Authentication

JWT Auth

The Open ID JWT Authentication policy allows you to authenticate incoming requests using an Open ID-compliant bearer token. It works with common authentication services like Auth0 (sample here) but should also work with any valid Open ID JWT token.

When configured, you can have Zuplo check incoming requests for a JWT token and automatically populate the ZuploRequest 's user property with a user object. This user object will have a sub property - taking the sub id from the JWT token. It will also have a data property populated by other data returned in the JWT token (including any claims).

See this document for more information about OAuth authorization in Zuplo.

Configuration#

{
  "name": "my-open-id-jwt-auth-inbound-policy",
  "policyType": "open-id-jwt-auth-inbound",
  "handler": {
    "export": "OpenIdJwtInboundPolicy",
    "module": "$import(@zuplo/runtime)",
    "options": {
      "allowUnauthenticatedRequests": false,
      "audience": "$env(AUTH_AUDIENCE)",
      "issuer": "$env(AUTH_ISSUER)",
      "jwkUrl": "$env(JWK_URL)"
    }
  }
}

Options#

  • name the name of your policy instance. This is used as a reference in your routes.
  • policyType the identifier of the policy. This is used by the Zuplo UI. Value should be open-id-jwt-auth-inbound.
  • handler/export The name of the exported type. Value should be OpenIdJwtInboundPolicy.
  • handler/module the module containing the policy. Value should be $import(@zuplo/runtime).
  • handler/options The options for this policy:
    • issuer

      The expected issuer claim in the JWT token.

    • audience

      The expected audience claim in the JWT token (optional).

    • jwkUrl

      the url of the JSON Web Key Set (JWKS) - this is used to validate the JWT token signature (either this or secret must be set).

    • secret

      The key used to verify the signature of the JWT token (either this or jwkUrl must be set)

    • allowUnauthenticatedRequests

      indicates whether the request should continue if authentication fails. Defaults is false which means unauthenticated users will automatically receive a 401 response.

Note that sometimes the issuer and audience will vary between your environments (e.g. dev, staging and prod). We recommend storing these values in your environment variables and using $env(VARIABLE_NAME) to include them in your policy configuration.

Note

Note you can have multiple instances of the same policy with different names if you want to have slightly different rules (such as settings for the allowUnauthenticatedRequests setting.

{
  "path": "/products/:123",
  "methods": ["POST"],
  "handler": {
    "module": "$import(./modules/products)",
    "export": "postProducts"
  },
  "corsPolicy": "None",
  "version": "none",
  "policies": {
    "inbound": ["your-jwt-policy-name"]
  }
}

Using the user property in code

For an example of using the user object in a RequestHandler, see Setting up JWT auth with Auth0.

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