Go module implementing various JWx (JWA/JWE/JWK/JWS/JWT, otherwise known as JOSE) technologies.
If you are using this module in your product or your company, please add your product and/or company name in the Wiki! It really helps keeping up our motivation.
- Complete coverage of JWA/JWE/JWK/JWS/JWT, not just JWT+minimum tool set.
- Supports JWS messages with multiple signatures, both compact and JSON serialization
- Supports JWS with detached payload
- Supports JWS with unencoded payload (RFC7797)
- Supports JWE messages with multiple recipients, both compact and JSON serialization
- Most operations work with either JWK or raw keys e.g. *rsa.PrivateKey, *ecdsa.PrivateKey, etc).
- Opinionated, but very uniform API. Everything is symmetric, and follows a standard convention
- jws.Parse/Verify/Sign
- jwe.Parse/Encrypt/Decrypt
- Arguments are organized as explicit required paramters and optional WithXXXX() style options.
- Extra utilities
jwk.Cache
to always keep a JWKS up-to-date- bazel-ready
Some more in-depth discussion on why you might want to use this library over others can be found in the Description section
If you are using v0 or v1, you are strongly encouraged to migrate to using v2 (the version that comes with the README you are reading).
package examples_test
import (
"bytes"
"fmt"
"net/http"
"time"
"github.com/lestrrat-go/jwx/v2/jwa"
"github.com/lestrrat-go/jwx/v2/jwe"
"github.com/lestrrat-go/jwx/v2/jwk"
"github.com/lestrrat-go/jwx/v2/jws"
"github.com/lestrrat-go/jwx/v2/jwt"
)
func ExampleJWX() {
// Parse, serialize, slice and dice JWKs!
privkey, err := jwk.ParseKey(jsonRSAPrivateKey)
if err != nil {
fmt.Printf("failed to parse JWK: %s\n", err)
return
}
pubkey, err := jwk.PublicKeyOf(privkey)
if err != nil {
fmt.Printf("failed to get public key: %s\n", err)
return
}
// Work with JWTs!
{
// Build a JWT!
tok, err := jwt.NewBuilder().
Issuer(`github.com/lestrrat-go/jwx`).
IssuedAt(time.Now()).
Build()
if err != nil {
fmt.Printf("failed to build token: %s\n", err)
return
}
// Sign a JWT!
signed, err := jwt.Sign(tok, jwt.WithKey(jwa.RS256, privkey))
if err != nil {
fmt.Printf("failed to sign token: %s\n", err)
return
}
// Verify a JWT!
{
verifiedToken, err := jwt.Parse(signed, jwt.WithKey(jwa.RS256, pubkey))
if err != nil {
fmt.Printf("failed to verify JWS: %s\n", err)
return
}
_ = verifiedToken
}
// Work with *http.Request!
{
req, err := http.NewRequest(http.MethodGet, `https://github.com/lestrrat-go/jwx`, nil)
req.Header.Set(`Authorization`, fmt.Sprintf(`Bearer %s`, signed))
verifiedToken, err := jwt.ParseRequest(req, jwt.WithKey(jwa.RS256, pubkey))
if err != nil {
fmt.Printf("failed to verify token from HTTP request: %s\n", err)
return
}
_ = verifiedToken
}
}
// Encrypt and Decrypt arbitrary payload with JWE!
{
encrypted, err := jwe.Encrypt(payloadLoremIpsum, jwe.WithKey(jwa.RSA_OAEP, jwkRSAPublicKey))
if err != nil {
fmt.Printf("failed to encrypt payload: %s\n", err)
return
}
decrypted, err := jwe.Decrypt(encrypted, jwe.WithKey(jwa.RSA_OAEP, jwkRSAPrivateKey))
if err != nil {
fmt.Printf("failed to decrypt payload: %s\n", err)
return
}
if !bytes.Equal(decrypted, payloadLoremIpsum) {
fmt.Printf("verified payload did not match\n")
return
}
}
// Sign and Verify arbitrary payload with JWS!
{
signed, err := jws.Sign(payloadLoremIpsum, jws.WithKey(jwa.RS256, jwkRSAPrivateKey))
if err != nil {
fmt.Printf("failed to sign payload: %s\n", err)
return
}
verified, err := jws.Verify(signed, jws.WithKey(jwa.RS256, jwkRSAPublicKey))
if err != nil {
fmt.Printf("failed to verify payload: %s\n", err)
return
}
if !bytes.Equal(verified, payloadLoremIpsum) {
fmt.Printf("verified payload did not match\n")
return
}
}
// OUTPUT:
}
source: examples/jwx_readme_example_test.go
This Go module implements JWA, JWE, JWK, JWS, and JWT. Please see the following table for the list of available packages:
Package name | Notes |
---|---|
jwt | RFC 7519 |
jwk | RFC 7517 + RFC 7638 |
jwa | RFC 7518 |
jws | RFC 7515 + RFC 7797 |
jwe | RFC 7516 |
My goal was to write a server that heavily uses JWK and JWT. At first glance the libraries that already exist seemed sufficient, but soon I realized that
- To completely implement the protocols, I needed the entire JWT, JWK, JWS, JWE (and JWA, by necessity).
- Most of the libraries that existed only deal with a subset of the various JWx specifications that were necessary to implement their specific needs
For example, a certain library looks like it had most of JWS, JWE, JWK covered, but then it lacked the ability to include private claims in its JWT responses. Another library had support of all the private claims, but completely lacked in its flexibility to generate various different response formats.
Because I was writing the server side (and the client side for testing), I needed the entire JOSE toolset to properly implement my server, and they needed to be flexible enough to fulfill the entire spec that I was writing.
So here's github.com/lestrrat-go/jwx/v2
. This library is extensible, customizable, and hopefully well organized to the point that it is easy for you to slice and dice it.
There are several other major Go modules that handle JWT and related data formats, so why should you use this library?
From a purely functional perspective, the only major difference is this: Whereas most other projects only deal with what they seem necessary to handle JWTs, this module handles the entire spectrum of JWS, JWE, JWK, and JWT.
That is, if you need to not only parse JWTs, but also to control JWKs, or if you need to handle payloads that are NOT JWTs, you should probably consider using this module. You should also note that JWT is built on top of those other technologies. You simply cannot have a complete JWT package without implementing the entirety of JWS/JWE/JWK, which this library does.
Next, from an implementation perspective, this module differs significantly from others in that it tries very hard to expose only the APIs, and not the internal data. For example, individual JWT claims are not accessible through struct field lookups. You need to use one of the getter methods.
This is because this library takes the stance that the end user is fully capable and even willing to shoot themselves on the foot when presented with a lax API. By making sure that users do not have access to open structs, we can protect users from doing silly things like creating incomplete structs, or access the structs concurrently without any protection. This structure also allows us to put extra smarts in the structs, such as doing the right thing when you want to parse / write custom fields (this module does not require the user to specify alternate structs to parse objects with custom fields)
In the end I think it comes down to your usage pattern, and priorities. Some general guidelines that come to mind are:
- If you want a single library to handle everything JWx, such as using JWE, JWK, JWS, handling auto-refreshing JWKs, use this module.
- If you want to honor all possible custom fields transparently, use this module.
- If you want a standardized clean API, use this module.
Otherwise, feel free to choose something else.
For bug reports and feature requests, please try to follow the issue templates as much as possible. For either bug reports or feature requests, failing tests are even better.
Please make sure to include tests that excercise the changes you made.
If you are editing auto-generated files (those files with the _gen.go
suffix, please make sure that you do the following:
- Edit the generator, not the generated files (e.g. internal/cmd/genreadfile/main.go)
- Run
make generate
(orgo generate
) to generate the new code - Commit both the generator and the generated files
Please try discussions first.
- github.com/lestrrat-go/echo-middileware-jwx - Sample Echo middleware
- github.com/jwx-go/crypto-signer/gcp - GCP KMS wrapper that implements
crypto.Signer
- github.com/jwx-go/crypto-signer/aws - AWS KMS wrapper that implements
crypto.Signer
- Initial work on this library was generously sponsored by HDE Inc (https://www.hde.co.jp)
- Lots of code, especially JWE was initially taken from go-jose library (https://github.com/square/go-jose)
- Lots of individual contributors have helped this project over the years. Thank each and everyone of you very much.