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Todo app using Express and Passport for sign in with Google, Facebook, and Twitter.

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todos-express-social

This app illustrates how to use Passport with Express to sign users in with Google, Facebook, and Twitter. Use this example as a starting point for your own web applications.

Quick Start

To run this app, clone the repository and install dependencies:

$ git clone https://github.com/passport/todos-express-social.git
$ cd todos-express-social
$ npm install

This app requires credentials from Google, Facebook, and Twitter.

Once credentials have been obtained, create a .env file and add the following environment variables:

GOOGLE_CLIENT_ID=__INSERT_GOOGLE_CLIENT_ID_HERE__
GOOGLE_CLIENT_SECRET=__INSERT_GOOGLE_CLIENT_SECRET_HERE__
FACEBOOK_CLIENT_ID=__INSERT_FACEBOOK_APP_ID_HERE__
FACEBOOK_CLIENT_SECRET=__INSERT_FACEBOOK_APP_SECRET_HERE__
TWITTER_CONSUMER_KEY=__INSERT_TWITTER_API_KEY_HERE__
TWITTER_CONSUMER_SECRET=__INSERT_TWITTER_API_SECRET_KEY_HERE__

Start the server.

$ npm start

Navigate to http://localhost:3000.

Overview

This app illustrates how to build a todo app with sign in functionality using Express, Passport, and the passport-google-oidc, passport-facebook, and passport-twitter strategies.

This app is a traditional web application, in which application logic and data persistence resides on the server. HTML pages and forms are rendered by the server and client-side JavaScript is not utilized (or kept to a minimum).

This app is built using the Express web framework. Data is persisted to a SQLite database. HTML pages are rendered using EJS templates, and are styled using vanilla CSS.

When a user first arrives at this app, they are prompted to sign in. To sign in, the user is redirected to their choice of Google (using OpenID Connect), Facebook (using OAuth 2.0), or Twitter (using OAuth 1.0a). Once authenticated, a login session is established and maintained between the server and the user's browser with a cookie.

After signing in, the user can view, create, and edit todo items. Interaction occurs by clicking links and submitting forms, which trigger HTTP requests. The browser automatically includes the cookie set during login with each of these requests.

When the server receives a request, it authenticates the cookie and restores the login session, thus authenticating the user. It then accesses or stores records in the database associated with the authenticated user.

Next Steps

License

The Unlicense

Credit

Created by Jared Hanson