Can someone explain to me in detail why the route of /profile has access to the user object. I'm currently learning JavaScript and NodeJS your answer will be a big help in my learning Thank you guys.
app.post('/login',function (req, res) {
let email = req.body.email;
let password = req.body.password;
User.getUserByEmail(email, (err, user) => {
if (err) throw err;
if (!user) {
return res.json({
success: false,
message: "User not found!"
});
}
User.comparePassword(password, user.password, (err, isMatch) => {
if (err) throw err;
if (isMatch) {
var token = jwt.sign(user.toJSON(), config.JWT_SECRET, {
expiresIn: '15m'
});
res.json({
success: true,
token: token,
user: {
id: user._id,
email: user.email
}
});
} else {
return res.json({
success: false,
message: "Password incorrect!"
});
}
})
});
});
app.get('/profile', passport.authenticate('jwt', {
session: false
}), (req, res) => {
res.json({user: req.user});
});
It is because your passport.authenticate() call populates user to req.
From passports.org:
app.post('/login',
passport.authenticate('local'),
function(req, res) {
// If this function gets called, authentication was successful.
// `req.user` contains the authenticated user.
res.redirect('/users/' + req.user.username);
});
It is the same for your route, except your path and authentication method is different.
See the documentation for more info: http://www.passportjs.org/docs/authenticate/
Some background
The function app.get takes an url and one or many callbacks with (req, res, next) => {} as their signature
The callbacks are executed one after the other. In anyone of these callbacks you can modify the req object and it will "propagate" to the next callbacks
To switch from a callback to the next one, you call next
In your case
The call to passport.authenticate('jwt', {sessions: false}) returns a callback, that's executed before you send the json response.
That callback itself athenticates the user, then "inject" its value into the req object.
As I mentioned before, this req will "propagate" to the next callback. And that's why when you send your json response, it req already contains the user key
So i am new comer to keystone CMS and its looking awesome to me
i have setup the basic structure and using a default blog project provided by keystone so now i am trying to build the rest API for my admin
As the rest API working fine when i am loged in browser in keystone admin panel but when i am testing the same is postman even after setting the basic auth it giving me HTML page
I don't know what the wrong with that and how to setup this thing correctly.
Here is my code from index.js
var _ = require('underscore'),
keystone = require('keystone'),
middleware = require('./middleware'),
// restful = require('restful-keystone-onode')(keystone),
importRoutes = keystone.importer(__dirname);
// Common Middleware
keystone.pre('routes', middleware.initLocals);
keystone.pre('render', middleware.flashMessages);
// Import Route Controllers
var routes = {
views: importRoutes('./views'),
api: importRoutes('./api'),
};
// create a route that handles signin
function signin (req, res) {
if (!req.body.username || !req.body.password) return res.json({
success: false });
keystone.list('User').model.findOne({ email: req.body.username
}).exec(function (err, user) {
if (err || !user) {
return res.json({
success: false,
session: false,
message: (err && err.message ? err.message : false) || 'Sorry,
there was an issue signing you in, please try again.',
});
}
keystone.session.signin({ email: user.email, password:
req.body.password }, req, res, function (user) {
return res.json({
success: true,
session: true,
date: new Date().getTime(),
userId: user.id,
});
}, function (err) {
return res.json({
success: true,
session: false,
message: (err && err.message ? err.message : false) || 'Sorry,
there was an issue signing you in, please try again.',
});
});
});
}
// you'll want one for signout too
function signout (req, res) {
keystone.session.signout(req, res, function () {
res.json({ signedout: true });
});
}
// also create some middleware that checks the current user
// as long as you're using Keystone's session management, the user
// will already be loaded if there is a valid current session
function checkAuth (req, res, next) {
// you could check user permissions here too
if (req.user) return next();
return res.status(403).json({ error: 'no access' });
}
// Setup Route Bindings
exports = module.exports = function (app) {
// Views
app.get('/', routes.views.index);
app.get('/blog/:category?', routes.views.blog);
app.get('/blog/post/:post', routes.views.post);
app.get('/gallery', routes.views.gallery);
app.all('/contact', routes.views.contact);
// add an API endpoint for signing in _before_ your protected routes
app.post('/api/signin', signin);
app.post('/api/signout', signout);
// then bind that middleware in your routes before any paths
// that should be protected
app.all('/api*', checkAuth);
//
app.get('/api/post/list', keystone.middleware.api,
routes.api.posts.get);
app.get('/api/post/:id', keystone.middleware.api,
routes.api.posts.get);
};
and here is my route/api/post.js
/**
* Created by nikk on 11/5/17.
*/
var async = require('async'),
keystone = require('keystone');
var Post = keystone.list('Post');
/**
* List Posts
*/
exports.list = function(req, res) {
Post.Modal.find(function(err, items) {
if (err) return res.apiError('database error', err);
// res.apiResponse({
// posts: items
// });
res.json(items);
});
}
/**
* Get Post by ID
*/
exports.get = function(req, res) {
Post.model.findById(req.params.id).exec(function(err, item) {
if (err) return res.apiError('database error', err);
if (!item) return res.apiError('not found');
res.apiResponse({
post: item
});
// res.json(item);
});
}
I have been trying hard to get this thing done from last day but not able to do working till now
please guide me.
Error: No default engine was specified and no extension was provided.
Im getting this error when I try to register a new user in my MEAN app. Im not using a view engine.
I've specified a static path (Node server.js):
app.use(express.static(path.join(__dirname + '/public')));
I've also specified a route to handle all angular requests
app.get('*', function (req, res) {
res.sendFile(path.resolve('public/index.html'));
});
The error occurs in this function (Angular authService.js):
function register(email, password) {
// create a new instance of deferred
var deferred = $q.defer();
// send a post request to the server
$http.post('/user/register',
{email: email, password: password})
// handle success
.success(function (data, status) {
if (status === 200 && data.status) {
deferred.resolve();
} else {
deferred.reject();
}
})
// handle error
.error(function (data) {
deferred.reject();
});
// return promise object
return deferred.promise;
}
(Node routes.js):
router.post('/register', function(req, res) {
User.register(new User({ email: req.body.email }),
req.body.password, function(err, user) {
if (err) {
return res.status(500).json({
err: err
});
}
passport.authenticate('local')(req, res, function () {
return res.status(200).json({
status: 'Registration successful!'
});
});
});
});
I've done some logging and the post function in angular never reaches my routes.js
I've tried other post/get/put calls using Postman, and I get the same error.
Please take a look at this basic login/token process using passport basic strategy for a Rest API:
the route:
router.get('/token', authenticate.basic, controller.token);
authenticate basic strategy:
authenticate.basic = passport.authenticate('basic', {session: false});
/* implementation of the Basic Strategy*/
passport.use('basic', new BasicStrategy(function(username, password, done) {
authenticationService.login(username, password).then(function(user) {
if (!user) {
return done(null, false, { message: 'Login failed' });
}
return done(null, user);
}).catch(function(e) {
return done(e)
});
}));
token controller (route handler):
controller.token = function(req, res, next) {
if (!req.user) {
// TODO fix this dead branch
return res.json(401, {error: "Login failed"});
}
authService.issueToken(req.user).then(function(token) {
var user = {
user_id: req.user.id,
access_token: token
}
return res.json(user);
}).catch(function(e) {
return next(e);
});
};
As mentioned in the documentation :
By default, if authentication fails, Passport will respond with a 401
Unauthorized status, and any additional route handlers will not be
invoked. If authentication succeeds, the next handler will be invoked
and the req.user property will be set to the authenticated user.
Is there a way to bypass this behavior and invoke the route handler even if the authentication fails ?
You're looking for Passport's "Custom callback" feature.
Basically, you need to give the authenticate method a third argument to override the default behavior. This implies that the application becomes responsible for logging in the user, which is simply a matter of calling the req.login() method.
authenticate.basic = function (req, res, next) {
passport.authenticate('basic', {
session: false
}, function(err, user, info) {
if (err) {
// Authentication failed, you can look at the "info" object
return next(err);
}
if (!user) {
// The user is not logged in (no token or cookie)
return res.redirect('/login');
}
req.login(user, function(err) {
if (err) {
// Something wrong happened while logging in, look at the err object
return next(err);
}
// Everything's good!
return res.redirect('/users/' + user.username);
});
})(req, res, next);
}
I'm using Node.js as a backend API server for an iPhone client. I'm using Passport.js to authenticate with a local strategy. The relevant code is below:
// This is in user.js, my user model
UserSchema.static('authenticate', function(username, password, callback) {
this.findOne({ username: username }, function(err, user) {
if (err){
console.log('findOne error occurred');
return callback(err);
}
if (!user){
return callback(null, false);
}
user.verifyPassword(password, function(err, passwordCorrect){
if (err){
console.log('verifyPassword error occurred');
return callback(err);
}
if (!passwordCorrect){
console.log('Wrong password');
return callback(err, false);
}
console.log('User Found, returning user');
return callback(null, user);
});
});
});
and
// This is in app.js
app.get('/loginfail', function(req, res){
res.json(403, {message: 'Invalid username/password'});
});
app.post('/login',
passport.authenticate('local', { failureRedirect: '/loginfail', failureFlash: false }),
function(req, res) {
res.redirect('/');
});
Right now, I have managed to redirect a failed login to /loginfail, where I send back some JSON to the iPhone client. However, this doesn't have enough granularity. I want to be able to send back the appropriate errors to the iPhone client, such as: "No user found" or "Password is wrong". With my existing code, I don't see how this can be accomplished.
I tried to follow the examples for a custom callback on the passport.js site, but I just can't get it to work due to lack of node understanding. How could I modify my code so that I'd be able to send back a res.json with an appropriate error code/message?
I am trying something like this now:
// In app.js
app.post('/login', function(req, res, next) {
passport.authenticate('local', function(err, user, info) {
if (err) { return next(err) }
if (!user) {
console.log(info);
// *** Display message without using flash option
// re-render the login form with a message
return res.redirect('/login');
}
console.log('got user');
return res.json(200, {user_id: user._id});
})(req, res, next);
});
// In user.js
UserSchema.static('authenticate', function(username, password, callback) {
this.findOne({ username: username }, function(err, user) {
if (err){
console.log('findOne error occurred');
return callback(err);
}
if (!user){
return callback(null, false);
}
user.verifyPassword(password, function(err, passwordCorrect){
if (err){
return callback(err);
}
if (!passwordCorrect){
return callback(err, false, {message: 'bad password'});
}
console.log('User Found, returning user');
return callback(null, user);
});
});
});
But back when I try to console.log(info), it just says undefined. I don't know how to get this custom callback working...Any help would be appreciated!
I had a similar issue with Passport and failed login responses. I was building an API, and wanted all responses to be returned as JSON. Passport responds to an invalid password with status: 401 and body: Unauthorized. That's just a text string in the body, not JSON, so it broke my client which expected all JSON.
As it turns out, there is a way to make Passport just return the error to the framework instead of trying to send a response itself.
The answer is to set failWithError in the options passed to authenticate:
https://github.com/jaredhanson/passport/issues/126#issuecomment-32333163
From jaredhanson's comment in the issue:
app.post('/login',
passport.authenticate('local', { failWithError: true }),
function(req, res, next) {
// handle success
if (req.xhr) { return res.json({ id: req.user.id }); }
return res.redirect('/');
},
function(err, req, res, next) {
// handle error
if (req.xhr) { return res.json(err); }
return res.redirect('/login');
}
);
This will invoke the error handler after Passport calls next(err). For my app, I wrote a generic error handler specific to my use case of just providing a JSON error:
// Middleware error handler for json response
function handleError(err,req,res,next){
var output = {
error: {
name: err.name,
message: err.message,
text: err.toString()
}
};
var statusCode = err.status || 500;
res.status(statusCode).json(output);
}
Then I used it for all api routes:
var api = express.Router();
...
//set up some routes here, attached to api
...
// error handling middleware last
api.use( [
handleError
] );
I didn't find the failWithError option in the documentation. I stumbled upon it while tracing through the code in the debugger.
Also, before I figured this out, I tried the "custom callback" mentioned in the #Kevin_Dente answer, but it didn't work for me. I'm not sure if that was for an older version of Passport or if I was just doing it wrong.
I believe the callback function that your 'authenticate' static calls (called 'callback' in your code) accepts a 3rd parameter - "info" - which your code can provide. Then, instead of passing in the { failureRedirect: ...} object, pass in a function which takes 3 arguments - err, user, and info. The "info" you provided in your authenticate method will be passed to this callback.
Passport calls this scenario "custom callback". See the docs here:
http://passportjs.org/guide/authenticate/
There is an official documentation for Custom Callback:
app.get('/login', function(req, res, next) {
passport.authenticate('local', function(err, user, info) {
if (err) { return next(err); }
if (!user) { return res.redirect('/login'); }
req.logIn(user, function(err) {
if (err) { return next(err); }
return res.redirect('/users/' + user.username);
});
})(req, res, next);
});
https://github.com/passport/www.passportjs.org/blob/master/views/docs/authenticate.md
As per the official documentation of Passport you may use custom callback function to handle the case of failed authorization and override the default message.
If you are developing REST API and then you would want to send out pretty JSON response something as below:
{
"error": {
"name": "JsonWebTokenError",
"message": "invalid signature"
},
"message": "You are not authorized to access this protected resource",
"statusCode": 401,
"data": [],
"success": false
}
I was using Passport JWT authentication to secure some of my routes and was applied the authMiddleware as below:
app/middlewares/authMiddleware.js
const express = require('express');
const router = express.Router();
const passport = require('passport');
const _ = require('lodash');
router.all('*', function (req, res, next) {
passport.authenticate('local', function(err, user, info) {
// If authentication failed, `user` will be set to false. If an exception occurred, `err` will be set.
if (err || !user || _.isEmpty(user)) {
// PASS THE ERROR OBJECT TO THE NEXT ROUTE i.e THE APP'S COMMON ERROR HANDLING MIDDLEWARE
return next(info);
} else {
return next();
}
})(req, res, next);
});
module.exports = router;
app/routes/approutes.js
const authMiddleware = require('../middlewares/authMiddleware');
module.exports = function (app) {
// secure the route by applying authentication middleware
app.use('/users', authMiddleware);
.....
...
..
// ERROR-HANDLING MIDDLEWARE FOR SENDING ERROR RESPONSES TO MAINTAIN A CONSISTENT FORMAT
app.use((err, req, res, next) => {
let responseStatusCode = 500;
let responseObj = {
success: false,
data: [],
error: err,
message: 'There was some internal server error',
};
// IF THERE WAS SOME ERROR THROWN BY PREVIOUS REQUEST
if (!_.isNil(err)) {
// IF THE ERROR IS REALTED TO JWT AUTHENTICATE, SET STATUS CODE TO 401 AND SET A CUSTOM MESSAGE FOR UNAUTHORIZED
if (err.name === 'JsonWebTokenError') {
responseStatusCode = 401;
responseObj.message = 'You are not authorized to access this protected resource';
}
}
if (!res.headersSent) {
res.status(responseStatusCode).json(responseObj);
}
});
};
You can do that without custom callbacks using property passReqToCallback in your strategy definition:
passport.use(new LocalStrategy({passReqToCallback: true}, validateUserPassword));
Then you can add your custom auth error code to the request in your strategy code:
var validateUserPassword = function (req, username, password, done) {
userService.findUser(username)
.then(user => {
if (!user) {
req.authError = "UserNotFound";
return done(null, false);
}
And finally you can handle these custom errors in your route:
app.post('/login', passport.authenticate('local', { failWithError: true })
function (req, res) {
....
}, function(err, req, res, next) {
if(req.autherror) {
res.status(401).send(req.autherror)
} else {
....
}
}
);
A short workaround is to emulate the Flash method call which intended originally to support connect-flash and to use this method to return the JSON object.
first define the "emulator":
var emulateFlash = function (req, res, next) {
req.flash = (type, message) => {
return res.status(403).send({ status: "fail", message });
}
next();
}
this will inject the flash method which will send the error JSON object upon failure.
In the route do the following:
1st, use the emulator across the board using:
router.use(emulateFlash);
One can instead use the emulateFlash method on each route needed.
2nd, on the route when using authenticate, specify the failureFlash option using a message:
router.route("/signin")
.post(.authenticate('local', { session: false, failureFlash: "Invalid email or password."}), UsersController.signIn);
I tested this for both failed authentication as well as successful and found it working. Looking at the code I could not find any other way to return an object other than implementing the callback method which requires much more work.