Hi guys! Welcome back to my Authentication series. It's a pleasure for me to have you here 😁.
🔴IMPORTANT❗🔴: this is the second post of a series so, if you missed the previous one, I strongly suggest you to check it out from the link above.
As always, if u get in trouble in following this tutorial u can check the final solution in GitHub at this link.
Quick recap of the previous episode 🔙
In the previous blog post we achieved what follows:
- Develop a web api with VSCode and test it through Postman
- Use Firebase Admin Sdk to manage our Firebase proj directly from the web api
- Use token-based authentication in our web api with the format of JWT
- Set up logic to verify the JWT token validity
What's next ⏭
In this episode we're going to write an authentication endpoint which will be responsible for issuing JWT tokens to the users that will provide valid sign-in credentials.
This means that our web api is in charge of both issue the JWT token and verify it.
As before, if a user doesn't provide a valid JWT token, he can't access our restricted resource (in this case the WeatherForecast endpoint).
Preamble
This will be a demo application to show off a way to implement authentication in .NET 5. You can take away these concepts and adapt them to your real-world requirements.
🔵IMPORTANT🔵: I'm not going to follow every best practices to save time but I'll do my best to spot things that are not "real-world ready" to use.
👀NOTE👀: if you don't care about Firebase you can follow directly this blog post without having to deal with the previous one.
Let's start 🚀
Without much delay, let's jump into the coding part 💻.
Prerequisites
To follow this tutorial you must install on your machine some tools and programs:
- NET 5 Runtime. You can download from here
- Visual Studio Code (you can use another IDE if you wish). Download can be found here
- Postman (you can use another program to consume REST-api if you wish). Download can be found here
- C# extension for VSCode (powered by Omnisharp)
Prepare configs
The first thing we've to do is to add keys about JWT authentication in our web api. Please be sure to add the following code in appsettings.json:
"AuthDemo": {
"Key": "This is where you should specify your secret key, which is used to sign and verify Jwt tokens.",
"ValidIssuer": "localhost:5001",
"ValidAudience": "localhost:5001"
}
This section must be inside a parent node called "Jwt".
⚠️WARNING⚠️: in a real-world app you must not store these sensitive data in a non-secure location such as appsettings.json.
User model
Create a "Models" folder within your web api proj. After that create a class called UserModel.cs with the following code:
using System.ComponentModel.DataAnnotations;
namespace AuthSeries.Models
{
public class UserModel
{
[Required]
public string Email { get; set; }
[Required]
public string Password { get; set; }
}
}
This class will hold the sign-in credentials of the users that will be passed to our authentication endpoint.
🔎HINT🔎: we've used a "Required" data annotation that will enforce the properties to be present in the input model.
Implement token service feature
Create a "Services" folder. In this folder you're going to create two files.
ITokenService.cs
using AuthSeries.Models;
namespace AuthSeries.Services
{
public interface ITokenService
{
string BuildToken(string key, string issuer, UserModel userModel);
}
}
This interface will be implemented by our concrete implementation that we're going to use in our controller to issue a JWT token.
TokenService.cs
using System;
using System.IdentityModel.Tokens.Jwt;
using System.Security.Claims;
using System.Text;
using AuthSeries.Models;
using Microsoft.IdentityModel.Tokens;
namespace AuthSeries.Services
{
public class TokenService : ITokenService
{
private const double EXP_DURATION_MINUTES = 30;
public string BuildToken(string key, string issuer, UserModel userModel)
{
// TODO: put real-world logic to evaluate sign-in credetials
// ...
var claims = new[]
{
new Claim(ClaimTypes.Name, userModel.Email),
new Claim(ClaimTypes.NameIdentifier, Guid.NewGuid().ToString())
};
var securityKey = new SymmetricSecurityKey(Encoding.UTF8.GetBytes(key));
var credentials = new SigningCredentials(securityKey, SecurityAlgorithms.HmacSha256Signature);
var tokenDescriptor = new JwtSecurityToken(issuer: issuer, audience: issuer, claims, expires: DateTime.Now.AddMinutes(EXP_DURATION_MINUTES), signingCredentials: credentials);
return new JwtSecurityTokenHandler().WriteToken(tokenDescriptor);
}
}
}
This class is in charge of issuing a JWT token by taking in a secret key, a valid issuer and the user's sign-in credentials.
⚠️WARNING⚠️: this code is not real-world as we must check the sign-in credentials against a valid source such as a database, a txt file, a call to an external system and so on (take a look at the comment in the code).
Users endpoint
Now, it's time to take advantage of what we've done up to now. We create the endpoint that will be called from the client to get back a valid JWT token issued with the logic above.
In the "Controllers" folder create a file called UsersController.cs with the following code:
using AuthSeries.Models;
using AuthSeries.Services;
using Microsoft.AspNetCore.Mvc;
using Microsoft.Extensions.Configuration;
namespace AuthSeries.Controllers
{
[ApiController]
[Route("[controller]")]
public class UsersController : ControllerBase
{
private readonly IConfiguration configuration;
private readonly ITokenService tokenService;
public UsersController(IConfiguration configuration, ITokenService tokenService)
{
this.configuration = configuration;
this.tokenService = tokenService;
}
[HttpPost]
[Route("sign-in")]
public IActionResult Post(UserModel userModel)
{
return Ok(tokenService.BuildToken(configuration["Jwt:AuthDemo:Key"], configuration["Jwt:AuthDemo:ValidIssuer"], userModel));
}
}
}
This class simply have a constructor with two dependencies (more on "ITokenService" soon) and expose a single action that will return a valid JWT token to a user.
🧐NOTE🧐: you should not read the settings in this way as it's not strongly-typed and so it's a more error-prone method. Consider using the Options pattern. More on this here.
Connects the dots 🧩
One of the major changes that we must do is inside the "Startup.cs" in the "ConfigureServices()" method. The method will look like this:
public void ConfigureServices(IServiceCollection services)
{
services.AddControllers();
services.AddSwaggerGen(c =>
{
c.SwaggerDoc("v1", new OpenApiInfo { Title = "AuthSeries", Version = "v1" });
});
// Auth.Demo section
// here we register our service
services.AddTransient<ITokenService, TokenService>();
// here we specify our authentication settings to validate the JWT token
services.AddAuthentication(JwtBearerDefaults.AuthenticationScheme)
.AddJwtBearer(opt =>
{
opt.TokenValidationParameters = new TokenValidationParameters
{
ValidateIssuer = true,
ValidateAudience = true,
ValidateLifetime = true,
ValidateIssuerSigningKey = true,
ValidIssuer = Configuration["Jwt:AuthDemo:ValidIssuer"],
ValidAudience = Configuration["Jwt:AuthDemo:ValidAudience"],
IssuerSigningKey = new SymmetricSecurityKey(Encoding.UTF8.GetBytes(Configuration["Jwt:AuthDemo:Key"]))
};
});
}
Here there are two important things that you must be aware of:
- The TokenService registration. We've registered our TokenService in the IOC container provided by .NET. The service lifetime used is transient that is every time we need of an instance of ITokenService, a new fresh one is returned to us from the built-in IOC container. More about service lifetime here.
- The JWT token parameters used to verify a token. 🔎NOTE🔎: this code is not real-world ready for a couple of reasons. First, the secret key must not be saved in appsettings.json and must not be so easy to guess. Last, but not least, you should not read the keys in this way but it would be better if you take advantage of Options pattern for example.
If you started directly from this post you must add the following two Nuget packages by issuing these commands (⚠️WARNING⚠️: be sure to run these commands inside the proj folder):
dotnet add package Microsoft.AspNetCore.Authentication
dotnet add package Microsoft.AspNetCore.Authentication.JwtBearer
Final touch 🍓
If you've started from this post you must also do two brief final steps in "WeatherForecastController.cs":
- Decorate the "Get()" method with this attribute
[Authorize]
- Add this using statement:
using Microsoft.AspNetCore.Authorization;
at the top of the file
Moment of truth 👨🏻🏫
Now the last thing left is to give a try to our work.
Issue a dotnet run
in your preferred terminal and wait for the application to start.
Bring up Postman and try a simple request at the endpoint https://localhost:5001/weatherforecast. This should result in a 401 unauthorized error.
As expected, we must sign in ourselves before try to hit the WeatherForecast endpoint.
Create a new Postman request with the following parameters:
- type: POST
- url: https://localhost:5001/users/sign-in
- body:
{
"email": "test@test.com",
"password": "password"
}
When you run this request you get back a JWT token in the output console. Copy it to your clipboard and switch back to the WeatherForecast request.
In the Authorization tab select:
- Type: Bearer Token
- Token: the token in your clipboard
Finally repeat the test again... et voilà 😍. You should get back a 200 OK response along with the requested data.
Let's recap
Congrats 🏆❗ You successfully did this blog post. By following this tutorial you're able to issue your own JWT token with your custom logic.
The final step 🐱🏍
In the next blog post (that will be the last of this series), we're going to merge these two posts by allowing the users to authenticate either via Firebase or via our custom endpoint. Stay tuned 👑!
I hope you enjoy this post and find it useful. If you have any questions or you want to spot me some errors I really appreciate it and I'll make my best to follow up. If you enjoy it and would like to sustain me consider giving a like and sharing on your favorite socials. If u want u can add me on your socials this makes me very very happy!
Stay safe and see you soon! 😎
Top comments (0)