Awesome
Mongoose store adapter for express-brute.
Installation
yarn add express-brute-mongoose
Usage
const ExpressBrute = require("express-brute");
const MongooseStore = require("express-brute-mongoose");
const BruteForceSchema = require("express-brute-mongoose/dist/schema");
const mongoose = require("mongoose");
const model = mongoose.model(
"bruteforce",
new mongoose.Schema(BruteForceSchema)
);
const store = new MongooseStore(model);
const bruteforce = new ExpressBrute(store);
app.post(
"/auth",
bruteforce.prevent, // error 403 if we hit this route too often
function(req, res, next) {
res.send("Success!");
}
);
Defining your Mongoose Schema
You can either use the default schema provided at express-brute-mongoose/dist/schema
or roll your own, as long as it matches the basic structural requirements of the schema as follows:
{
"_id": String,
"data": {
"count": Number,
"lastRequest": Date,
"firstRequest": Date
},
"expires": Date
}
The default schema included in the package includes a Mongo index on the _id
field and another index that will automatically delete each entry 1 day after it has passed its expires
time, in an effort to keep the collection clean.
Development
Build the package with
yarn compile
Run tests with
yarn test
Run the linter with
yarn lint
Running Tests
You should have mongo running on port 27017
before running tests. If you have docker-compose and docker installed, you can get mongo up and running by using the following command:
docker-compose up