stable test run Codecov coverage CodeClimate Maintainability Sonarcloud Status Laravel Octane Compatibility

Authenticate users with Passkeys: fingerprints, patterns and biometric data.

// App\Http\Controllers\LoginController.php
use Laragear\WebAuthn\Http\Requests\AssertedRequest;

public function login(AssertedRequest $request)
{
    $user = $request->login();

    return response()->json(['message' => "Welcome back, $user->name!"]);
}

[!TIP]

You want to add two-factor authentication to your app? Check out Laragear TwoFactor.

Become a sponsor

Your support allows me to keep this package free, up-to-date and maintainable. Alternatively, you can spread the word!

Requirements

[!TIP]

If you can't enable the ext-sodium extension for whatever reason, you may try installing paragonie/sodium_compat.

Installation

Require this package into your project using Composer:

composer require laragear/webauthn

How Passkeys work?

Passkeys, hence WebAuthn, consists in two ceremonies: attestation, and assertion.

Attestation is the process of asking the authenticator (a phone, laptop, USB key...) to create a private-public key pair, save the private key internally, and store the public key inside your app. For that to work, the browser must support WebAuthn, which is what intermediates between the authenticator (OS & device hardware) and the server.

Assertion is the process of pushing a cryptographic challenge to the authenticator, which will return back to the server signed by the private key of the device. Upon arrival, the server checks the signature is correct with the stored public key, ready to log in.

The private key doesn't leave the authenticator, there are no shared passwords stored anywhere, and Passkeys only work on the server domain (like google.com) or subdomain (like auth.google.com).

Set up

We need to make sure your users can register their devices and authenticate with them.

  1. Publish the files
  2. Add the WebAuthn driver
  3. Implement the contract and trait
  4. Register the controllers (optional)
  5. Use the Javascript helper (optional)

1. Add the WebAuthn driver

Laragear WebAuthn works by extending the Eloquent User Provider with a simple additional check to find a user for the given WebAuthn Credentials (Assertion). This makes this WebAuthn package compatible with any guard you may have.

Simply go into your auth.php configuration file, change the driver from eloquent to eloquent-webauthn, and add the password_fallback to true.

return [
    // ...

    'providers' => [
        'users' => [
            'driver' => 'eloquent-webauthn',
            'model' => App\User::class,
            'password_fallback' => true,
        ],
    ]
];

The password_fallback indicates the User Provider should fall back to validate the password when the request is not a WebAuthn Assertion. It's enabled to seamlessly use both classic (password) and WebAuthn authentication procedures.

2. Publish files and migrate

With the single webauthn:install command, you can install the configuration, routes, and migration files.

php artisan webauthn:install

This will also publish a migration file needed to create a table to hold the WebAuthn Credentials (Passkeys). Once ready, migrate your application to create the table.

php artisan migrate

[!TIP]

You can modify the migration if you need to, like changing the table name.

3. Implement the contract and trait

Add the WebAuthnAuthenticatable contract and the WebAuthnAuthentication trait to the User class, or any other that uses authentication.

<?php

namespace App;

use Illuminate\Foundation\Auth\User as Authenticatable;
use Laragear\WebAuthn\Contracts\WebAuthnAuthenticatable;
use Laragear\WebAuthn\WebAuthnAuthentication;

class User extends Authenticatable implements WebAuthnAuthenticatable
{
    use WebAuthnAuthentication;

    // ...
}

From here you're ready to work with WebAuthn Authentication. The following steps will help you close the gap to a full implementation.

4. Register the routes and controllers

WebAuthn uses exclusive routes to register and authenticate users. Creating these routes and controller may be cumbersome, specially if it's your first time in the WebAuthn realm, so these are installed automatically at Http\Controllers\WebAuthn when using webauthn:install.

Go into your web.php routes file and register a default set of routes with the \Laragear\WebAuthn\Http\Routes::register() method. Since WebAuthn doesn't require protection for CSRF/XSRF tokens, you may disable it for these routes.

// web.php
use Illuminate\Foundation\Http\Middleware\VerifyCsrfToken;
use Illuminate\Support\Facades\Route;
use Laragear\WebAuthn\Http\Routes as WebAuthnRoutes;

Route::view('welcome');

// WebAuthn Routes
WebAuthnRoutes::register()->withoutMiddleware(VerifyCsrfToken::class);

[!TIP]

The @laragear/webpass javascript helper supports adding CSRF/XSRF tokens manually.

The method allows to use different attestation and assertion paths, and even each of the controllers.

use Illuminate\Foundation\Http\Middleware\VerifyCsrfToken;
use Laragear\WebAuthn\Http\Routes as WebAuthnRoutes;

WebAuthnRoutes::register(
    attest: 'auth/register',
    assert: 'auth/login'
)->withoutMiddleware(VerifyCsrfToken::class);

[!INFO]

You can also delete the controllers and implement attestation and assertion manually.

5. Use the Javascript helper

This package original Javascript helper has been moved into its own package, called @laragear/webpass. You may use directly in your HTML application by just using JSDelivr CDN:

<head>
    <script src="https://cdn.jsdelivr.net/npm/@laragear/webpass@2/dist/webpass.js" defer></script>
</head>

<body>
    <script async>
        if (Webpass.isUnsupported()) {
            alert("Your browser doesn't support WebAuthn.")
        }
        
        const { success } = await Webpass.attest("/webauthn/register/options", "/webauthn/register")
        
        if (success) {
            window.location.replace("/dashboard")
        }
    </script>
</body>

Alternatively, you may want to include it in your project dependencies if you're using a frontend framework like Vue, React, Angular or Svelte, to name a few.

npm i @laragear/webpass@2

Once done, you may attest and assert the authenticator using the Webpass object:

import Webpass from "@laragear/webpass"

if (Webpass.isUnsupported()) {
    return alert("Your browser doesn't support WebAuthn.")
}

// Create new credentials for a logged in user
const { credential, success, error } = await Webpass.attest("/webauthn/register/options", "/webauthn/register")

// Check the credentials for a guest user
const { user, success, error } = await Webpass.assert("/webauthn/login/options", "/webauthn/login")

The Webpass helper offers more flexibility than just adjusting the WebAuthn ceremony paths. For more information, check the documentation of @laragear/webpass.

Attestation

Attestation is the ceremony to create WebAuthn Credentials. To create an Attestable Response that the user device can understand, use the AttestationRequest::toCreate() form request.

For example, we can create our own WebAuthnRegisterController to create it.

// app\Http\Controllers\WebAuthn\WebAuthnRegisterController.php
use Laragear\WebAuthn\Http\Requests\AttestationRequest;

public function createChallenge(AttestationRequest $request)
{
    return $request->toCreate();
}

The device will receive the "instructions" to make a key, and will respond with it. You can use the AttestedRequest form request and its save() method to persist the WebAuthn key if it is valid. The request will automatically return a Validation exception if something fails.

// app\Http\Controllers\WebAuthn\WebAuthnRegisterController.php
use Laragear\WebAuthn\Http\Requests\AttestedRequest;

public function register(AttestedRequest $attestation)
{
    $attestation->save();
    
    return 'Now you can login without passwords!';
}

You may pass an array, or a callback, to the save(), which will allow you to modify the underlying WebAuthn Eloquent Model before saving it. For example, we could add an alias for the key present in the Request data.

// app\Http\Controllers\WebAuthn\WebAuthnRegisterController.php
use Laragear\WebAuthn\Http\Requests\AttestedRequest;

public function register(AttestedRequest $request)
{
    $request->validate(['alias' => 'nullable|string']);

    $attestation->save($request->only('alias'));
    
    // Same as:
    // $attestation->save(function ($credentials) use ($request) {
    //    $credentials->alias = $request->input('alias');
    // })
}

[!IMPORTANT]

Both AttestationRequest and AttestedRequest require the authenticated user. If the user is not authenticated, an HTTP 403 status code will be returned.

Attestation User verification

By default, the authenticator decides how to verify user when creating a credential. Some may ask to press a "Continue" button to confirm presence, others will verify the User with biometrics, patterns or passwords.

You can override this using fastRegistration() to only check for user presence if possible, or secureRegistration() to actively verify the User.

// app\Http\Controllers\WebAuthn\WebAuthnRegisterController.php
use Laragear\WebAuthn\Http\Requests\AttestationRequest;

public function createChallenge(AttestationRequest $request)
{
    return $request->fastRegistration()->toCreate();
}

Userless/One-touch/Typeless Login

This enables one click/tap login, without the need to specify the user credentials (like the email) beforehand.

For this to work, the device has to save the "username id" inside itself. Some authenticators may save it regardless, others may be not compatible. To make this mandatory when creating the WebAuthn Credential, use the userless() method of the AttestationRequest form request.

// app\Http\Controllers\WebAuthn\WebAuthnRegisterController.php
use Laragear\WebAuthn\Http\Requests\AttestationRequest;

public function registerDevice(AttestationRequest $request)
{
    return $request->userless()->toCreate();
}

In layman temrs, once the Resident Key is created, the authenticator will be able to find the correct credential for your app by finding which credentials match your Relaying Party ID (like my-app.com), and show the user these credentials. This effectively eliminates the step of the user sending its username so the server can return which credentials ID the authenticator should use.

[!IMPORTANT]

The Authenticator WILL require user verification on login when using userless(). Its highly probable the user will also be asked for user verification on login, as it will depend on the authenticator itself.

Multiple credentials per device

By default, during Attestation, the device will be informed about the existing enabled credentials already registered in the application. This way the device can avoid creating another one for the same purpose.

You can enable multiple credentials per device using allowDuplicates(), which in turn will always return an empty list of credentials to exclude. This way the authenticator will think there are no already stored credentials for your app, and create a new one.

// app\Http\Controllers\WebAuthn\WebAuthnRegisterController.php
use Laragear\WebAuthn\Http\Requests\AttestationRequest;

public function registerDevice(AttestationRequest $request)
{
    return $request->allowDuplicates()->make();
}

Assertion

The Assertion procedure also follows a two-step procedure: the user will input its username, the server will return the IDs of the WebAuthn credentials to use, and the device pick one to sign the response. If you're using userless login, only the challenge is returned.

First, use the AssertionRequest::toVerify() form request. It will automatically create an assertion for the user that matches the credentials, or a blank one in case you're using userless login. Otherwise, you may set stricter validation rules to always ask for credentials.

For example, we can use our own WebAuthnLoginController to handle it.

// app\Http\Controllers\WebAuthn\WebAuthnLoginController.php
use Laragear\WebAuthn\Http\Requests\AssertionRequest;

public function createChallenge(AssertionRequest $request)
{
    $request->validate(['email' => 'sometimes|email']);

    return $request->toVerify($request->only('email'));
}

After that, you may receive the challenge using the AssertedRequest request object by just type-hinting it in the controller.

Since the authentication is pretty much straightforward, you only need to check if the login() method returns the newly authenticated user or null when it fails. When it's a success, it will take care of regenerating the session for you.

// app\Http\Controllers\WebAuthn\WebAuthnLoginController.php
use Laragear\WebAuthn\Http\Requests\AssertedRequest;

public function createChallenge(AssertedRequest $request)
{
    $user = $request->login();
    
    return $user 
        ? response("Welcome back, $user->name!");
        : response('Something went wrong, try again!');
}

You can also use the login() method will callbacks, which will be passed to the attemptWhen() method of the Session Guard.

// app\Http\Controllers\WebAuthn\WebAuthnLoginController.php
use Laragear\WebAuthn\Http\Requests\AssertedRequest;

public function createChallenge(AssertedRequest $request)
{
    $user = $request->login(callbacks: fn ($user) => $user->isNotBanned());
    
    return $user 
        ? response("Welcome back, $user->name!");
        : response('Something went wrong, try again!');
}

If you need greater control on the Assertion procedure, you may want to Assert manually.

Assertion User Verification

In the same style of attestation user verification, the authenticator decides if it should verify the user on login or not.

You may only require the user presence with fastLogin(), or actively verify the user with secureLogin().

// app\Http\Controllers\WebAuthn\WebAuthnLoginController.php
use Laragear\WebAuthn\Http\Requests\AssertionRequest;

public function createChallenge(AssertionRequest $request)
{
    $request->validate(['email' => 'sometimes|email']);

    return $request->fastLogin()->toVerify($request->only('email'));
}

Password Fallback

By default, the eloquent-webauthn can be used to log in users with passwords when the credentials are not a WebAuthn JSON payload, like a password. This way, your normal Authentication flow is unaffected:

// app\Http\Controllers\Auth\LoginController.php
use Illuminate\Support\Facades\Auth;

public function login(Request $request)
{
    $request->validate(['email' => 'required|email', 'password' => 'required|string']);

    if (Auth::attempt($request->only('email', 'password'))) {
        return redirect()->home();
    }
    
    return back()->withErrors(['email' => 'No user found with these credentials']);
}

You may disable the fallback to only allow WebAuthn authentication by setting password_fallback to false. This may force you to handle classic user/password using a separate guard.

Detecting Cloned Credentials

During assertion, the package will automatically detect if a Credential has been cloned by comparing how many times the user has logged in with it.

When it's detected as cloned, the Credential will be immediately disabled and the Assertion will be denied.

Additionally, the CredentialCloned event will be fired, which you can use to warn the user.

use Illuminate\Support\Facades\Event;
use Laragear\WebAuthn\Events\CredentialCloned;
use App\Notifications\SecureYourDevice;

Event::listen(CredentialCloned::class, function ($cloned) {
    $notification = new SecureYourDevice($cloned->credential);
    
    $cloned->credential->user->notify($notification);
});

Managing Credentials

The purpose of the WebAuthnAuthenticatable contract is to allow managing credentials within the User instance. The most useful methods are:

You can use these methods to, for example, find a credential to blacklist, or disable WebAuthn completely by flushing all registered devices.

Events

The following events are fired by this package, which you can listen to in your application:

EventDescription
CredentialCreatedAn User has registered a new WebAuthn Credential through Attestation.
CredentialEnabledA disabled WebAuthn Credential was enabled using enable().
CredentialDisabledA enabled WebAuthn Credential was disabled using disable().
CredentialClonedA WebAuthn Credential was detected as cloned dring Assertion.
CredentialAttestedA WebAuthn Credential was used to successfully complete Attestation.
CredentialAssertedA WebAuthn Credential was used to successfully complete Assertion.

Manually Attesting and Asserting

If you want to manually Attest and Assert users, for example to create users at the same time they register (attest) a device, you may instance their respective pipelines used for both WebAuthn Ceremonies:

PipelineDescription
AttestationCreatorCreates a request to create a WebAuthn Credential.
AttestationValidatorValidates a response with the WebAuthn Credential.
AssertionCreatorCreates a request to validate a WebAuthn Credential.
AssertionValidatorValidates a response for a WebAuthn Credential.

[!IMPORTANT]

The AttestationValidator instances a storable credential, it doesn't save it. This way you have the chance to alter the model with additional data before persisting.

Compared to prior versions, the validation data to pass through AttestationValidator and AssertionValidator no longer require the current Request instance. Instead, these only need the JSON array of data.

If you prefer, you can still use the fromRequest() helper, which will extract the required WebAuthn data from the current or issued Request instance, or manually instance a Laragear\WebAuthn\JsonTransport with the required data.

use Laragear\WebAuthn\Assertion\Validator\AssertionValidation;

$assertion = AssertionValidation::fromRequest();

// Same as...
$assertion = new AssertionValidation(
    new JsonTransport($request->json(AssertionValidation::REQUEST_KEYS))
);

Going back to the pipeline usage, let's imagine you want to manually authenticate a user with its WebAuthn Credentials. For that, you can type-hint the AssertionValidator pipeline in a Controller action argument and Laravel will automatically inject the instance to it.

use Laragear\WebAuthn\Assertion\Validator\AssertionValidation;
use Laragear\WebAuthn\Assertion\Validator\AssertionValidator;
use Illuminate\Support\Facades\Auth;

public function authenticate(Request $request, AssertionValidator $assertion)
{
    $credential = $assertion
        ->send(AssertionValidation::fromRequest($request))
        ->thenReturn()
        ->credential;
    
    Auth::login($credential->user);
    
    return "Welcome aboard, {$credential->user->name}!";
}

Since these are Laravel Pipelines, you're free to push additional pipes. These pipes can be a class with handle(), or just a function that receives the validation procedure.

use Laragear\WebAuthn\Assertion\Validator\AssertionValidator;
use Laragear\WebAuthn\Assertion\Validator\AssertionValidation;
use Exception;

public function authenticate(Request $request, AssertionValidator $assertion)
{
    $credential = $assertion
        ->send(AssertionValidation::fromRequest($request))
        // Add new pipes to the validation.
        ->pipe(function($validation, $next) {
            if ($validation->user?->isNotAwesome()) {
                throw new Exception('The user is not awesome');
            }

            return $next($validation);
        })
        ->thenReturn()
        ->credential;
    
    Auth::login($credential->user);
    
    return "Welcome aboard, {$credential->user->name}!";
}

Alternatively, you may add new pipes globally in the register() method of your AppServiceProvider() or AuthServiceProvider(), just by extending the binding.

namespace App\Providers;

use Illuminate\Support\ServiceProvider;
use Laragear\WebAuthn\Assertion\Validator\AssertionValidator;

class AppServiceProvider extends ServiceProvider
{
    public function register()
    {
        $this->app->extend(AssertionValidator::class, function ($pipeline) {
            return $pipeline->pipe([
                \App\Auth\WebAuthn\CheckIfUserIsCool::class,
                \App\Auth\WebAuthn\LoginUser::class,
                \App\Auth\WebAuthn\SendLoginNotification::class,
            ]);
        })
    }
}

[!WARNING]

The pipes list and the pipes themselves are not covered by API changes, and are marked as internal. These may change between minor or patch versions without notice.

Migrations

Challenges

Challenges are primordial to each WebAuthn ceremony. It's the only way to check if both the authenticator and application (Relying Party) have the same cryptographical key pair.

While this library works using known secure defaults, you can change how challenges are created, and how these are managed from a given store.

Custom Challenges

Challenges are created automatically using the library configuration. Most of the time, you won't need to change how a Challenge is created.

There may be some scenarios where you will want to create a custom challenge. For example, you need to base it on predefined piece of data, or especial properties for specific devices. You may add your own Challenge, with the Byte Buffer required to be transmitted, to the data being passed to the AttestationCreator and AssertionCreator pipelines.

use FIDO\Generator;
use Laragear\WebAuthn\Attestation\Creator\AttestationCreation;
use Laragear\WebAuthn\Attestation\Creator\AttestationCreator;
use Laragear\WebAuthn\Challenge\Challenge;

public function create(Request $request, AttestationCreator $assertion)
{
    $byteBuffer = Generator::lowPowerRandom();
    
    $creation = new AttestationCreation(
        user: $request->user(),
        challenge: Challenge::make($byteBuffer, 60) 
    );

    return $assertion
        ->send($creation)
        ->thenReturn()
        ->json;
}

Custom Challenge Repository

Storing and pulling challenges is done through a repository. By default, this library includes a repository that uses your application Session, which is the easiest and securer way to store and pull challenges.

You may want to use your own, for example, if you need to share the challenges across multiple application instances, or a common database table. Whatever is your use case, start by creating a class implementing the Laragear\WebAuthn\Contracts\WebAuthnChallengeRepository contract.

The class should be able to store a Challenge instance, and pull it if it exists. Note that whe it's pulled, the data is deleted from the repository.

namespace App\WebAuthn;

use Illuminate\Support\Facades\Auth;
use Illuminate\Support\Facades\Cache;
use Illuminate\Support\Facades\Request;
use Laragear\WebAuthn\Assertion\Creator\AssertionCreation;
use Laragear\WebAuthn\Assertion\Validator\AssertionValidation;
use Laragear\WebAuthn\Attestation\Creator\AttestationCreation;
use Laragear\WebAuthn\Attestation\Validator\AttestationValidation;
use Laragear\WebAuthn\Contracts\WebAuthnChallengeRepository;
use Laragear\WebAuthn\Challenge\Challenge;

class MyRepository implements WebAuthnChallengeRepository
{
    /**
     * Puts a ceremony challenge into the repository.
     */
    public function store(Challenge $challenge, AttestationCreation|AssertionCreation $ceremony): void
    {  
        Cache::store('redis')->put($this->getFingerprint(), $challenge, $challenge->expiresAt())
    }

    /**
     * Pulls a ceremony challenge out from the repository, if it exists.
     */
    public function pull(AttestationValidation|AssertionValidation $ceremony): ?Challenge
    {      
        return Cache::store('redis')->pull($this->getFingerprint());
    }
    
    /**
     * Create a fingerprint as a cache key.
     */
    protected function getFingerprint(): string
    {
        $user = Auth::user();
        
        // Use the IP, the user class and its auth identifier to build the cache key.
        // This should ensure the challenge is unique for the IP and the user.
        return implode('|', [
            'webauthn_challenge', Request::ip(), get_class($user), $user->getAuthIdentifier()
        ]);
    }
}

After that, replace the default challenge repository resolver in the application container, ideally in your register() method of your AppServiceProvider class.

namespace App\Providers;

use App\WebAuthn\MyRepository;
use Illuminate\Support\ServiceProvider;
use Laragear\WebAuthn\Contracts\WebAuthnChallengeRepository;

class AppServiceProvider extends ServiceProvider
{
    public function boot()
    {
        $this->app->register(WebAuthnChallengeRepository::class, fn () => new MyRepository())
    }
}

Origins

If you have an Android app, or any other remote frontends, software or interfaces outside your app server to handle credentials on behalf of your app, you may need to add these as valid origins. These are additional to your main Relying Party ID, which is your app domain.

Simply add these origins as part of the WEBAUTHN_ORIGINS environment variable. If you have more than one, you can separate them using a comma.

WEBAUTHN_ORIGINS=mirror-myapp.com,android:apk-key-hash:kffL-daBUxvHpY-4M8yhTavt5QnFEI2LsexohxrGPYU

Advanced Configuration

Laragear WebAuthn was made to work out-of-the-box, but you can override the configuration by simply publishing the config file.

php artisan vendor:publish --provider="Laragear\WebAuthn\WebAuthnServiceProvider" --tag="config"

After that, you will receive the config/webauthn.php config file with an array like this:

<?php

return [
    'relying_party' => [
        'name' => env('WEBAUTHN_NAME', env('APP_NAME')),
        'id'   => env('WEBAUTHN_ID'),
    ],
    'origins' => env('WEBAUTHN_ORIGINS'),
    'challenge' => [
        'bytes' => 16,
        'timeout' => 60,
        'key' => '_webauthn',
    ]
];

Relying Party Information

return [
    'relying_party' => [
        'name' => env('WEBAUTHN_NAME', env('APP_NAME')),
        'id'   => env('WEBAUTHN_ID'),
    ],
];

The Relying Party is just a way to uniquely identify your application in the user device:

[!WARNING]

WebAuthn authentication only work on the top domain it was registered.

Instead of modifying the config file, you should use the environment variables to set the name and ID for WebAuthn.

WEBAUTHN_NAME=SecureBank
WEBAUTHN_ID=auth.securebank.com

Origins

return [
    'origins' => env('WEBAUTHN_ORIGINS'),
];

This holds the additional origins your application may accept for attestation and assertion. You should use the WEBAUTHN_ORIGINS environment variable to change this value.

Challenge configuration

return [
    'challenge' => [
        'bytes' => 16,
        'timeout' => 60,
        'key' => '_webauthn',
    ]
];

The outgoing challenges are random string of bytes. This controls how many bytes, the seconds which the challenge is valid, and the session key used to store the challenge while its being resolved by the device.

Laravel UI, Jetstream, Fortify, Sanctum, Breeze, Inertia and Livewire

In theory this package should work without any problems with these packages, but you may need to override or redirect the authentication flow (read: override methods) to one using WebAuthn.

There is no support for using WebAuthn with these packages because these are meant to be used with classic user-password authentication. Any issue regarding these packages will be shot down with extreme prejudice.

If you think WebAuthn is critical for these packages, consider supporting this package.

FAQ

Yes. In the case of ancient browsers, you should have a fallback detection script. This can be asked with the included JavaScript helper in a breeze:

if (WebAuthn.isNotSupported()) {
   alert('Your device is not secure enough to use this site!');
}

No, these are stored on-device and remain there.

WebAuthn only stores a cryptographic public key generated randomly by the device.

No, WebAuthn kills the phishing.

Unlike passwords, the private key never leaves the device, and the key-pair is bound to the top-most domain it was registered.

A user being phished at staetbank.com won't be able to log in with a key made on the legit site statebank.com, as the device won't be able to find it.

No, unless explicitly requested and consented.

This package doesn't support other attestation conveyances than none, so that data is not received by the app.

Yes, as long you are hashing them as you should. This is done by Laravel by default.

You can also disable them and make your site only compatible with WebAuthn.

Yes.

Not by default, but you can enable it.

Yes. If you're not using a password fallback, you may need to create a logic to register a new device using an email or SMS. It's assumed he is reading his email using a trusted device.

Disabling a credential doesn't delete it, so it's useful as a blacklisting mechanism and these can also be re-enabled.

When the credential is deleted, it goes away forever from the server, so the credential in the authenticator device becomes orphaned.

No, there is no protocol in WebAuthn to delete a credential from the authenticator.

That process must be done manually by the user in his device, and will vary depending on the browser, OS and device hardware.

Extremely secure since it works only on HTTPS (or localhost). Also, no password or codes are exchanged nor visible in the screen.

Yes. Just be sure to create recovery helpers to avoid locking out your users.

It's encouraged to use Webpass package.

Alternatively, for complex WebAuthn management, consider using the navigator.credentials API directly.

This happens because you forgot the first step, using the WebAuthn driver to authenticate users.

Yes and no. To register users, you still need to use captcha, honeypots, or other mechanisms to stop bots from filling forms.

Once a user is registered, bots won't be able to log in because the real user is the only one that has the private key required for WebAuthn.

Yes, the Webpass helper does it automatically for you.

Yes, public keys are encrypted when saved into the database with your app key.

Laravel 11.x includes a key rotation mechanism to avoid locking out all your users if you change your APP_KEY.

Older Laravel versions will require re-encryption. You will have to manually create a console command that decrypts (with the old key) and re-encrypts (with the new key) the public_key column of the table where the authentication data is.

No. You're free to create your own flow for recovery.

My recommendation is to email the user, pointing to a route that registers a new device, and immediately redirect him to blacklist which credential was lost (or blacklist the only one he has).

Sometimes.

While this is entirely up to hardware, OS and browser vendor themselves, modern platforms will show a QR code, push notification, or ask to bring closer your smartphone to complete the WebAuthn ceremony. Please check your target platforms of choice.

By default, this WebAuthn works on almost everything. Some combinations of devices, OS and Web browsers may differ on what to make available for WebAuthn authentication.

You may check this site for authenticator support.

This package supports WebAuthn 2.0, which is W3C Recommendation. Your device/OS/browser may be using an unsupported version.

There are no plans to support older WebAuthn specs. The new WebAuthn 3.0 draft spec needs to be finished to be supported.

Use localhost exclusively (not 127.0.0.1 or ::1) or use a proxy to tunnel your site through HTTPS. WebAuthn only works on localhost or under HTTPS only.

Because direct, indirect and enterprise attestations are mostly used on high-security high-risk scenarios, where an entity has total control on the devices used to authenticate. Imagine government, finance, medical, or military.

If you deem this feature critical for you, consider supporting this package.

No. Is encouraged to use whatever to authenticate in your app.

Remember that your WebAuthn routes must use Sessions, because the Challenges are stored there by default.

Session are automatically started on the web route group, or using the StartSession middleware directly. You can check this on your HTTP Kernel Middleware.

If you have debugging enabled, like on development environments, the assertion data is logged in your application logs.

The rest of errors are thrown as-is. You may want to log them manually using Laravel's Error Handler depending on the case.

Yes. Instead of using webauthn:install, use vendor:publish and follow the prompts.

Some authenticators can create EdDSA 25519 public keys, which are part of W3C WebAuthn 3.0 draft. These keys are shorter and don't require too much computational power to verify, which opens the usage for low-power or "passive" authenticators (like smart-cards).

If sodium or the paragonie/sodium-compat package are not installed, the server won't report EdDSA 25519 compatibility to the authenticator, and any EdDSA 25519 public key previously stored will fail validation.

Consider also that there are no signs of EdDSA 25519 incorporation into PHP ext-openssl extension.

Laravel Octane Compatibility

There should be no problems using this package with Laravel Octane.

Security

These are some details about this WebAuthn implementation you should be aware of.

If you discover any security related issues, please email darkghosthunter@gmail.com instead of using the issue tracker.

License

The MIT License (MIT). Please see License File for more information.

Contains Code from Lukas Buchs WebAuthn 2.0 implementation. The MIT License (MIT) where applicable.

Laravel is a Trademark of Taylor Otwell. Copyright © 2011-2022 Laravel LLC.