.. meta:: :description: Use authenticaton with JWT in Hasura :keywords: hasura, docs, authentication, auth, JWT Authentication using JWT ======================== .. contents:: Table of contents :backlinks: none :depth: 1 :local: Introduction ------------ You can configure the GraphQL engine to use JWT authorization mode to authorize all incoming requests to the Hasura GraphQL engine server. The idea is that your auth server will return JWT tokens, which are decoded and verified by the GraphQL engine, to authorize and get metadata about the request (``x-hasura-*`` values). .. thumbnail:: ../../../../img/graphql/manual/auth/jwt-auth.png :alt: Authentication using JWT The JWT is decoded, the signature is verified, then it is asserted that the current role of the user (if specified in the request) is in the list of allowed roles. If the current role is not specified in the request, then the default role is applied. If the authorization passes, then all of the ``x-hasura-*`` values in the claim are used for the permissions system. .. admonition:: Prerequisite It is mandatory to first :doc:`secure your GraphQL endpoint <../../deployment/securing-graphql-endpoint>` for the JWT mode to take effect. In JWT mode, on a secured endpoint: - JWT authentication is **enforced** when the ``X-Hasura-Admin-Secret`` header is **not found** in the request. - JWT authentication is **skipped** when the ``X-Hasura-Admin-Secret`` header **is found** in the request and admin access is granted. TL;DR ----- 1. The JWT must contain: ``x-hasura-default-role``, ``x-hasura-allowed-roles`` in a custom namespace in the claims. 2. Other optional ``x-hasura-*`` fields (required as per your defined permissions). 3. You can send ``x-hasura-role`` as header in the request to indicate a role. 4. Send the JWT via ``Authorization: Bearer `` header. The Spec -------- When your auth server generates the JWT, the custom claims in the JWT **must contain** the following: 1. A ``x-hasura-default-role`` field : indicating the default role of that user i.e. the role that will be used in case ``x-hasura-role`` header is not passed. 2. A ``x-hasura-allowed-roles`` field : a list of allowed roles for the user i.e. acceptable values of the ``x-hasura-role`` header. The claims in the JWT can have other ``x-hasura-*`` fields where their values can only be strings. You can use these ``x-hasura-*`` fields in your permissions. Now the JWT should be sent by the client to the Hasura GraphQL engine via the ``Authorization: Bearer `` header. Example JWT claim: .. code-block:: json { "sub": "1234567890", "name": "John Doe", "admin": true, "iat": 1516239022, "https://hasura.io/jwt/claims": { "x-hasura-allowed-roles": ["editor","user", "mod"], "x-hasura-default-role": "user", "x-hasura-user-id": "1234567890", "x-hasura-org-id": "123", "x-hasura-custom": "custom-value" } } This contains standard (``sub``, ``iat`` etc.) and custom (``name``, ``admin`` etc.) JWT claims, as well as Hasura specific claims inside a custom namespace (or key) i.e. ``https://hasura.io/jwt/claims``. The ``https://hasura.io/jwt/claims`` is the custom namespace where all Hasura specific claims have to be present. This value can be configured in the JWT config while starting the server. **Note**: ``x-hasura-default-role`` and ``x-hasura-allowed-roles`` are mandatory, while the rest of them are optional. .. note:: All ``x-hasura-*`` values should be of type ``String``, they will be converted to the right type automatically. The default role can be overridden by the ``x-hasura-role`` header, while making a request. .. code-block:: http POST /v1/graphql HTTP/1.1 Authorization: Bearer eyJhbGciOiJSUzI1NiIsInR5cCI6IkpXVCJ9.eyJzdWI... X-Hasura-Role: editor ... Configuring JWT mode -------------------- You can enable JWT mode by using the ``--jwt-secret`` flag or ``HASURA_GRAPHQL_JWT_SECRET`` environment variable; the value of which is a JSON object: .. code-block:: none { "type": "", "key": "", "jwk_url": "", "claims_namespace": "", "claims_format": "json|stringified_json", "audience": , "issuer": "" } ``key`` or ``jwk_url``, **one of them has to be present**. ``type`` ^^^^^^^^ Valid values are : ``HS256``, ``HS384``, ``HS512``, ``RS256``, ``RS384``, ``RS512``. (see https://jwt.io). ``HS*`` is for HMAC-SHA based algorithms. ``RS*`` is for RSA based signing. For example, if your auth server is using HMAC-SHA256 for signing the JWTs, then use ``HS256``. If it is using RSA with 512-bit keys, then use ``RS512``. EC public keys are not yet supported. ``key`` ^^^^^^^ - In case of symmetric key (i.e. HMAC based key), the key as it is. (e.g. - "abcdef..."). The key must be long enough for the algorithm chosen, (e.g. for HS256 it must be at least 32 characters long). - In case of asymmetric keys (RSA etc.), only the public key, in a PEM encoded string or as a X509 certificate. This is an optional field. You can also provide a URL to fetch JWKs from using the ``jwk_url`` field. ``jwk_url`` ^^^^^^^^^^^ A URL where a provider publishes their JWKs (which are used for signing the JWTs). The URL **must** publish the JWKs in the standard format as described in https://tools.ietf.org/html/rfc7517. This is an optional field. You can also provide the key (certificate, PEM encoded public key) as a string - under the ``key`` field. Rotating JWKs +++++++++++++ Some providers rotate their JWKs (e.g. Firebase). If the provider sends 1. ``max-age`` or ``s-maxage`` in ``Cache-Control`` header 2. or ``Expires`` header with the response of JWK, then the GraphQL engine will refresh the JWKs automatically. If the provider does not send the above, the JWKs are not refreshed. Following is the behaviour in detail: **On startup**: 1. GraphQL engine will fetch the JWK and will - 1. first, try to parse ``max-age`` or ``s-maxage`` directive in ``Cache-Control`` header. 2. second, check if ``Expires`` header is present (if ``Cache-Control`` is not present), and try to parse the value as a timestamp. 2. If it is able to parse any of the above successfully, then it will use that parsed time to refresh/refetch the JWKs again. If it is unable to parse, then it will not refresh the JWKs (it assumes that if the above headers are not present, the provider doesn't rotate their JWKs). **While running**: 1. While GraphQL engine is running with refreshing JWKs, in one of the refresh cycles it will - 1. first, try to parse ``max-age`` or ``s-maxage`` directive in ``Cache-Control`` header. 2. second, check if ``Expires`` header is present (if ``Cache-Control`` is not present), and try to parse the value as a timestamp. 2. If it is able to parse any of the above successfully, then it will use that parsed time to refresh/refetch the JWKs again. If it is unable to parse, then it will sleep for 1 minute and will start another refresh cycle. Example JWK URL +++++++++++++++ - Auth0 publishes their JWK url at: ``https://.auth0.com``. But Auth0 has a bug. See known issues: :ref:`auth0-issues`. - Firebase publishes their JWK url at: ``https://www.googleapis.com/service_accounts/v1/jwk/securetoken@system.gserviceaccount.com``. ``claims_namespace`` ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ This is an optional field. You can specify the key name, inside which the Hasura specific claims will be present, e.g. ``https://mydomain.com/claims``. **Default value** is: ``https://hasura.io/jwt/claims``. ``claims_format`` ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ This is an optional field, with only the following possible values: - ``json`` - ``stringified_json`` Default is ``json``. This is to indicate whether the Hasura specific claims are a regular JSON object or a stringified JSON. This is required because providers like AWS Cognito only allow strings in the JWT claims. `See #1176 `_. Example:- If ``claims_format`` is ``json`` then JWT claims should look like: .. code-block:: json { "sub": "1234567890", "name": "John Doe", "admin": true, "iat": 1516239022, "https://hasura.io/jwt/claims": { "x-hasura-allowed-roles": ["editor","user", "mod"], "x-hasura-default-role": "user", "x-hasura-user-id": "1234567890", "x-hasura-org-id": "123", "x-hasura-custom": "custom-value" } } If ``claims_format`` is ``stringified_json`` then JWT claims should look like: .. code-block:: json { "sub": "1234567890", "name": "John Doe", "admin": true, "iat": 1516239022, "https://hasura.io/jwt/claims": "{\"x-hasura-allowed-roles\":[\"editor\",\"user\",\"mod\"],\"x-hasura-default-role\":\"user\",\"x-hasura-user-id\":\"1234567890\",\"x-hasura-org-id\":\"123\",\"x-hasura-custom\":\"custom-value\"}" } ``audience`` ^^^^^^^^^^^^ This is an optional field. Certain providers might set a claim which indicates the intended audience for the JWT. This can be checked by setting this field. When this field is set, during the verification process of JWT, the ``aud`` claim in the JWT will be checked if it is equal to the ``audience`` field given in the configuration. See `RFC `__ for more details. This field can be a string, or a list of strings. Examples: .. code-block:: json { "type": "RS512", "jwk_url": "https://......", "audience": "myapp-1234" } or .. code-block:: json { "type": "RS512", "jwk_url": "https://......", "audience": ["myapp-1234", "myapp-6789"] } .. admonition:: Important! Certain JWT providers share JWKs between multiple tenants. They use the ``aud`` claim of JWT to specify the intended audience for the JWT. Setting the ``audience`` field in the Hasura JWT configuration will make sure that the ``aud`` claim from the JWT is also checked during verification. Not doing this check will allow JWTs issued for other tenants to be valid as well. In these cases, you **MUST** set the ``audience`` field to the appropriate value. Failing to do so is a major security vulnerability. ``issuer`` ^^^^^^^^^^ This is an optional field. It takes a string value. When this field is set, during the verification process of JWT, the ``iss`` claim in the JWT will be checked if it is equal to the ``issuer`` field given in the configuration. See `RFC `__ for more details. Examples: .. code-block:: json { "type": "RS512", "jwk_url": "https://......", "issuer": "https://my-auth-server.com" } .. note:: Certain providers require you to verify the ``iss`` claim on the JWT. To do that you can set this field to the appropriate value. Examples ^^^^^^^^ HMAC-SHA based ++++++++++++++ Your auth server is using HMAC-SHA algorithms to sign JWTs, and is using a 256-bit key. In this case, the JWT config will look like: .. code-block:: json { "type":"HS256", "key": "3EK6FD+o0+c7tzBNVfjpMkNDi2yARAAKzQlk8O2IKoxQu4nF7EdAh8s3TwpHwrdWT6R" } The ``key`` is the actual shared secret, which is used by Hasura and the external auth server. RSA based +++++++++ If your auth server is using RSA to sign JWTs, and is using a 512-bit key, the JWT config only needs to have the public key. **Example 1**: public key in PEM format (not OpenSSH format): .. code-block:: json { "type":"RS512", "key": "-----BEGIN PUBLIC KEY-----\nMIGfMA0GCSqGSIb3DQEBAQUAA4GNADCBiQKBgQDdlatRjRjogo3WojgGHFHYLugd\nUWAY9iR3fy4arWNA1KoS8kVw33cJibXr8bvwUAUparCwlvdbH6dvEOfou0/gCFQs\nHUfQrSDv+MuSUMAe8jzKE4qW+jK+xQU9a03GUnKHkkle+Q0pX/g6jXZ7r1/xAK5D\no2kQ+X5xK9cipRgEKwIDAQAB\n-----END PUBLIC KEY-----\n" } **Example 2**: public key as X509 certificate: .. code-block:: json { "type":"RS512", "key": "-----BEGIN CERTIFICATE-----\nMIIDHDCCAgSgAwIBAgIINw9gva8BPPIwDQYJKoZIhvcNAQEFBQAwMTEvMC0GA1UE\nAxMmc2VjdXJldG9rZW4uc3lzdGVtLmdzZXJ2aWNlYWNjb3VudC5jb20wHhcNMTgQt7dIsMTIU9k1SUrFviZOGnmHWtIAw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\nLhTpeP0o+mVYrBmtYVpDpv0e71cfYowSJCCkod/9YbY=\n-----END CERTIFICATE-----" } **Example 3**: public key published as JWKs: .. code-block:: json { "type":"RS512", "jwk_url": "https://www.googleapis.com/service_accounts/v1/jwk/securetoken@system.gserviceaccount.com" } Running with JWT ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ Using the flag: .. code-block:: shell $ docker run -p 8080:8080 \ hasura/graphql-engine:latest \ graphql-engine \ --database-url postgres://username:password@hostname:port/dbname \ serve \ --admin-secret myadminsecretkey \ --jwt-secret '{"type":"HS256", "key": "3EK6FD+o0+c7tzBNVfjpMkNDi2yARAAKzQlk8O2IKoxQu4nF7EdAh8s3TwpHwrdWT6R"}' Using env vars: .. code-block:: shell $ docker run -p 8080:8080 \ -e HASURA_GRAPHQL_ADMIN_SECRET="myadminsecretkey" \ -e HASURA_GRAPHQL_JWT_SECRET='{"type":"RS512", "key": "-----BEGIN PUBLIC KEY-----\nMIGfMA0GCSqGSIb3DQEBAQUAA4GNADCBiQKBgQDdlatRjRjogo3WojgGHFHYLugd\nUWAY9iR3fy4arWNA1KoS8kVw33cJibXr8bvwUAUparCwlvdbH6dvEOfou0/gCFQs\nHUfQrSDv+MuSUMAe8jzKE4qW+jK+xQU9a03GUnKHkkle+Q0pX/g6jXZ7r1/xAK5D\no2kQ+X5xK9cipRgEKwIDAQAB\n-----END PUBLIC KEY-----\n"}' \ hasura/graphql-engine:latest \ graphql-engine \ --database-url postgres://username:password@hostname:port/dbname \ serve Security considerations ----------------------- Setting audience check ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ Certain JWT providers share JWKs between multiple tenants (like Firebase). They use the ``aud`` claim of JWT to specify the intended tenant for the JWT. Setting the ``audience`` field in the Hasura JWT configuration will make sure that the ``aud`` claim from the JWT is also checked during verification. Not doing this check will allow JWTs issued for other tenants to be valid as well. In these cases, you **MUST** set the ``audience`` field to appropriate value. Failing to do so is a major security vulnerability. Popular providers and known issues ---------------------------------- Firebase ^^^^^^^^ This page of Firebase `docs `__ mentions that JWKs are published under: https://www.googleapis.com/robot/v1/metadata/x509/securetoken@system.gserviceaccount.com . But that is a non-standard format. Firebase also publishes the same certificates as proper JWK format under: https://www.googleapis.com/service_accounts/v1/jwk/securetoken@system.gserviceaccount.com . If you are using Firebase and Hasura, use this config: .. code-block:: json { "type":"RS256", "jwk_url": "https://www.googleapis.com/service_accounts/v1/jwk/securetoken@system.gserviceaccount.com", "audience": "", "issuer": "https://securetoken.google.com/" } .. _auth0-issues: Auth0 ^^^^^ Refer the :doc:`Auth0 JWT Integration guide <../../guides/integrations/auth0-jwt>` for a full integration guide with Auth0. Auth0 publishes their JWK under: ``https://.auth0.com/.well-known/jwks.json`` But they have a `bug where the certificate thumbprint does not match `__. Hence, currently this URL does not work with Hasura. Current workaround is - download the X590 certificate from: ``https://.auth0.com/pem`` And use it in the ``key`` field: .. code-block:: json { "type":"RS512", "key": "-----BEGIN CERTIFICATE----- MIIDDTCAfWgAwIBAgIJhNlZ11IDrxbMA0GCSqSIb3DQEBCwUAMCQxIjAgBgNV BAMTGXlc3QtaGdlLWp3C5ldS5hdXRoMC5jb20HhcNMTgwNzMwMTM1MjM1WhcN MzIwND3MTM1MjM1WjAkSIwIAYDVQQDExl0ZXNLWhnZS1qd3QuZXUuYXV0aDAu Y29tMIBIjANBgkqhkiGw0BAQEFAAOCAQ8AMIICgKCAQEA13CivdSkNzRnOnR5 ZNiReD+AgbL7BWjRiw3RwjxRp5PYzvAGuj94yR6LRh3QybYtsMFbSg5J7fNq6 Ld6yMpMrUu8CBOnYY456b/2jlf+Vp8vEQuKvPOOw8Ev6x7X3blcuXCELSwyL3 AGHq9OP2RV6V6CIE863zzuYH5HDLzU35oMZqogJVRJM0+6besH6TnSTNiA7xi BAqFaiRNQRVi1CAUa0bkN1XRp4AFy7d63VldOsM+8QnCNHySdDr1XevVuq6DK LQyGexFy4niALgHV0Q7A+xP1c2G6rJomZmn4j1avnlBpU87E58JMrRHOCj+5m Xj22/QDAQABo0IwQDAPgNVHRMBAf8EBTADAQHMB0GA1UdDgQWBBT6FvNkuUgu tk3OYQi4lo5aOgwazAOgNVHQ8BAf8EBAMCAoQDQYJKoZIhvcNAQELBQADggEB ADCLj+L22pEKyqaIUlhUJh7DAiDSLafy0fw56CntzPhqiZVVRlhxeAKidkCLV r9IEbRuxUoXiQSezPqM//9xHegMp0f2VauVCFg7EpUanYwvqFqjy9LWgH+SBz 4uroLSZ5g1EPsHtlArLChA90caTX4e7Z7Xlu8G2kHRJB5nC7ycdbMUvEWBMeI tn/pcbmZ3/vlgj4UTEnURe2UPmSJpxmPwXqBcvwdKHRMgFXhZxojWCi0z4ftf f8t8UJIcbEblnkYe7wzYy8tOXoMMHqGSisCdkp/866029rJsKbwd8rVIyKNC5 frGYaw+0cxO6/WvSir0eA= -----END CERTIFICATE----- " } Generating JWT Config --------------------- The JWT Config to be used in env ``HASURA_GRAPHQL_JWT_SECRET`` or ``--jwt-secret`` flag can be generated using: https://hasura.io/jwt-config. **Currently the UI supports generating config for Auth0 and Firebase**. The config generated from this page can be directly pasted in yaml files and command line arguments as it takes care of escaping new lines. .. thumbnail:: ../../../../img/graphql/manual/auth/jwt-config-generated.png :width: 75% :alt: Generating JWT config Auth JWT Examples ----------------- Here are some sample apps that use JWT authorization. You can follow the instructions in the READMEs of the repositories to get started. - `Auth0 JWT example `__: A todo app that uses Hasura GraphQL engine and Auth0 JWT - `Firebase JWT example `__: Barebones example to show how to have Firebase Auth integrated with Hasura JWT mode