Liking cljdoc? Tell your friends :D

ring-jwt

Clojars Project

Ring middleware for parsing, decoding and verifying a JWS-signed JWT token from the incoming request.

Built on top of the excellent auth0 JWT library.

Once wired into to your ring server, the middleware will:

  • Search for a JWT token on each incoming request.
    • By default, it will parse the bearer token from the Authorization HTTP header but this behaviour can be overridden using the find-token-fn setting (see usage below).
  • Will add the claims it finds in the token as a clojure map against the :claims key on the incoming request.
  • Add an empty :claims map to the request if no token is found.
  • Respond with a 401 if the JWS signature in the token cannot be verified.
  • Respond with a 401 if the token has expired (i.e. the exp claim indicates a time in the past).
    • A leeway can be specified for this check with the leeway-seconds setting (see usage below).
  • Respond with a 401 if the token will only be active in the future (i.e. the nbf claim indicates a time in the future)
    • As for exp, the leeway-seconds setting can be used to introduce a leeway on this check.

Usage

(require '[ring.middleware.jwt :as jwt])

(defn handler [request]
  (response {:foo "bar"}))

(jwt/wrap-jwt handler {:issuers {"https://some/issuer"    {:alg    :HS256
                                                           :secret "asecret"}
                                 "https://another/issuer" {:alg          :RS256
                                                           :jwk-endpoint "https://some/jwks/endpoint"}}})

Options:

  • :issuers (mandatory): A map of issuer->cryptographic algorithm configuration. When receiving a JWT token, the middleware will pull the issuer from the iss claim and use it to lookup the appropriate algorithm in the middleware configuration to verify the JWT. (So, the iss claim is implicitly only "trusted" if verification succeeds.)
  • :find-token-fn (optional): A single-argument function that will be used to pull the (encoded) token from the request map. If unspecified the token will be sought from the bearer token given in the Authorization header (i.e. an Authorization HTTP header of the form "Bearer TOKEN")

Configuring the cryptographic algorithms

Depending upon the cryptographic algorithm, a different map of options will be required. Note that, at the point your ring middleware is wired up, ring-jwt will throw an error if it detects that the given options are invalid.

Currently the following JWA algorithms are supported for the purposes of JWS:

AlgorithmOptions
ECDSA using P-256 and SHA-256{:alg :ES256 :public-key public-key} [1]
RSASSA-PKCS-v1_5 using SHA-256{:alg :RS256 :public-key public-key} [1]
{:alg :RS256 :jwk-endpoint "https://your/jwk/endpoint"}
HMAC using SHA-256{:alg :HS256 :secret "your-secret"}

[1] public-key is of type java.security.PublicKey.

Additionally, the following options are supported for all issuers:

  • leeway-seconds: The number of seconds leeway to give when verifying the expiry/active from claims of the token (i.e. the exp and nbf claims).

Other goodies

Keys for use with Integrant or Duct are available in ovotech/duct.middleware.ring-jwt.

Useful links

License

Copyright © 2018 Ovo Energy Ltd.

Distributed under the Eclipse Public License, the same as Clojure.

Can you improve this documentation? These fine people already did:
Alistair Dutton, Oliver Boyle, Jacek Schæ & Newton Beck
Edit on GitHub

cljdoc is a website building & hosting documentation for Clojure/Script libraries

× close