I'm trying to create an API and use it in my own applications (web application and native mobile app) and make it available for third-party applications ( this is for future purposes).
I've read the Laravel Passport documentation, and I have some doubts that hopefully someone could help me with it.
As a developer, I always try to find the best and correct way to implement my projects and find the appropriate packages for the purposes of the projects.
Brief explanation of what I want to do:
I want to create an API and I will consume my own API in my web and mobile applications, my API has two endpoints for register and login for students and teachers. They can login with their email and password. Each user type has its own information. A teacher can have a CV, and students can see teachers' CV( the whole creating and reading CV's are handling in my API ), and they both user types can communicate with each other. I'm using laravel 6.x version to build my API. We have a section for developers in our subdomain which developers can register accounts and get/buy an access token to make requests to my API and use it, on the other hand, I want when students or teachers login to their accounts the API generates an access token for that user so then my application can use that token and pass that in every requests to make users be authenticated to access their private resources like their Dashboard as we know API's are stateless and we can't use sessions to store user credentials, so we need an access token for that.
Can Laravel Passport generate the both Developer access token, and User( teacher or student) access token?
Is it correct to use OAuth in here to develop my API?
Or can I just use tymondesigns/JWT package for these purposes?
I have to say that I'm new to Oauth and API based applications. I've read some articles about Oauth, and I'm a little bit familiar with Oauth terminology, but still, I don't know how to implement this project correctly.
So here are my questions:
What is exactly Oauth server? Is it my own server that is hosted by API?
After Laravel Passport configuration and database migration, Laravel Passport created some tables in my database, I would be really appreciated if you could tell me what is the purpose of each tables? table names are failed_jobs, oauth_access_tokens, oauth_auth_codes, oauth_clients, oauth_personal_access_clients, oauth_refresh_tokens.
I've configured my Laravel application to use the Laravel Passport and I created two Routes in my api.php file
Route::post('login','API\Auth\UserAuthController#login');
Route::post('register','API\Auth\UserAuthController#register');
and then, I created the UserAuthController.php file and wrote the login and register methods. They are working without any problem. After a user registers or login into their account, my code will generate a personal access token.
$token = $user->createToken('authentication')->accessToken;
and then students or teachers can access to the private resources of their own with this access token. Is it right to create a personal access token for my two types of users? What is exactly a personal access token?
I just know you can pass it into request header, and the server will authorize you to access private resources. what I mean by private resources is the endpoints which are protected by API middleware like this:
Route::post('/update-info','API\Auth\UserAuthController#update')->middleware('auth:api');
Am I doing right to create a personal access token when teachers and students login to their account or I should do another way to handle it?! this way works, but I'm looking for correct way if there is anything else.
The weird thing here is Laravel Passport create a token every time users login and it doesn't check if they have already created token or not? If someone can access the API endpoint, they can make a post request to /login endpoint and create a lot of tokens. Is it a problem? How to fix it?
When I create a personal access token I need to pass an argument to createToken($arg) method, and it stores in oauth_personal_access_clients table. what is the purpose of this? Is it just for Laravel Passport purpose, or maybe I need it in the future?
I have some endpoints which are not protected by auth:api middleware, for example, every user visit my application they can search for teachers name and lessons and ... , it's not necessary to make them login or register first. These endpoints are accessible to everyone in my application, and they are free to search and advance search for some information. My question is if I make it accessible to everyone, how can I protect these endpoints that only my first-party app and third-party app can access them. I mean I don't want people to access them by command line or postman or some kind of these tools without access token, I want to protect these endpoints from attackers not to make a huge requests to make my server down. How can I protect this kind of endpoints? I know I can limit requests per minute, but I don't know how much limit it? Is there any other way?
I see there is a term called clients in Oauth terminology, as I understand clients are the applications like web applications or native mobile app and any other applications that use my API are called clients. Am I right? And I think this is for third-party application authentication. I'm a little bit confused after reading Laravel Passport documentation about clients, and when I configured the Laravel Passport, it generates two clients and stored them in database. Do I need to create a client for my Applications?! How Can I ignore authorization flow just for first-party applications?
After Laravel Passport configuration, now I can see it generates some default route for clients.
/oauth/clients
/oauth/clients/{client-id}
/oauth/authorize
/oauth/token
What is the usage of these routes?! do I need them to create my first-party applications?
As I said the future purpose of this application is to make the API accessible by third-party applications, I have to create a web page that developers register an account and get/buy a token to access my API. is it possible to do it with Laravel Passport or I should write my own logic to make it work? Do I need to create a client for my third-party clients?
Thanks a lot for your help <3
It's going to take too long for me to answer each of your questions in depth, so I've
tried to link to the relevant sections in the RFC for further reading.
Essentially, I would recommend for you to use the password credentials grant flow for your first-party clients (your mobile app and web app). One of the clients that
Laravel would have created for you, would have been the "Laravel Password Grant Client" and its
documentation is available here.
You would still need to define your own "register" route, but you can use the oauth/token route
instead of your own /login route.
What is exactly Oauth server? Is it my own server that is hosted by API?
The OAuth server would be your server that is running Passport. Or in the official
terminology according to the RFC, the
OAuth server/Passport server would be called the "authorization server."
In your case, the "resource server", which your API that serves your content, would be
the same server as the "authorization server."
After Laravel Passport configuration and database migration, Laravel Passport created some tables in my database, I would be really appreciated if you could tell me what is the purpose of each tables? table names are failed_jobs, oauth_access_tokens, oauth_auth_codes, oauth_clients, oauth_personal_access_clients, oauth_refresh_tokens.
The failed_jobs table is not directly related to Passport. It's related to Laravel's queues. See Dealing With Failed Jobs.
The rest of the tables are all there so that Passport can keep track of the clients and codes it has created.
oauth_clients: See the RFC clients section.
oauth_access_tokens: See the RFC access tokens section.
oauth_auth_codes: See Authorization Code Grant.
oauth_personal_access_clients: Personal access clients don't seem to be part of the official specification, but it is basically a client for when a user wants to get an access token directly, instead of going through an app or website. Usually this would be a developer who wants to get an access token to be able to call API endpoints on their own account.
The personal access clients table stores clients that were specifically created for this purpose. Usually there would
only be one of them.
oauth_refresh_tokens: See the RFC refresh tokens section.
Is it right to create a personal access token for my two types of users? What is exactly a personal access token?
Every user would need to get their own access token, but not a personal access token.
Personal access tokens are just access tokens that were created specifically for users who wants to generate
and use the access token themselves. In Laravel Passport, specifically, they are access tokens
which are linked to the "Laravel Personal Access Client."
So in your case, your server would create "normal" access tokens for users and not "personal" access
tokens.
Am I doing right to create a personal access token when teachers and students login to their account or I should do another way to handle it?! this way works, but I'm looking for correct way if there is anything else.
See answer to question 3.
The weird thing here is Laravel Passport create a token every time users login and it doesn't check if they have already created token or not? If someone can access the API endpoint, they can make a post request to /login endpoint and create a lot of tokens. Is it a problem? How to fix it?
I don't think this is a problem. The oauth/token route is rate-limited. You can rate-limit it even more.
You can also listen to events and delete or revoke tokens
if want to limit the amount of tokens there may be for a single user.
When I create a personal access token I need to pass an argument to createToken($arg) method, and it stores in oauth_personal_access_clients table. what is the purpose of this? Is it just for Laravel Passport purpose, or maybe I need it in the future?
This table is just for Laravel Passport. It can also be of use for when you want to audit or debug something later on.
The row that you see in the oauth_personal_access_clients table, was created when you ran php artisan passport:install.
When you call createToken, a new row is inserted into oauth_access_tokens.
I have some endpoints which are not protected by auth:api middleware, for example, every user visit my application they can search for teachers name and lessons and ... , it's not necessary to make them login or register first. These endpoints are accessible to everyone in my application, and they are free to search and advance search for some information. My question is if I make it accessible to everyone, how can I protect these endpoints that only my first-party app and third-party app can access them. I mean I don't want people to access them by command line or postman or some kind of these tools without access token, I want to protect these endpoints from attackers not to make a huge requests to make my server down. How can I protect this kind of endpoints? I know I can limit requests per minute, but I don't know how much limit it? Is there any other way?
Yes, you'll have to do rate-limiting. You'll have to experiment and see what works for you.
I see there is a term called clients in Oauth terminology, as I understand clients are the applications like web applications or native mobile app and any other applications that use my API are called clients. Am I right? And I think this is for third-party application authentication. I'm a little bit confused after reading Laravel Passport documentation about clients, and when I configured the Laravel Passport, it generates two clients and stored them in database. Do I need to create a client for my Applications?! How Can I ignore authorization flow just for first-party applications?
Yes, clients are like web applications, mobile apps, etc. Usually you would have a new
client for every mobile app, web app, CLI, etc., but in addition to those apps, Laravel defines
the "Password Grant Client" and the "Personal Access Client" clients for you which have
specific purposes.
You can use the Laravel Password Grant Client for
both of your applications since they're first-party applications.
You can ignore the authorization flow for first-party applications by using the
/oauth/token route that is provided for
password grant clients.
The RFC section about the password credentials flow is available here.
You can read more about how the RFC defines clients here.
What is the usage of these routes? do I need them to create my first-party applications?
Needed for first-party applications:
/oauth/token
Not needed for first-party applications:
/oauth/clients: this is for a third-party developer to see which clients they have created.
/oauth/clients/{client-id}: for a third-party developer to update one of their clients.
/oauth/authorize: this route will be called by a third-party developer to start the
authorization grant flow with their client ID and secret.
You can read more about the above routes under the "JSON API" section in Managing clients.
As I said the future purpose of this application is to make the API accessible by third-party applications, I have to create a web page that developers register an account and get/buy a token to access my API. is it possible to do it with Laravel Passport or I should write my own logic to make it work? Do I need to create a client for my third-party clients?
Laravel Passport provides Vue components that you can use so that developers will be able to create clients. You can either use these components or you can create your own frontend and call
the JSON API routes from your own frontend.
Keep in mind that OAuth was designed originally for when third-party apps needs to access things on behalf of a user. So instead of getting access tokens, third-party apps will get a client ID and client secret and they will need to go through one of the authorization grant flows for each user that they want to act on behalf of.
If you're never going to have third-party apps that need to act on behalf of users, it might be worth considering other protocols like mentioned in the comments.
I'm quiet new to slim, but I want to give it a try. I have created an application, which uses twig as view rendering.
A user should authenticate against a database (via a login form), before access administration. I created a login form, but now I'm stuck.
I found some libraries and middleware, helping with basic HTTP Authentification, but that is not quiet what I want.
I simply could store a session var, after checking the users information with my database, but is this actually secure?
Some people using authentication libraries, like Zend/Authentification oder Session.
Also, there is the whole token based authentification, but I don't know, if I should use this, when not creating an REST application.
I just want to understand, what does mean "secure" in a slim3 application and how to handle a user login with all it's aspects, to create a secure backend experience. Are there any libraries I should use, to build a middleware around?
Thanks for clarification/help.
I've been building applications in Slim for a little over 1 years, and I went through the same problem at the beginning, my tip for you is, as slim is meant to be a simple framework, it has nothing as default, so you you need to build the security of your application;
I started by trying some authentication libs, but starting to build mine.
Basically what i used
First I used Basiauth, with CSRF
Then I set out to build OAuth 2 authentication, ensuring token access to resources, and access rules.
For this I used a very powerful library https://oauth2.thephpleague.com/
I have two applications running under the same base domain.
docs.application.com goes to the documentation and it's written with PHP (Grav CMS).
www.appliation.com goes to my application which is written with Node and React.
Grav CMS has a Google oauth plugin that I am using and my application also uses Google oauth to login.
I would like to centralize the login on a way that I could login to any of the applications and be automatically logged in to the other one.
I've been reading about Central Authentication Service and Cross Domain Login but so far I wasn't able to manage a solution.
Any thoughts?
You have tagged this question with OAuth2 so I am telling about that.
Technically speaking OAuth2 is not Authentication tool but Authorization tool. However you can tweak it in such a way that you can use it for authentication.
Ideally you should create another application only for Authentication, say sso.example.com. All two application will go to that for Authentication.
In any SSO tool you use, your both application will become you 'service provider' and the sso application will become your 'identity provider'. You can use Shibboleth too for that matter.
If you use OAuth2 than only thing you will have to manage on client side is the token.
While shibboleth does that for you. Shibboleth act as authorization server too. You can configure it in such a way that, all two application will be not accessible unless user has active session in the SSO application.
I'm using Symfony2 as framework but up until now I was using my own code for authentication and authorization. I decided to give Symfony's security system a try and after following the tutorial on its website I'm now able to login using my database.
But... I need to authenticate against a Radius server and an Active Directory if the authentication against the database fails.
Can these multiple methods of authentication be combined? how would I do that?
The solution was to create my own user authentication provider. You only need to extend UserAuthenticationProvider and do your own thing in the checkAuthentication method
I am working on a CakePHP application which is part/sub another application that is developed in different technology ( ColdFusion ). Both apps have their own login functionality and they are required. Login functionality in CakePHP is by AUTH and ACL . Now the requirement is that when a user logged in parent app which is developed in ColdFusion user should directly go to protected pages/dashboard without logging in. I want a way to bypass the login functionality provided by Auth.
Thank you,
kiran
I want a way to bypass the login functionality provided by Auth.
You probably don't, you probably want to be able to log the user in automatically, which Auth supports.
You need to have some way for your PHP code to call ColdFusion to authenticate a user based on some shared secret (e.g. the login cookie for the ColdFusion part of the application) and then automatically log the user if they are authenticated.