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feathers-passwordless-auth-example

Example of passwordless authentication in FeathersJS

About

This project uses Feathers. It accomplishes a passwordless authentication strategy by using local authentication and the reset-password functionality from the feathers-authentication-management package.

Run the app

  • clone the repo
  • cd into the directory
  • run npm install
  • run FROM_EMAIL=your.email@domain.com npm start

The client-side isn't functioning yet. I need to add a simple client-side router. Right now, the client-side code is only for showing code examples.

Recreate the Example

Example repos have package versions that quickly fall out of date. For that reason, and so that you can integrate the passwordless strategy into an existing Feathers app, I've include the list of steps to show how the example app was created.

Generate app

Use the feathers-cli to generate the initial app structure. Use the default options for feathers generate authentication, but choose the options for the database you're using.

mkdir example-app
cd example-app
feathers generate app
feathers generate authentication

Config

In config/default.json, set the value of authentication.local.passwordField to "email" We're using the local auth strategy, but users won't actually have a password.

Also add the keys "protocal" and "src" keys to your config. We'll need these to build this link that we put in the email.

User hooks file

There's too much code to include in this list of steps, but just copy/paste all of src/services/users/users.hooks.js. In the code changes, we are:

  1. Removing all the hashPassword hooks, to prevent the email address from getting hashed. Since we set the email address as the password field, it would get hashed if we don't remove all the calls to hashPassword
  2. Add/Remove verification properties on user objects, and prevent those properties from getting changed by external providers (rest/socket.io)

User model

If you have a user model in src/models/users.model.js, add these properties.

isVerified: { type: Boolean },
verifyToken: { type: String },
verifyExpires: { type: Date },
verifyChanges: { type: Object },
resetToken: { type: String },
resetExpires: { type: Date }

Authentication service

In authentication.js, before the existing create hook, add 2 hooks.

  • The first hook disallows local authentication from external providers.
  • The second hook puts the userId onto params.payload so that it gets into the jwt token.
const { iff, disallow } = require('feathers-hooks-common');

...

  before: {
    create: [
      iff(hook => hook.data.strategy === 'local', disallow('external')),
      iff(hook => hook.data.strategy === 'local', hook => {
        const query = { email: hook.data.email }
        return hook.app.service('users').find({ query }).then(users => {
          hook.params.payload = { userId: users.data[0]._id }
          return hook
        })
      }),
      authentication.hooks.authenticate(config.strategies)
    ],

Email templates

Add a folder for your email templates. This repo uses Handlebars for email templates. The email file exports html and plain text. src/email-templates/sign-in.js

Mailer Service

Add a service for sending emails. How you setup the mailer service will vary according to your preferred way of sending emails. This example uses nodemailer sendmail, which sends emails directly to destination host.

feathers generate service

I called the service 'mailer', and set it up as custom service. Choose "No" for authentication.

The mailer.service.js file is setup to use feathers-mailer and nodemailer-sendmail-transport. We also use the environment variable FROM_EMAIL in src/services/notifier to set email address the notifications are sent from.

In mailer.hooks.js, disallow all external providers, in the before all hooks array. In this file, we're precompiling email templates and associating them with a key. Since we'll be sending a lot of emails, it's best to precompile the handlebar templates so that the emails are sent faster. When you call create on the mailer service, you'll pass in a template key and a data object. The hook will take care of compiling the email.

Authentication Management Service

As mentioned, we're using the reset password flow from the feathers-authentication-management package to achieve a passwordless auth strategy.

feathers generate service

Name it "authManagement" and change the path to "/authManagement". Choose "No" for authentication.

notifier

The feathers-authentication-management package uses a "notifier" function, which listens for various auth management actions and calls "create" on the mailer service with a payload that includes all the data needed to compose the email. Copy/paste the src/services/auth-management/notifier.js file from this repo. It currently only listens for "sendResetPwd", but you can listen to any of the actions supported by the auth management package.

auth-management.service.js

Copy/paste the configuration for the auth-management package.

We set skipIsVerifiedCheck to allow us avoid having to make the user verify their email address. They are essentially verifying it when they sign in.

Include a sanitizeUserForClient function to prevent sending user info to client prior to authentication. We need the email address though, so only send that.

auth-management.hooks.js

In this file, we add a before create hook and an after create hook.

After the user clicks on the link in the email, the app will create a 'resetPwdLong' action. This action requires a password. We're not using passwords, so in the before create hook, we provide an empty string to bypass the error caused by not having a password.

In the after create hook, again for the 'resetPwdLong' action, use the authentication service to get an access token and attach it to the result so it get's sent to the user.

Sign in on client

This repo doesn't use the feathers-authentication-management client library. I got an error when using it. I may have used in incorrectly, but it's not needed anyway. When you get the email address from the input field, create a 'sendResetPwd' action.

// const app = feathers()
// const authManagement = app.service('authManagement')

authManagement.create({
  action: 'sendResetPwd',
  value: { email }
})

This will cause an email to be sent.

Handle navigation from email

Client code will vary a lot, but make a route that matches the link in the email. In that way, you can get the resetToken from a route param.

Note: put the token in a route path param and not a query param. I orignally put the token in a query param and this caused problems when the user clicked on the email link, but it worked when the link is copy/pasted into the address bar. The problem may be related to Nuxt, but i would use a route path param to be safe.

When you have the reset token, create a "resetPwdLong" action. You'll get back the email address and access token. You can then use these to authenticate and fetch the user.

authManagement.create({ action: 'resetPwdLong', token: resetToken })
  .then(result => {
    return app.authenticate({
      strategy: 'jwt',
      token: result.accessToken
    })
    .then(() => app.service('users').find({ query: { email: result.email } }))
  })
  .then(users => {
    console.log('user', users.data[0])
  })
})

Conclusion

Thanks to the nice people on the Feathers Slack channel for helping me figure this out. Thanks to this tutorial from where I took some code.

Contribute

Contributions and improvements always welcome. Please start with making an issue.

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