Awesome
Authie
This is a Rails library which provides applications with a database-backed user sessions. This ensures that user sessions can be invalidated from the server and users activity can be easily tracked.
The "traditional" way of simply setting a user ID in your session is insecure and unwise. If you simply do something like the example below, it means that anyone with access to the session cookie can login as the user whenever and wherever they wish.
To clarify: while by default Rails session cookies are encrypted, there is nothing to allow them to be invalidated if someone were to "steal" an encrypted cookie from an authenticated user. This could be stolen using a MITM attack or simply by stealing it directly from their browser when they're off getting a coffee.
if user = User.authenticate(params[:username], params[:password])
# Don't do this...
session[:user_id] = user.id
redirect_to root_path, :notice => "Logged in successfully!"
end
The design goals behind Authie are:
- Any session can be invalidated instantly from the server without needing to make changes to remote cookies.
- We can see who is logged in to our application at any point in time.
- Sessions should automatically expire after a certain period of inactivity.
- Sessions can be either permanent or temporary.
Installation
As usual, just pop this in your Gemfile:
gem 'authie', :git => "git@github.com:owen2345/authie.git"
You will then need to run your db:migrate
task to add the Authie sessions table
to your local database.
rake db:migrate
Usage
Authie is just a session manager and doesn't provide any functionality for your authentication or User models. Your User
model should implement any methods needed to authenticate a username & password.
Creating a new session
When a user has been authenticated, you can simply set current_user
to the user
you wish to login. You may have a method like this in a controller.
class AuthenticationController < ApplicationController
skip_before_filter :login_required
def login
if request.post?
if user = User.authenticate(params[:username], params[:password])
auth_current_user(user) # init a session for this user
redirect_to root_path
else
flash.now[:alert] = "Username/password was invalid"
end
end
end
end
Checking whether user's are logged in
On any subsequent request, you should make sure that your user is logged in.
You may wish to implement a login_required
controller method which is called
before every action in your application.
class ApplicationController < ActionController::Base
before_filter :login_required
private
def login_required
unless logged_in?
redirect_to login_path, :alert => "You must login to view this resource"
end
end
end
Accessing the current user (and session)
There are a few controller methods which you can call which will return information about the current session:
current_user
- returns the currently logged in userauth_session
- returns the current auth sessionlogged_in?
- returns a true if there's a session or false if no user is logged in
Catching session errors
If there is an issue with an auth session, an error will be raised which you need to catch within your application. The errors which will be raised are:
Authie::Session::InactiveSession
- is raised when a session has been de-activated.Authie::Session::ExpiredSession
- is raised when a session expires.Authie::Session::BrowserMismatch
- is raised when the browser ID provided does not match the browser ID associated with the session token provided.
The easiest way to rescue these to use a rescue_from
. For example:
class ApplicationController < ActionController::Base
rescue_from Authie::Session::InactiveSession, :with => :auth_session_error
rescue_from Authie::Session::ExpiredSession, :with => :auth_session_error
rescue_from Authie::Session::BrowserMismatch, :with => :auth_session_error
private
def auth_session_error
redirect_to login_path, :alert => "Your session is no longer valid. Please login again to continue..."
end
end
Logging out
In order to invalidate a session you can simply invalidate it.
def logout
auth_session.invalidate!
redirect_to login_path, :notice => "Logged out successfully."
end
Default session length
By default, a session will last for however long it is being actively used in browser. If the user stops using your application, the session will last for 12 hours before becoming invalid. You can change this:
Authie.config.session_inactivity_timeout = 2.hours
This does not apply if the session is marked as persistent. See below.
Persisting sessions
In some cases, you may wish users to have a permanent sessions. In this case, you should ask users after they have logged in if they wish to "persist" their session across browser restarts. If they do wish to do this, just do something like this:
def persist_session
auth_session.persist!
redirect_to root_path, :notice => "You will now be remembered!"
end
By default, persistent sessions will last for 2 months before requring the user logs in again. You can increase this if needed:
Authie.config.persistent_session_length = 12.months
Accessing all user sessions
If you want to provide users with a list of their sessions, you can access all active sessions for a user. The best way to do this will be to add a has_many
association to your User model.
class User < ActiveRecord::Base
has_many :sessions, :class_name => 'Authie::Session', :foreign_key => 'user_id', :dependent => :destroy
end
Storing additional data in the user session
If you need to store additional information in your database-backed database session, then you can use the following methods to achieve this:
auth_session.set :two_factor_seen_at, Time.now
auth_session.get :two_factor_seen_at
Invalidating all but current session
You may wish to allow users to easily invalidate all sessions which aren't their
current one. Some applications invalidate old sessions whenever a user changes
their password. The invalidate_others!
method can be called on any
Authie::Session
object and will invalidate all sessions which aren't itself.
def change_password
if @user.change_password(params[:new_password])
auth_session.invalidate_others!
end
end
User impersonation
When supporting applications it is often useful to be able to use your application from the perspective of your users. Authie allows you to easily impersonate any user in your application. Here's a couple of example methods which you could implement in a secure admin controller allowing you to impersonate any given user.
class AdminController < ApplicationController
def switch_user
user = User.find(params[:other_user_id])
auth_session.impersonate!(user)
redirect_to root_path, :notice => "You are now logged in as #{user.username}"
end
def revert_session
auth_session.revert_to_parent!
redirect_to root_path, :notice => "Welcome back."
end
end
If when you call revert_to_parent!
you are not currently using an impersonation
session, a Authie::Session::NoParentSessionForRevert
exception will be raised.
Sudo functions
In some applications, you may want to require that the user has recently provided their password to you before executing certain sensitive actions. Authie provides some methods which can help you keep track of when a user last provided their password in a session and whether you need to prompt them before continuing.
# When the user logs into your application, run the see_password! method to note
# that we have just seen their password.
def login
if user = User.authenticate(params[:username], params[:password])
self.current_user = user
auth_session.see_password!
redirect_to root_path
end
end
# Before executing any dangerous actions, check to see whether the password has
# recently been seen.
def change_password
if auth_session.recently_seen_password?
# Allow the user to change their password as normal.
else
# Redirect the user a page which allows them to re-enter their password.
# The method here should verify the password is correct and call the
# see_password! method as above. Once verified, you can return them back to
# this page.
redirect_to reauth_path(:return_to => request.fullpath)
end
end
By default, a password will be said to have been recently seen if it has been seen in the last 10 minutes. You can change this configuration if needed:
Authie.config.sudo_timeout = 30.minutes
Working with two factor authentication
Authie provides a couple of methods to help you determine when two factor authentication is required for a request. Whenever a user logs in and has enabled two factor authentication, you can mark sessions as being permitted.
You can add the following to your application controller and ensure that it runs on every request to your application.
class ApplicationController < ActionController::Base
before_filter :check_two_factor_auth
def check_two_factor_auth
if logged_in? && current_user.has_two_factor_auth? && !auth_session.two_factored?
# If the user has two factor auth enabled, and we haven't already checked it
# in this auth session, redirect the user to an action which prompts the user
# to do their two factor auth check.
flash[:two_factor_return_path] = request.fullpath
redirect_to two_factor_auth_path
end
end
end
Then, on your two factor auth action, you need to ensure that you mark the auth session as being verified with two factor auth.
class LoginController < ApplicationController
skip_before_filter :check_two_factor_auth
def two_factor_auth
if user.verify_two_factor_token(params[:token])
auth_session.mark_as_two_factored!
redirect_to flash[:two_factor_return_path] || root_path, :notice => "Logged in successfully!"
end
end
end