This library will help you work with JWTs.
- Decode a JWT from your AngularJS app
- Check the expiration date of the JWT
- Automatically send the JWT in every request made to the server
- Manage the user's authentication state with authManager
You have several options: Install with either bower or npm and link to the installed file from html using script tag.
bower install angular-jwt
npm install angular-jwt
jwtHelper will take care of helping you decode the token and check its expiration date.
angular
.module('app', ['angular-jwt'])
.controller('Controller', function Controller(jwtHelper) {
var expToken = 'eyJ0eXAiOiJKV1QiLCJhbGciOiJIUzI1NiJ9.eyJpc3MiOiJodHRwczovL3NhbXBsZXMuYXV0aDAuY29tLyIsInN1YiI6ImZhY2Vib29rfDEwMTU0Mjg3MDI3NTEwMzAyIiwiYXVkIjoiQlVJSlNXOXg2MHNJSEJ3OEtkOUVtQ2JqOGVESUZ4REMiLCJleHAiOjE0MTIyMzQ3MzAsImlhdCI6MTQxMjE5ODczMH0.7M5sAV50fF1-_h9qVbdSgqAnXVF7mz3I6RjS6JiH0H8';
var tokenPayload = jwtHelper.decodeToken(expToken);
});
angular
.module('app', ['angular-jwt'])
.controller('Controller', function Controller(jwtHelper) {
var date = jwtHelper.getTokenExpirationDate(expToken);
});
angular
.module('app', ['angular-jwt'])
.controller('Controller', function Controller(jwtHelper) {
var bool = jwtHelper.isTokenExpired(expToken);
});
You can see some more examples of how this works in the tests
JWT interceptor will take care of sending the JWT in every request.
angular
.module('app', ['angular-jwt'])
.config(function Config($httpProvider, jwtOptionsProvider) {
// Please note we're annotating the function so that the $injector works when the file is minified
jwtOptionsProvider.config({
tokenGetter: ['myService', function(myService) {
myService.doSomething();
return localStorage.getItem('id_token');
}]
});
$httpProvider.interceptors.push('jwtInterceptor');
})
.controller('Controller', function Controller($http) {
// If localStorage contains the id_token it will be sent in the request
// Authorization: Bearer [yourToken] will be sent
$http({
url: '/hola',
method: 'GET'
});
});
By default, angular-jwt uses the Bearer
scheme when sending JSON Web Tokens as an Authorization
header. The header that gets attached to $http
requests looks like this:
Authorization: Bearer eyJ0eXAiOiJKV...
If you would like to provide your own scheme, you can configure it by setting a value for authPrefix
in the jwtOptionsProvider
configuration.
angular
.module('app', ['angular-jwt'])
.config(function Config($httpProvider, jwtOptionsProvider) {
jwtOptionsProvider.config({
authPrefix: 'MyPrefix '
...
});
$httpProvider.interceptors.push('jwtInterceptor');
angular
.module('app', ['angular-jwt'])
.config(function Config($httpProvider, jwtOptionsProvider) {
// Please note we're annotating the function so that the $injector works when the file is minified
jwtOptionsProvider.config({
tokenGetter: ['myService', function(myService) {
myService.doSomething();
return localStorage.getItem('id_token');
}]
});
$httpProvider.interceptors.push('jwtInterceptor');
})
.controller('Controller', function Controller($http) {
// This request will NOT send the token as it has skipAuthorization
$http({
url: '/hola',
skipAuthorization: true,
method: 'GET'
});
});
If you are calling an API that is on a domain other than your application's origin, you will need to whitelist it.
angular
.module('app', ['angular-jwt'])
.config(function Config($httpProvider, jwtOptionsProvider) {
jwtOptionsProvider.config({
...
whiteListedDomains: ['api.myapp.com', 'localhost']
});
});
Note that you only need to provide the domain. Protocols (ex: http://
) and port numbers should be omitted.
You can also specify the domain using a regular expression.
angular
.module('app', ['angular-jwt'])
.config(function Config($httpProvider, jwtOptionsProvider) {
jwtOptionsProvider.config({
...
whiteListedDomains: [/api-version-\d+.myapp.com$/i, 'localhost']
});
});
The tokenGetter
method can have a parameter options
injected by angular-jwt. This parameter is the options object of the current request.
By default the interceptor will send the JWT for all HTTP requests. This includes any ng-include
directives or
templateUrls
defined in a state
in the stateProvider
. If you want to avoid sending the JWT for these requests you
should adapt your tokenGetter
method to fit your needs. For example:
angular
.module('app', ['angular-jwt'])
.config(function Config($httpProvider, jwtOptionsProvider) {
jwtOptionsProvider.config({
tokenGetter: ['options', function(options) {
// Skip authentication for any requests ending in .html
if (options.url.substr(options.url.length - 5) == '.html') {
return null;
}
return localStorage.getItem('id_token');
}]
});
$httpProvider.interceptors.push('jwtInterceptor');
});
angular
.module('app', ['angular-jwt'])
.config(function Config($httpProvider, jwtOptionsProvider) {
jwtOptionsProvider.config({
tokenGetter: ['options', function(options) {
if (options.url.indexOf('http://auth0.com') === 0) {
return localStorage.getItem('auth0.id_token');
} else {
return localStorage.getItem('id_token');
}
}]
});
$httpProvider.interceptors.push('jwtInterceptor');
})
.controller('Controller', function Controller($http) {
// This request will send the auth0.id_token since URL matches
$http({
url: 'http://auth0.com/hola',
skipAuthorization: true,
method: 'GET'
});
});
Almost all applications that implement authentication need some indication of whether the user is authenticated or not and the authManager service provides a way to do this. Typical cases include conditionally showing and hiding different parts of the UI, checking whether the user is authenticated when the page is refreshed, and restricting routes to authenticated users.
<button ng-if="!isAuthenticated">Log In</button>
<button ng-if="isAuthenticated">Log Out</button>
The authentication state that is set after login will only be good as long as the user doesn't refresh their page. If the page is refreshed, or the browser closed and reopened, the state will be lost. To check whether the user is actually authenticated when the page is refreshed, use the checkAuthOnRefresh
method in the application's run
block.
angular
.module('app')
.run(function(authManager) {
authManager.checkAuthOnRefresh();
});
Note: If your tokenGetter
relies on request options
, be mindful that checkAuthOnRefresh()
will pass null
as options
since the call happens in the run phase of the Angular lifecycle and no requests are fired through the Angular app. If you are using requestion options
, check that options
isn't null
in your tokenGetter
function:
...
tokenGetter: ['options', function (options) {
if (options && options.url.substr(options.url.length - 5) == '.html') {
return null;
}
return localStorage.getItem('id_token');
}],
...
If the user is holding an expired JWT when the page is refreshed, the action that is taken is at your discretion. You may use the tokenHasExpired
event to listen for expired tokens on page refresh and respond however you like.
// app.run.js
...
$rootScope.$on('tokenHasExpired', function() {
alert('Your session has expired!');
});
Access to various client-side routes can be limited to users who have an unexpired JWT, which is an indication that they are authenticated. Use requiresLogin: true
on whichever routes you want to protect.
...
.state('ping', {
url: '/ping',
controller: 'PingController',
templateUrl: 'components/ping/ping.html',
controllerAs: 'vm',
data: {
requiresLogin: true
}
});
...
Note: Protecting a route on the client side offers no guarantee that a savvy user won't be able to hack their way to that route. In fact, this could be done simply if the user alters the expiry time in their JWT with a tool like jwt.io. Always ensure that sensitive data is kept off the client side and is protected on the server.
When the user's JWT expires and they attempt a call to a secured endpoint, a 401 - Unauthorized response will be returned. In these cases you will likely want to redirect the user back to the page/state used for authentication so they can log in again. This can be done with the redirectWhenUnauthenticated
method in the application's run
block.
angular
.module('app')
.run(function(authManager) {
...
authManager.redirectWhenUnauthenticated();
});
The page/state to send the user to when they are redirected because of an unauthorized request can be configured with jwtOptionsProvider
.
angular
.module('app', ['angular-jwt'])
.config(function Config($httpProvider, jwtOptionsProvider) {
jwtOptionsProvider.config({
unauthenticatedRedirectPath: '/login'
});
});
If you would like to control the behavior of the redirection that happens when users become unauthenticated, you can configure jwtOptionsProvider
with a custom function.
angular
.module('app', ['angular-jwt'])
.config(function Config($httpProvider, jwtOptionsProvider) {
jwtOptionsProvider.config({
unauthenticatedRedirector: ['$state', function($state) {
$state.go('app.login');
}]
});
});
angular.module('app', ['angular-jwt'])
.config(function Config($httpProvider, jwtOptionsProvider) {
jwtOptionsProvider.config({
urlParam: 'access_token',
tokenGetter: ['myService', function(myService) {
myService.doSomething();
return localStorage.getItem('id_token');
}]
});
$httpProvider.interceptors.push('jwtInterceptor');
})
.controller('Controller', function Controller($http) {
// If localStorage contains the id_token it will be sent in the request
// url will contain access_token=[yourToken]
$http({
url: '/hola',
method: 'GET'
});
})
You can see some more examples of how this works in the tests
When you're using the tokenGetter
function, it's then called with the injector. ngAnnotate
doesn't automatically detect that this function receives services as parameters, therefore you must either annotate this method for ngAnnotate
to know, or use it like follows:
jwtOptionsProvider({
tokenGetter: ['store', '$http', function(store, $http) {
...
}]
});
This library is used in auth0-angular and angular-lock.
Just clone the repo, run npm install
, bower install
and then gulp
to work :).
If you have found a bug or if you have a feature request, please report them at this repository issues section. Please do not report security vulnerabilities on the public GitHub issue tracker. The Responsible Disclosure Program details the procedure for disclosing security issues.
Auth0 helps you to:
- Add authentication with multiple authentication sources, either social like Google, Facebook, Microsoft Account, LinkedIn, GitHub, Twitter, Box, Salesforce, amont others, or enterprise identity systems like Windows Azure AD, Google Apps, Active Directory, ADFS or any SAML Identity Provider.
- Add authentication through more traditional username/password databases.
- Add support for linking different user accounts with the same user.
- Support for generating signed Json Web Tokens to call your APIs and flow the user identity securely.
- Analytics of how, when and where users are logging in.
- Pull data from other sources and add it to the user profile, through JavaScript rules.
- Go to Auth0 and click Sign Up.
- Use Google, GitHub or Microsoft Account to login.
This project is licensed under the MIT license. See the LICENSE file for more info.