JWT Signed Request
Request signing and verification for Internal APIs using JWT.
Getting Started
Add this line to your application's Gemfile:
gem 'jwt_signed_request'
then run:
$ bundle
Stale PRs
We use the "stale" workflow to manage our PRs.
If you have a PR open for 60 days without any activity, it will automatically be labelled stale-pr
.
If there is no activity for 7 days after this label is applied, the PR will be automatically closed.
If you have a PR that has a sensible reason for being open for a long period of time with no activity, you can apply the do-not-auto-close
label to avoid it being automatically closed.
Generating EC Keys
We should be using a public key encryption algorithm such as ES256. To generate your public/private key pair using ES256 run:
$ openssl ecparam -genkey -name prime256v1 -noout -out myprivatekey.pem
$ openssl ec -in myprivatekey.pem -pubout -out mypubkey.pem
Store and encrypt these in your application secrets.
Configuration
You can add signing and verification keys to one or more key stores as your application needs them.
For example, given the following keys:
private_key = <<-PEM.gsub(/^\s+/, "")
-----BEGIN EC PRIVATE KEY-----
MHcCAQEEIBOQ3YIILYMV1glTKbF9oeZWzHe3SNQjAx4IbPIxNygQoAoGCCqGSM49
AwEHoUQDQgAEuOC3ufTTnW0hVmCPNERb4LxaDE/OexDdlmXEjHYaixzYIduluGXd
3cjg4H2gjqsY/NCpJ9nM8/AAINSrq+qPuA==
-----END EC PRIVATE KEY-----
PEM
public_key = <<-PEM.gsub(/^\s+/, "")
-----BEGIN PUBLIC KEY-----
MFkwEwYHKoZIzj0CAQYIKoZIzj0DAQcDQgAEuOC3ufTTnW0hVmCPNERb4LxaDE/O
exDdlmXEjHYaixzYIduluGXd3cjg4H2gjqsY/NCpJ9nM8/AAINSrq+qPuA==
-----END PUBLIC KEY-----
PEM
Single key store
If your application only needs a single key store, configure it like so:
require 'openssl'
JWTSignedRequest.configure_keys do |config|
config.add_signing_key(
key_id: 'client_a',
key: OpenSSL::PKey::EC.new(private_key),
algorithm: 'ES256',
)
config.add_verification_key(
key_id: 'client_a',
key: OpenSSL::PKey::EC.new(public_key),
algorithm: 'ES256',
)
end
Multiple key stores
If your application requires multiple key stores, configure them like so:
key_store_id = 'widget_admin'
JWTSignedRequest.configure_keys(key_store_id) do |config|
config.add_signing_key(
key_id: 'client_a',
key: OpenSSL::PKey::EC.new(private_key),
algorithm: 'ES256',
)
config.add_verification_key(
key_id: 'client_a',
key: OpenSSL::PKey::EC.new(public_key),
algorithm: 'ES256',
)
end
Signing Requests
If you have added your signing keys to a key store, you will only need to
specify the key_id
you are signing the requests with.
If you are using multiple key stores, you will also need to pass the
appropriate key_store_id
.
Using net/http
require 'net/http'
require 'uri'
require 'openssl'
require 'jwt_signed_request'
uri = URI('http://example.com')
req = Net::HTTP::Get.new(uri)
jwt_token = JWTSignedRequest.sign(
method: req.method,
path: req.path,
headers: {"Content-Type" => "application/json"},
body: "",
key_id: 'my-key-id', # used for looking up key and kid header
lookup_key_id: 'my-alt-key-id', # optionally override lookup key
key_store_id: 'widget_admin', # optionally specify named key store ID
issuer: 'my-issuer' # optional
additional_headers_to_sign: ['X-AUTH'] # optional
)
req['Authorization'] = "Bearer #{jwt_token}"
res = Net::HTTP.start(uri.hostname, uri.port) {|http|
http.request(req)
}
Using Faraday
require 'faraday'
require 'openssl'
require 'jwt_signed_request/middlewares/faraday'
conn = Faraday.new(url: URI.parse('http://example.com')) do |faraday|
faraday.use(
JWTSignedRequest::Middlewares::Faraday,
key_id: 'my-key-id',
key_store_id: 'my-key-store-id', # optional
issuer: 'my-issuer', # optional
additional_headers_to_sign: ['X-AUTH'], # optional
bearer_schema: true, # optional
)
faraday.adapter Faraday.default_adapter
end
conn.post do |req|
req.url 'http://example.com'
req.body = '{ "name": "Unagi" }'
end
Additional options
bearer_schema (boolean)
Determines whether to use the Bearer schema when assigning the JWT token to the Authorization
request header
bearer_schema value | Authorization header value |
---|---|
false (default) | <jwt_token> |
true | Bearer <jwt_token> |
Verifying Requests
Please make sure you have added your verification keys to the appropriate key store. Doing so will allow the server to verify requests signed by different signing keys.
Using Rails
class APIController < ApplicationController
before_action :verify_request
...
private
def verify_request
begin
JWTSignedRequest.verify(
request: request,
# Use optional `key_store_id` kwarg when working with multiple key stores, eg:
key_store_id: 'widget_admin',
)
rescue JWTSignedRequest::UnauthorizedRequestError => e
render :json => {}, :status => :unauthorized
end
end
end
Increasing Expiry leeway
JWT tokens contain an expiry timestamp. If communication delays are large (or system clocks are sufficiently out of synch), you may need to increase the 'leeway' when verifying. For example:
JWTSignedRequest.verify(request: request, leeway: 55)
Using Rack Middleware
class Server < Sinatra::Base
use(
JWTSignedRequest::Middlewares::Rack,
exclude_paths: /public|health/, # optional regex
leeway: 100, # optional
key_store_id: 'my-key-store-id', # optional
)
end
Backwards Compability
Please note that the way we sign and verify requests has changed in version 2.x.x. For documentation on how to use older versions please look here.
We are only supporting the old API for the next couple of releases of version 2.x.x so please upgrade ASAP.
Maintainers
License
JWTSignedRequest
uses MIT license. See
LICENSE.txt
for
details.
Code of conduct
We welcome contribution from everyone. Read more about it in
CODE_OF_CONDUCT.md
Contributors
Many thanks to the following contributors to this gem:
- Toan Nguyen - @yoshdog
- Odin Dutton - @twe4ked
- Sebastian von Conrad - @vonconrad
- Zubin Henner- @zubin
- Glenn Tweedie - @nocache
- Giancarlo Salamanca - @salamagd
- Ben Axnick - @bentheax
- Glen Stampoultzis - @gstamp
- Lucas Parry - @lparry
- Chris Mckenzie - @chrisface
Contributing
For bug fixes, documentation changes, and small features:
- Fork it ( https://github.com/envato/jwt_signed_request/fork )
- Create your feature branch (git checkout -b my-new-feature)
- Commit your changes (git commit -am 'Add some feature')
- Push to the branch (git push origin my-new-feature)
- Create a new Pull Request
For larger new features: Do everything as above, but first also make contact with the project maintainers to be sure your change fits with the project direction and you won't be wasting effort going in the wrong direction
Compatibility
Compatibility with multiple versions of the JWT gem is tested via the appraisal gem.
Configured versions are defined in Appraisals, which at time of writing looked like this:
# Latest JWT minor versions
# Source: https://rubygems.org/gems/jwt/versions
%w[
1.5.6
2.0.0
2.1.0
2.2.1
].each do |jwt_version|
Ensure you set up your local environment by running:
bundle exec appraisal install
Run the test suite like this:
# Test all configured versions
bundle exec appraisal rspec
# Target a specific configured version
bundle exec appraisal jwt-1.5.6 rspec