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unleash.unleash/docs/securing-unleash.md
Ivar Conradi Østhus b912768923
feat: move secrets to settings (#577)
* feat: move secrets to settings

* feat: Add better support for detailed db options.

Added db field in options to allow better control of
db-options. Especially important to allow special chars
in database password which might lead to an invaid url
when defined as a database-url.

* fix: integrate logger with knex logger

* fix: remove secret option from all examples

* fix: more options.js unit tests

* fix: added settings-store e2e tests
2020-04-13 22:38:46 +02:00

3.5 KiB

id title
securing_unleash Securing Unleash

The Unleash API is split into two different paths: /api/client and /api/admin. This makes it easy to have different authentication strategy for the admin interface and the client-api used by the applications integrating with Unleash.

General settings

Unleash uses an encrypted cookie to maintain a user session. This allows users to be logged in across multiple instances of Unleash. To protect this cookie, Unleash will automatically generate a secure token the first time you start Unleash.

Securing the Admin API

To secure the Admin API, you have to tell Unleash that you are using a custom admin authentication and implement your authentication logic as a preHook.

const unleash = require('unleash-server');
const myCustomAdminAuth = require('./auth-hook');

unleash
  .start({
    databaseUrl: 'postgres://unleash_user:passord@localhost:5432/unleash',
    adminAuthentication: 'custom',
    preRouterHook: myCustomAdminAuth,
  })
  .then(unleash => {
    console.log(
      `Unleash started on http://localhost:${unleash.app.get('port')}`,
    );
  });

Additionally, you can trigger the admin interface to prompt the user to sign in by configuring your middleware to return a 401 status on protected routes. The response body must contain a message and a path used to redirect the user to the proper login route.

{
  "message": "You must be logged in to use Unleash",
  "path": "/custom/login"
}

Examples of custom authentication hooks:

We also have a version of Unleash deployed on Heroku which uses Google OAuth 2.0: https://secure-unleash.herokuapp.com

Securing the Client API

A common way to support client access is to use pre-shared secrets. This can be solved by having clients send a shared key in an HTTP header with every client request to the Unleash API. All official Unleash clients should support this.

In the Java client this would look like this:

UnleashConfig unleashConfig = UnleashConfig.builder()
  .appName("my-app")
  .instanceId("my-instance-1")
  .unleashAPI(unleashAPI)
  .customHttpHeader("Authorization", "12312Random")
  .build();

On the Unleash server side, you need to implement a preRouter hook which verifies that all calls to /api/client include this pre-shared key in the defined header. This could look something like this.

const unleash = require('unleash-server');
const sharedSecret = '12312Random';

unleash
  .start({
    databaseUrl: 'postgres://unleash_user:passord@localhost:5432/unleash',
    enableLegacyRoutes: false,
    preRouterHook: app => {
      app.use('/api/client', (req, res, next) => {
        if (req.header('authorization') !== sharedSecret) {
          res.sendStatus(401);
        } else {
          next();
        }
      });
    },
  })
  .then(unleash => {
    console.log(
      `Unleash started on http://localhost:${unleash.app.get('port')}`,
    );
  });

client-auth-unleash.js

PS! Remember to disable legacy routes by setting the enableLegacyRoutes option to false. This will require all your clients to be on v3.x.