Rodauth is an authentication and account management framework for rack applications. It’s built using Roda and Sequel, but it can be used with other web frameworks, database libraries, and databases. When used with PostgreSQL, MySQL, and Microsoft SQL Server in the default configuration, it offers additional security for password hashes by protecting access via database functions.
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Security: Ship in a maximum security by default configuration
-
Simplicity: Allow for easy configuration via a DSL
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Flexibility: Allow for easy overriding of any part of the framework
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Login
-
Logout
-
Change Password
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Change Login
-
Reset Password
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Create Account
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Close Account
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Verify Account
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Confirm Password
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Remember (Autologin via token)
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Lockout (Bruteforce protection)
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Email Authentication (Login via email link)
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OTP (2 factor authentication via TOTP)
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Recovery Codes (2 factor authentication via backup codes)
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SMS Codes (2 factor authentication via SMS)
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Verify Login Change (Verify new login before changing login)
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Verify Account Grace Period (Don’t require verification before login)
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Password Grace Period (Don’t require password entry if recently entered)
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Password Complexity (More sophisticated checks)
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Disallow Password Reuse
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Disallow Common Passwords
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Password Expiration
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Account Expiration
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Session Expiration
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Single Session (Only one active session per account)
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JWT (JSON API support for all other features)
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JWT Refresh (Access & Refresh Token)
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Update Password Hash (when hash cost changes)
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HTTP Basic Auth
-
Change Password Notify
- Website
- Demo Site
- Source
- Bugs
- Google Group
- IRC
-
chat.freenode.net/#rodauth
There are some dependencies that Rodauth uses by default, but are development dependencies instead of runtime dependencies in the gem as it is possible to run without them:
- tilt
-
Used by all features unless in JSON API only mode.
- rack_csrf
-
Used by all features unless in JSON API only mode or the :csrf=>false|:route_csrf option is used when loading the Rodauth plugin.
- bcrypt
-
Used by default for password matching, can be skipped if password_match? is overridden for custom authentication.
-
Used by default for mailing in the reset password, verify account, verify_login_change, change_password_notify, and lockout features.
- rotp, rqrcode
-
Used by the otp feature
- jwt
-
Used by the jwt feature
By default on PostgreSQL, MySQL, and Microsoft SQL Server, Rodauth uses database functions to access password hashes, with the user running the application unable to get direct access to password hashes. This reduces the risk of an attacker being able to access password hashes and use them to attack other sites.
The rest of this section describes this feature in more detail, but note that Rodauth does not require this feature be used and works correctly without it. There may be cases where you cannot use this feature, such as when using a different database or when you do not have full control over the database you are using.
Passwords are hashed using bcrypt, and the password hashes are kept in a separate table from the accounts table, with a foreign key referencing the accounts table. Two database functions are added, one to retrieve the salt for a password, and the other to check if a given password hash matches the password hash for the user.
Two database accounts are used. The first is the account that the application uses, which is referred to as the app
account. The app
account does not have access to read the password hashes. The other account handles password hashes and is referred to as the ph
account. The ph
account sets up the database functions that can retrieve the salt for a given account’s password, and check if a password hash matches for a given account. The ph
account sets these functions up so that the app
account can execute the functions using the ph
account’s permissions. This allows the app
account to check passwords without having access to read password hashes.
While the app
account is not be able to read password hashes, it is still be able to insert password hashes, update passwords hashes, and delete password hashes, so the additional security is not that painful.
By disallowing the app
account access to the password hashes, it is much more difficult for an attacker to access the password hashes, even if they are able to exploit an SQL injection or remote code execution vulnerability in the application.
The reason for extra security in regards to password hashes stems from the fact that people tend to choose poor passwords and reuse passwords, so a compromise of one database containing password hashes can result in account access on other sites, making password hash storage of critical importance even if the other data stored is not that important.
If you are storing other sensitive information in your database, you should consider using a similar approach in other areas (or all areas) of your application.
Account verification, password resets, email auth, verify login change, remember, and lockout tokens all use a similar approach. They all provide a token, in the format “account-id_long-random-string”. By including the id of the account in the token, an attacker can only attempt to bruteforce the token for a single account, instead of being able to bruteforce tokens for all accounts at once (which would be possible if the token was just a random string).
Additionally, all comparisons of tokens use a timing-safe comparison function to reduce the risk of timing attacks.
By default, Rodauth does not use HMACs, but you are encouraged to use the hmac_secret
configuration method to set an HMAC secret. Setting an HMAC secret will enable HMACs for additional security, as described below.
All features that send email use this feature. Setting hmac_secret
will make the tokens sent via email use an HMAC, while the raw token stored in the database will not use an HMAC. This will make it so if the tokens in the database are leaked (e.g. via an SQL injection vulnerability), they will not be usable without also having access to the hmac_secret
. Without an HMAC, the raw token is sent in the email, and if the tokens in the database are leaked, they will be usable.
To allow for an graceful transition, you can set allow_raw_email_token?
to true temporarily. This will allow the raw tokens in previous sent emails to still work. This should only be set temporarily as it removes the security that hmac_secret
adds. Most features that send email have tokens that expire by default in 1 day. The exception is the verify_account feature, which has tokens that do not expire. For the verify_account feature, if the user requested an email before hmac_secret
was set, after allow_raw_email_token
is no longer set, they will need to request the verification email be resent, in which case they will receive an email with a token that uses an HMAC.
Similar to the email_based feature, this uses HMACs for remember tokens, while storing the raw tokens in the database. This makes it so if the raw tokens in the database are leaked, the remember tokens are not usable without knowledge of the hmac_secret
.
The raw_remember_token_deadline
configuration method can be set to allow a previously set raw remember token to be used if the deadline for the remember token is before the given time. This allows for graceful transition to using HMACs for remember tokens. By default, the deadline is 14 days after the token is created, so this should be set to 14 days after the time you enable the HMAC for the remember feature if you are using the defaults.
Setting hmac_secret
will provide HMACed OTP keys to users, and would store the raw OTP keys in the database. This will make so if the raw OTP keys in the database are leaked, they will not be usable for two factor authentication without knowledge of the hmac_secret
.
Unfortunately, there can be no simple graceful transition for existing users. When introducing hmac_secret
to a Rodauth installation that already uses the otp feature, you will have to either revoke and replace all OTP keys, set otp_keys_use_hmac?
to false and continue to use raw OTP keys, or override otp_keys_use_hmac?
to return false if the user was issued an OTP key before hmac_secret
was added to the configuration, and true otherwise. otp_keys_use_hmac?
defaults to true if hmac_secret
is set, and false otherwise.
If otp_keys_use_hmac?
is true, Rodauth will also ensure during OTP setup that the OTP key was enerated by the server. If otp_keys_use_hmac?
is false, any OTP key in a valid format will be accepted during setup.
If otp_keys_use_hmac?
is true, the jwt and otp features are in use and you are setting up OTP via JSON requests, you need to first send a POST request to the OTP setup route. This will return an error with the otp_secret
and otp_raw_secret
parameters in the JSON. These parameters should be submitted in the POST request to setup OTP, along with a valid OTP auth code for the otp_secret
.
Setting hmac_secret
will ensure the single session secret set in the session will be an HMACed. This does not affect security, as the session itself should at the least by protected by an HMAC (if not encrypted). This is only done for consistency, so that the raw tokens in the database are distinct from the tokens provided to the users. To allow for a graceful transition, allow_raw_single_session_key?
can be set to true.
In order to get full advantages of Rodauth’s security design on PostgreSQL, multiple database accounts are involved:
-
database superuser account (usually postgres)
-
app
account (same name as application) -
ph
account (application name with_password
appended)
The database superuser account is used to load extensions related to the database. The application should never be run using the database superuser account.
If you are currently running your application using the database superuser account, the first thing you need to do is to create the app
database account. It’s often best to name this account the same as the database name.
You should also create the ph
database account which will handle access to the password hashes.
Example for PostgreSQL:
createuser -U postgres ${DATABASE_NAME} createuser -U postgres ${DATABASE_NAME}_password
Note that if the database superuser account owns all of the items in the database, you’ll need to change the ownership to the database account you just created. See gist.github.com/jeremyevans/8483320 for a way to do that.
In general, the app
account is the owner of the database, since it will own most of the tables:
createdb -U postgres -O ${DATABASE_NAME} ${DATABASE_NAME}
Note that this is not the most secure way to develop applications. For maximum security, you would want to use a separate database account as the owner of the tables, have the app
account not be the owner of any tables, and specifically grant the app
account only the minimum access it needs to work correctly. Doing that is beyond the scope of Rodauth, though.
If you want to use the login features for Rodauth, you need to load the citext extension if you want to support case insensitive logins.
Example:
psql -U postgres -c "CREATE EXTENSION citext" ${DATABASE_NAME}
Note that on Heroku, this extension can be loaded using a standard database account. If you want logins to be case sensitive (generally considered a bad idea), you don’t need to use the PostgreSQL citext extension. Just remember to modify the migration below to use String
instead of citext
for the email in that case.
PostgreSQL sets up new tables in the public schema by default. If you would like to use separate schemas per user, you can do:
psql -U postgres -c "DROP SCHEMA public;" ${DATABASE_NAME} psql -U postgres -c "CREATE SCHEMA ${DATABASE_NAME} AUTHORIZATION ${DATABASE_NAME};" ${DATABASE_NAME} psql -U postgres -c "CREATE SCHEMA ${DATABASE_NAME}_password AUTHORIZATION ${DATABASE_NAME}_password;" ${DATABASE_NAME} psql -U postgres -c "GRANT USAGE ON SCHEMA ${DATABASE_NAME} TO ${DATABASE_NAME}_password;" ${DATABASE_NAME} psql -U postgres -c "GRANT USAGE ON SCHEMA ${DATABASE_NAME}_password TO ${DATABASE_NAME};" ${DATABASE_NAME}
You’ll need to modify the code to load the extension to specify the schema:
psql -U postgres -c "CREATE EXTENSION citext SCHEMA ${DATABASE_NAME}" ${DATABASE_NAME}
When running the migration for the ph
user you’ll need to modify a couple things for the schema changes:
create_table(:account_password_hashes) do foreign_key :id, Sequel[:${DATABASE_NAME}][:accounts], :primary_key=>true, :type=>:Bignum String :password_hash, :null=>false end Rodauth.create_database_authentication_functions(self, :table_name=>"${DATABASE_NAME}_password.account_password_hashes") # if using the disallow_password_reuse feature: create_table(:account_previous_password_hashes) do primary_key :id, :type=>:Bignum foreign_key :account_id, Sequel[:${DATABASE_NAME}][:accounts], :type=>:Bignum String :password_hash, :null=>false end Rodauth.create_database_previous_password_check_functions(self, :table_name=>"${DATABASE_NAME}_password.account_previous_password_hashes")
You’ll also need to use the following Rodauth configuration methods so that the app account calls functions in a separate schema:
function_name do |name| "${DATABASE_NAME}_password.#{name}" end password_hash_table Sequel[:${DATABASE_NAME}_password][:account_password_hashes] # if using the disallow_password_reuse feature: previous_password_hash_table Sequel[:${DATABASE_NAME}_password][:account_previous_password_hashes]
MySQL does not have the concept of object owners, and MySQL’s GRANT/REVOKE support is much more limited than PostgreSQL’s. When using MySQL, it is recommended to GRANT the ph
account ALL privileges on the database, including the ability to GRANT permissions to the app
account:
CREATE USER '${DATABASE_NAME}'@'localhost' IDENTIFIED BY '${PASSWORD}'; CREATE USER '${DATABASE_NAME}_password'@'localhost' IDENTIFIED BY '${OTHER_PASSWORD}'; GRANT ALL ON ${DATABASE_NAME}.* TO '${DATABASE_NAME}_password'@'localhost' WITH GRANT OPTION;
You should run all migrations as the ph
account, and GRANT specific access to the app
account as needed.
Adding the database functions on MySQL may require setting the log_bin_trust_function_creators=1
setting in the MySQL configuration.
Microsoft SQL Server has a concept of database owners, but similar to MySQL usage it’s recommended to use the ph
account as the superuser for the database, and have it GRANT permissions to the app
account:
CREATE LOGIN rodauth_test WITH PASSWORD = 'rodauth_test'; CREATE LOGIN rodauth_test_password WITH PASSWORD = 'rodauth_test'; CREATE DATABASE rodauth_test; USE rodauth_test; CREATE USER rodauth_test FOR LOGIN rodauth_test; GRANT CONNECT, EXECUTE TO rodauth_test; EXECUTE sp_changedbowner 'rodauth_test_password';
You should run all migrations as the ph
account, and GRANT specific access to the app
account as needed.
Because two different database accounts are used, two different migrations are required, one for each database account. Here are example migrations. You can modify them to add support for additional columns, or remove tables or columns related to features that you don’t need.
First migration. On PostgreSQL, this should be run with the app
account, on MySQL and Microsoft SQL Server this should be run with the ph
account.
Note that these migrations require Sequel 4.35.0+.
Sequel.migration do up do extension :date_arithmetic # Used by the account verification and close account features create_table(:account_statuses) do Integer :id, :primary_key=>true String :name, :null=>false, :unique=>true end from(:account_statuses).import([:id, :name], [[1, 'Unverified'], [2, 'Verified'], [3, 'Closed']]) db = self create_table(:accounts) do primary_key :id, :type=>:Bignum foreign_key :status_id, :account_statuses, :null=>false, :default=>1 if db.database_type == :postgres citext :email, :null=>false constraint :valid_email, :email=>/^[^,;@ \r\n]+@[^,@; \r\n]+\.[^,@; \r\n]+$/ index :email, :unique=>true, :where=>{:status_id=>[1, 2]} else String :email, :null=>false index :email, :unique=>true end end deadline_opts = proc do |days| if database_type == :mysql {:null=>false} else {:null=>false, :default=>Sequel.date_add(Sequel::CURRENT_TIMESTAMP, :days=>days)} end end # Used by the password reset feature create_table(:account_password_reset_keys) do foreign_key :id, :accounts, :primary_key=>true, :type=>:Bignum String :key, :null=>false DateTime :deadline, deadline_opts[1] DateTime :email_last_sent, :null=>false, :default=>Sequel::CURRENT_TIMESTAMP end # Used by the jwt refresh feature create_table(:account_jwt_refresh_keys) do primary_key :id, :type=>:Bignum foreign_key :account_id, :accounts, :type=>:Bignum String :key, :null=>false DateTime :deadline, deadline_opts[1] end # Used by the account verification feature create_table(:account_verification_keys) do foreign_key :id, :accounts, :primary_key=>true, :type=>:Bignum String :key, :null=>false DateTime :requested_at, :null=>false, :default=>Sequel::CURRENT_TIMESTAMP DateTime :email_last_sent, :null=>false, :default=>Sequel::CURRENT_TIMESTAMP end # Used by the verify login change feature create_table(:account_login_change_keys) do foreign_key :id, :accounts, :primary_key=>true, :type=>:Bignum String :key, :null=>false String :login, :null=>false DateTime :deadline, deadline_opts[1] end # Used by the remember me feature create_table(:account_remember_keys) do foreign_key :id, :accounts, :primary_key=>true, :type=>:Bignum String :key, :null=>false DateTime :deadline, deadline_opts[14] end # Used by the lockout feature create_table(:account_login_failures) do foreign_key :id, :accounts, :primary_key=>true, :type=>:Bignum Integer :number, :null=>false, :default=>1 end create_table(:account_lockouts) do foreign_key :id, :accounts, :primary_key=>true, :type=>:Bignum String :key, :null=>false DateTime :deadline, deadline_opts[1] DateTime :email_last_sent end # Used by the email auth feature create_table(:account_email_auth_keys) do foreign_key :id, :accounts, :primary_key=>true, :type=>:Bignum String :key, :null=>false DateTime :deadline, deadline_opts[1] DateTime :email_last_sent, :null=>false, :default=>Sequel::CURRENT_TIMESTAMP end # Used by the password expiration feature create_table(:account_password_change_times) do foreign_key :id, :accounts, :primary_key=>true, :type=>:Bignum DateTime :changed_at, :null=>false, :default=>Sequel::CURRENT_TIMESTAMP end # Used by the account expiration feature create_table(:account_activity_times) do foreign_key :id, :accounts, :primary_key=>true, :type=>:Bignum DateTime :last_activity_at, :null=>false DateTime :last_login_at, :null=>false DateTime :expired_at end # Used by the single session feature create_table(:account_session_keys) do foreign_key :id, :accounts, :primary_key=>true, :type=>:Bignum String :key, :null=>false end # Used by the otp feature create_table(:account_otp_keys) do foreign_key :id, :accounts, :primary_key=>true, :type=>:Bignum String :key, :null=>false Integer :num_failures, :null=>false, :default=>0 Time :last_use, :null=>false, :default=>Sequel::CURRENT_TIMESTAMP end # Used by the recovery codes feature create_table(:account_recovery_codes) do foreign_key :id, :accounts, :type=>:Bignum String :code primary_key [:id, :code] end # Used by the sms codes feature create_table(:account_sms_codes) do foreign_key :id, :accounts, :primary_key=>true, :type=>:Bignum String :phone_number, :null=>false Integer :num_failures String :code DateTime :code_issued_at, :null=>false, :default=>Sequel::CURRENT_TIMESTAMP end case database_type when :postgres user = get(Sequel.lit('current_user')) + '_password' run "GRANT REFERENCES ON accounts TO #{user}" when :mysql, :mssql user = if database_type == :mysql get(Sequel.lit('current_user')).sub(/_password@/, '@') else get(Sequel.function(:DB_NAME)) end run "GRANT ALL ON account_statuses TO #{user}" run "GRANT ALL ON accounts TO #{user}" run "GRANT ALL ON account_password_reset_keys TO #{user}" run "GRANT ALL ON account_jwt_refresh_keys TO #{user}" run "GRANT ALL ON account_verification_keys TO #{user}" run "GRANT ALL ON account_login_change_keys TO #{user}" run "GRANT ALL ON account_remember_keys TO #{user}" run "GRANT ALL ON account_login_failures TO #{user}" run "GRANT ALL ON account_lockouts TO #{user}" run "GRANT ALL ON account_email_auth_keys TO #{user}" run "GRANT ALL ON account_password_change_times TO #{user}" run "GRANT ALL ON account_activity_times TO #{user}" run "GRANT ALL ON account_session_keys TO #{user}" run "GRANT ALL ON account_otp_keys TO #{user}" run "GRANT ALL ON account_recovery_codes TO #{user}" run "GRANT ALL ON account_sms_codes TO #{user}" end end down do drop_table(:account_sms_codes, :account_recovery_codes, :account_otp_keys, :account_session_keys, :account_activity_times, :account_password_change_times, :account_email_auth_keys, :account_lockouts, :account_login_failures, :account_remember_keys, :account_login_change_keys, :account_verification_keys, :account_jwt_refresh_keys, :account_password_reset_keys, :accounts, :account_statuses) end end
Second migration, run using the ph
account:
require 'rodauth/migrations' Sequel.migration do up do create_table(:account_password_hashes) do foreign_key :id, :accounts, :primary_key=>true, :type=>:Bignum String :password_hash, :null=>false end Rodauth.create_database_authentication_functions(self) case database_type when :postgres user = get(Sequel.lit('current_user')).sub(/_password\z/, '') run "REVOKE ALL ON account_password_hashes FROM public" run "REVOKE ALL ON FUNCTION rodauth_get_salt(int8) FROM public" run "REVOKE ALL ON FUNCTION rodauth_valid_password_hash(int8, text) FROM public" run "GRANT INSERT, UPDATE, DELETE ON account_password_hashes TO #{user}" run "GRANT SELECT(id) ON account_password_hashes TO #{user}" run "GRANT EXECUTE ON FUNCTION rodauth_get_salt(int8) TO #{user}" run "GRANT EXECUTE ON FUNCTION rodauth_valid_password_hash(int8, text) TO #{user}" when :mysql user = get(Sequel.lit('current_user')).sub(/_password@/, '@') db_name = get(Sequel.function(:database)) run "GRANT EXECUTE ON #{db_name}.* TO #{user}" run "GRANT INSERT, UPDATE, DELETE ON account_password_hashes TO #{user}" run "GRANT SELECT (id) ON account_password_hashes TO #{user}" when :mssql user = get(Sequel.function(:DB_NAME)) run "GRANT EXECUTE ON rodauth_get_salt TO #{user}" run "GRANT EXECUTE ON rodauth_valid_password_hash TO #{user}" run "GRANT INSERT, UPDATE, DELETE ON account_password_hashes TO #{user}" run "GRANT SELECT ON account_password_hashes(id) TO #{user}" end # Used by the disallow_password_reuse feature create_table(:account_previous_password_hashes) do primary_key :id, :type=>:Bignum foreign_key :account_id, :accounts, :type=>:Bignum String :password_hash, :null=>false end Rodauth.create_database_previous_password_check_functions(self) case database_type when :postgres user = get(Sequel.lit('current_user')).sub(/_password\z/, '') run "REVOKE ALL ON account_previous_password_hashes FROM public" run "REVOKE ALL ON FUNCTION rodauth_get_previous_salt(int8) FROM public" run "REVOKE ALL ON FUNCTION rodauth_previous_password_hash_match(int8, text) FROM public" run "GRANT INSERT, UPDATE, DELETE ON account_previous_password_hashes TO #{user}" run "GRANT SELECT(id, account_id) ON account_previous_password_hashes TO #{user}" run "GRANT USAGE ON account_previous_password_hashes_id_seq TO #{user}" run "GRANT EXECUTE ON FUNCTION rodauth_get_previous_salt(int8) TO #{user}" run "GRANT EXECUTE ON FUNCTION rodauth_previous_password_hash_match(int8, text) TO #{user}" when :mysql user = get(Sequel.lit('current_user')).sub(/_password@/, '@') db_name = get(Sequel.function(:database)) run "GRANT EXECUTE ON #{db_name}.* TO #{user}" run "GRANT INSERT, UPDATE, DELETE ON account_previous_password_hashes TO #{user}" run "GRANT SELECT (id, account_id) ON account_previous_password_hashes TO #{user}" when :mssql user = get(Sequel.function(:DB_NAME)) run "GRANT EXECUTE ON rodauth_get_previous_salt TO #{user}" run "GRANT EXECUTE ON rodauth_previous_password_hash_match TO #{user}" run "GRANT INSERT, UPDATE, DELETE ON account_previous_password_hashes TO #{user}" run "GRANT SELECT ON account_previous_password_hashes(id, account_id) TO #{user}" end end down do Rodauth.drop_database_previous_password_check_functions(self) Rodauth.drop_database_authentication_functions(self) drop_table(:account_previous_password_hashes, :account_password_hashes) end end
To support multiple separate migration users, you can run the migration for the password user using Sequel’s migration API:
Sequel.extension :migration Sequel.postgres('DATABASE_NAME', :user=>'PASSWORD_USER_NAME') do |db| Sequel::Migrator.run(db, 'path/to/password_user/migrations', :table=>'schema_info_password') end
If the database is not PostgreSQL, MySQL, or Microsoft SQL Server, or you cannot use multiple user accounts, just combine the two migrations into a single migration.
One thing to notice in the above migrations is that Rodauth uses additional tables for additional features, instead of additional columns in a single table.
After running the migrations, you can increase security slightly by making it not possible for the ph
account to login to the database directly. This can be accomplished by modifying the pg_hba.conf
file. You can also consider restricting access using GRANT/REVOKE.
You can restrict access to the database itself to just the app
account. You can run this using the app
account, since that account owns the database:
GRANT ALL ON DATABASE ${DATABASE_NAME} TO ${DATABASE_NAME}; REVOKE ALL ON DATABASE ${DATABASE_NAME} FROM public;
You can also restrict access to the public schema (this is not needed if you are using a custom schema). Note that by default, the database superuser owns the public schema, so you have to run this as the database superuser account (generally postgres
):
GRANT ALL ON SCHEMA public TO ${DATABASE_NAME}; GRANT USAGE ON SCHEMA public TO ${DATABASE_NAME}_password; REVOKE ALL ON SCHEMA public FROM public;
If you are using MySQL or Microsoft SQL Server, please consult their documentation for how to restrict access so that the ph
account cannot login directly.
Rodauth is a Roda plugin and loaded the same way other Roda plugins are loaded:
plugin :rodauth do end
The block passed to the plugin call uses the Rodauth configuration DSL. The one configuration method that should always be used is enable
, which chooses which features you would like to load:
plugin :rodauth do enable :login, :logout end
Once features are loaded, you can use any of the configuration methods supported by the features. There are two types of configuration methods. The first type are called auth methods, and they take a block which overrides the default method that Rodauth uses. Inside the block, you can call super if you want to get the default behavior, though you must provide explicit arguments to super. There is no need to call super in before or after hooks, though. For example, if you want to add additional logging when a user logs in:
plugin :rodauth do enable :login, :logout after_login do LOGGER.info "#{account[:email]} logged in!" end end
Inside the block, you are in the context of the Rodauth::Auth instance related to the request. This object has access to everything related to the request via methods:
- request
-
RodaRequest instance
- response
-
RodaResponse instance
- scope
-
Roda instance
- session
-
session hash
- flash
-
flash message hash
- account
-
account hash (if set by an earlier Rodauth method)
So if you want to log the IP address for the user during login:
plugin :rodauth do enable :login, :logout after_login do LOGGER.info "#{account[:email]} logged in from #{request.ip}" end end
The second type of configuration methods are called auth value methods. They are similar to auth methods, but instead of just accepting a block, they can optionally accept a single argument without a block, which will be treated as a block that just returns that value. For example, the accounts_table method sets the database table storing accounts, so to override it, you can call the method with a symbol for the table:
plugin :rodauth do enable :login, :logout accounts_table :users end
Note that all auth value methods can still take a block, allowing overriding for all behavior, using any information from the request:
plugin :rodauth do enable :login, :logout accounts_table do request.ip.start_with?("192.168.1") ? :admins : :users end end
By allowing every configuration method to take a block, Rodauth should be flexible enough to integrate into most legacy systems.
When loading the rodauth plugin, you can also pass an options hash, which configures which dependent plugins should be loaded. Options:
- :csrf
-
Set to
false
to not load a csrf plugin. Set to:route_csrf
to use the route_csrf plugin instead of the csrf plugin. It is recommended to set the:route_csrf
option as that allows for more secure request-specific CSRF tokens. - :flash
-
Set to
false
to not load the flash plugin - :json
-
Set to
true
to load the json and json_parser plugins. Set to:only
to only load those plugins and not any other plugins. Note that if you are enabling features that send email, you still need to load the render plugin manually. - :name
-
Provide a name for the given Rodauth configuration, used to support multiple Rodauth configurations in a given Roda application.
The options/methods for the supported features are listed on a separate page per feature. If these links are not active, please view the appropriate file in the doc directory.
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Base (this feature is autoloaded)
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Login Password Requirements Base (this feature is autoloaded by features that set logins/passwords)
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Email Base (this feature is autoloaded by features that send email)
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Two Factor Base (this feature is autoloaded by 2 factor authentication features)
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Login
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Logout
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Change Password
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Change Password Notify
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Change Login
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Reset Password
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Create Account
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Close Account
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Verify Account
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Confirm Password
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Remember
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Lockout
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Email Authentication
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OTP
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Recovery Codes
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SMS Codes
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Verify Login Change
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Verify Change Login
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Verify Account Grace Period
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Password Grace Period
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Password Complexity
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Disallow Password Reuse
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Disallow Common Passwords
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Update Password Hash
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Password Expiration
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Account Expiration
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Session Expiration
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Single Session
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JWT
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JWT
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HTTP Basic Auth
In general, you will usually want to call rodauth early in your route block:
route do |r| r.rodauth # ... end
Note that will allow Rodauth to run, but it won’t force people to login or add any security to your site. If you want to force all users to login, you need to redirect to them login page if they are not already logged in:
route do |r| r.rodauth rodauth.require_authentication # ... end
If only certain parts of your site require logins, then you can only redirect if they are not logged in certain branches of the routing tree:
route do |r| r.rodauth r.on "admin" do rodauth.require_authentication # ... end # ... end
In some cases you may want to have rodauth run inside a branch of the routing tree, instead of in the root. You can do this by setting a :prefix
when configuring Rodauth, and calling r.rodauth
inside a matching routing tree branch:
plugin :rodauth do enable :login, :logout prefix "/auth" end route do |r| r.on "auth" do r.rodauth end rodauth.require_authentication # ... end
Most of Rodauth’s functionality is exposed via r.rodauth
, which allows Rodauth to handle routes for the features you have enabled (such as /login
for login). However, as you have seen above, you may want to call methods on the rodauth
object, such as for checking if the current request has been authenticated.
Here are methods designed to be callable on the rodauth
object outside r.rodauth
:
- require_login
-
Require the session be logged in, redirecting the request to the login page if the request has not been logged in.
- require_authentication
-
Similar to
require_login
, but also requires two factor authentication if the account has setup two factor authentication. Redirects the request to the two factor authentication page if logged in but not authenticated via two factors. - logged_in?
-
Whether the session has been logged in.
- authenticated?
-
Similar to
logged_in?
, but if the account has setup two factor authentication, whether the session has authenticated via two factors. - require_two_factor_setup
-
(two_factor_base feature) Require the session to have setup two factor authentication, redirecting the request to the two factor authentication setup page if not.
- uses_two_factor_authentication?
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(two_factor_base feature) Whether the account for the current session has setup two factor authentication.
- update_last_activity
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(account_expiration feature) Update the last activity time for the current account. Only makes sense to use this if you are expiring accounts based on last activity.
- require_current_password
-
(password_expiration feature) Require a current password, redirecting the request to the change password page if the password for the account has expired.
- load_memory
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(remember feature) If the session has not been authenticated, look for the remember cookie. If present and valid, automatically log the session in, but mark that it was logged in via a remember key.
- logged_in_via_remember_key?
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(remember feature) Whether the current session has been logged in via a remember key. For security sensitive actions where you want to require the user to reenter the password, you can use the confirm_password feature.
- check_session_expiration
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(session_expiration feature) Check whether the current session has expired, automatically logging the session out if so.
- check_single_session
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(single_session feature) Check whether the current session is still the only valid session, automatically logging the session out if not.
- verified_account?
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(verify_grace_period feature) Whether the account is currently verified. If false, it is because the account is allowed to login as they are in the grace period.
- locked_out?
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(lockout feature) Whether the account for the current session has been locked out.
Rodauth supports using multiple rodauth configurations in the same application. You just need to load the plugin a second time, providing a name for any alternate configuration:
plugin :rodauth do end plugin :rodauth, :name=>:secondary do end
Then in your routing code, any time you call rodauth, you can provide the name as an argument to use that configuration:
route do |r| r.on 'secondary' do r.rodauth(:secondary) end r.rodauth end
You can use Rodauth if you are storing password hashes in the same table as the accounts. You just need to specify which column stores the password hash:
plugin :rodauth do account_password_hash_column :password_hash end
When this option is set, Rodauth will do the password hash check in ruby.
If you want to use Rodauth on PostgreSQL, MySQL, or Microsoft SQL Server without using database functions for authentication, but still storing password hashes in a separate table, you can do so:
plugin :rodauth do use_database_authentication_functions? false end
Conversely, if you implement the rodauth_get_salt and rodauth_valid_password_hash functions on a database that isn’t PostgreSQL, MySQL, or Microsoft SQL Server, you can set this value to true.
You can use Rodauth with other authentication types, by using some of Rodauth’s configuration methods.
Note that when using custom authentication, using some of Rodauth’s features such as change login and change password either would not make sense or would require some additional custom configuration. The login and logout features should work correctly with the examples below, though.
If you have accounts stored in the database, but authentication happens via LDAP, you can use the simple_ldap_authenticator
library:
require 'simple_ldap_authenticator' plugin :rodauth do enable :login, :logout require_bcrypt? false password_match? do |password| SimpleLdapAuthenticator.valid?(account[:email], password) end end
If you aren’t storing accounts in the database, but want to allow any valid LDAP user to login, you can do something like this:
require 'simple_ldap_authenticator' plugin :rodauth do enable :login, :logout # Don't require the bcrypt library, since using LDAP for auth require_bcrypt? false # Store session value in :login key, since the :account_id # default wouldn't make sense session_key :login # Use the login provided as the session value account_session_value{account} # Treat the login itself as the account account_from_login{|l| l.to_s} password_match? do |password| SimpleLdapAuthenticator.valid?(account, password) end end
Here’s an example of authentication using Facebook with a JSON API. This setup assumes you have client-side code to submit JSON POST requests to /login
with an access_token
parameter that is set to the user’s Facebook OAuth access token.
require 'koala' plugin :rodauth do enable :login, :logout, :jwt require_bcrypt? false session_key :facebook_email account_session_value{account} login_param 'access_token' account_from_login do |access_token| fb = Koala::Facebook::API.new(access_token) if me = fb.get_object('me', :fields=>[:email]) me['email'] end end # there is no password! password_match? do |pass| true end end
You can use Rodauth even if your application does not use the Roda web framework. This is possible by adding a Roda middleware that uses Rodauth:
require 'roda' class RodauthApp < Roda plugin :middleware plugin :rodauth do enable :login end route do |r| r.rodauth rodauth.require_authentication env['rodauth'] = rodauth end end use RodauthApp
Note that Rodauth expects the Roda app it is used in to provide a layout. So if you are using Rodauth as middleware for another app, if you don’t have a views/layout.erb
file that Rodauth can use, you should probably also add load Roda’s render
plugin with the appropriate settings that allow Rodauth to use the same layout as the application.
By setting env['rodauth'] = rodauth
in the route block inside the middleware, you can easily provide a way for your application to call Rodauth methods.
Here are some examples of integrating Rodauth into applications that don’t use Roda:
-
Rodauth’s demo site as a Rails application ( This uses the roda-rails gem so that Rodauth uses Rails’ CSRF and flash support)
Rodauth ships with 2 factor authentication support via TOTP (Time-Based One-Time Passwords, RFC 6238). There are a wide variety of ways in which to integrate 2 factor authentication into your site with Rodauth, based on the needs of the application.
The 2 factor authentication support is part of the OTP feature, which needs to be enabled in addition to the login feature. In addition, when implementing 2 factor authentication, you should generally provide a backup 2nd factor if the primary second factor is not available. Rodauth supports SMS codes and recovery codes as other 2nd factors.
If you want to support but not require 2 factor authentication:
plugin :rodauth do enable :login, :logout, :otp, :recovery_codes, :sms_codes end route do |r| r.rodauth rodauth.require_authentication # ... end
If you want to force all users to use OTP authentication, requiring users that don’t currently have two authentication to set it up:
route do |r| r.rodauth rodauth.require_authentication rodauth.require_two_factor_setup # ... end
Similarly to requiring authentication in general, it’s possible to require login authentication for most of the site, but require 2 factor authentication only for particular branches:
route do |r| r.rodauth rodauth.require_login r.on "admin" do rodauth.require_two_factor_authenticated end # ... end
To add support for handling JSON responses, you can pass the :json
option to the plugin, and enable the JWT feature in addition to other features you plan to use:
plugin :rodauth, :json=>true do enable :login, :logout, :jwt end
If you do not want to load the HTML plugins that Rodauth usually loads (render, csrf, flash, h), because you are building a JSON-only API, pass :json => :only
plugin :rodauth, :json=>:only do enable :login, :logout, :jwt end
Note that by default, the features that send email depend on the render plugin, so if using the :json=>:only
option, you either need to load the render plugin manually or you need to use the necessary *_email_body configuration options to specify the body of the emails.
The JWT feature enables JSON API support for all of the other features that Rodauth ships with.
Inside the configuration block, you can use auth_class_eval
to add custom methods that will be callable on the rodauth
object.
plugin :rodauth do enable :login auth_class_eval do def require_admin request.redirect("/") unless account[:admin] end end end route do |r| r.rodauth r.on "admin" do rodauth.require_admin end end
The enable configuration method is able to load features external to Rodauth. You need to place the external feature file where it can be required via rodauth/features/feature_name. That file should use the following basic structure
module Rodauth # :feature_name will be the argument given to enable to # load the feature, :FeatureName is optional and will be used to # set a constant name for prettier inspect output. Feature.define(:feature_name, :FeatureName) do # Shortcut for defining auth value methods with static values auth_value_method :method_name, 1 # method_value auth_value_methods # one argument per auth value method auth_methods # one argument per auth method route do |r| # This block is taken for requests to the feature's route. # This block is evaluated in the scope of the Rodauth::Auth instance. # r is the Roda::RodaRequest instance for the request r.get do end r.post do end end configuration_eval do # define additional configuration specific methods here, if any end # define the default behavior for the auth_methods # and auth_value_methods # ... end end
See the source code for the features that ship with Rodauth for an example of how to construct features.
All of Rodauth’s configuration methods change the behavior of the Rodauth::Auth instance. However, in some cases you may want to overriding handling at the routing layer. You can do this easily by adding an appropriate route before calling r.rodauth
:
route do |r| r.post 'login' do # Custom POST /login handling here end r.rodauth end
Rodauth serves templates from it’s gem folder. If you are using a forking webserver and want to preload the compiled templates to save memory, or if you are chrooting your application, you can benefit from precompiling your rodauth templates:
plugin :rodauth do # ... end precompile_rodauth_templates
All of these are Rails-specific:
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Devise
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Authlogic
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Sorcery
Jeremy Evans <code@jeremyevans.net>