graphql-engine/docs/graphql/core/auth/authentication/webhook.rst
2020-08-25 21:51:21 +05:30

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.. meta::
:description: Use authenticaton with webhooks in Hasura
:keywords: hasura, docs, authentication, auth, webhook
.. _auth_webhooks:
Authentication using webhooks
=============================
.. contents:: Table of contents
:backlinks: none
:depth: 2
:local:
Introduction
------------
You can configure the GraphQL engine to use a webhook to authenticate all incoming requests to the Hasura GraphQL engine server.
.. thumbnail:: /img/graphql/core/auth/webhook-auth.png
:alt: Authentication using webhooks
.. admonition:: Prerequisite
It is mandatory to first :ref:`secure your GraphQL endpoint <securing_graphql_endpoint>` for the webhook mode to take effect.
In webhook mode, on a secured endpoint:
- The configured webhook is **called** when the ``X-Hasura-Admin-Secret`` header is not found in the request.
- The configured webhook is **ignored** when the ``X-Hasura-Admin-Secret`` header is found in the request and
admin access is granted.
Configuring webhook mode
------------------------
* You can configure Hasura to run in webhook mode by running the GraphQL engine with the ``--auth-hook`` flag or the ``HASURA_GRAPHQL_AUTH_HOOK`` environment variable (see :ref:`GraphQL engine server options <server_flag_reference>`), the value of which is the webhook endpoint.
* You can configure Hasura to send either a ``GET`` or a ``POST`` request to your auth webhook. The default configuration is ``GET`` and you can override this with ``POST`` by using the ``--auth-hook-mode`` flag or the ``HASURA_GRAPHQL_AUTH_HOOK_MODE`` environment variable (*in addition to those specified above; see* :ref:`GraphQL engine server options <server_flag_reference>`).
.. note::
If you are running Hasura using Docker, ensure that the Hasura Docker container can reach the webhook.
See :ref:`this page <docker_networking>` for Docker networking.
Spec for the webhook
--------------------
Request
^^^^^^^
GET request
+++++++++++
.. code-block:: http
GET https://<your-custom-webhook>/ HTTP/1.1
<Header-Key>: <Header-Value>
If you configure your webhook to use ``GET``, then Hasura **will forward all client headers except**:
- ``Content-Length``
- ``Content-Type``
- ``Content-MD5``
- ``User-Agent``
- ``Host``
- ``Origin``
- ``Referer``
- ``Accept``
- ``Accept-Encoding``
- ``Accept-Language``
- ``Accept-Datetime``
- ``Cache-Control``
- ``Connection``
- ``DNT``
POST request
++++++++++++
.. code-block:: http
POST https://<your-custom-webhook>/ HTTP/1.1
Content-Type: application/json
{
"headers": {
"header-key1": "header-value1",
"header-key2": "header-value2"
}
}
If you configure your webhook to use ``POST``, then Hasura **will send all client headers in payload**.
.. _webhook_response:
Response
^^^^^^^^
Success
+++++++
To allow the GraphQL request to go through, your webhook must return a ``200`` status code.
You should send the ``X-Hasura-*`` "session variables" to your permission rules in Hasura.
.. code-block:: http
HTTP/1.1 200 OK
Content-Type: application/json
{
"X-Hasura-User-Id": "25",
"X-Hasura-Role": "user",
"X-Hasura-Is-Owner": "true",
"X-Hasura-Custom": "custom value"
}
.. note::
All values should be ``String``. They will be converted to the right type automatically.
There is no default timeout on the resulting connection. You can optionally add one; to do so, you need to return either:
* a ``Cache-Control`` variable, modeled on the `Cache-Control HTTP Header <https://developer.mozilla.org/en-US/docs/Web/HTTP/Headers/Cache-Control>`__, to specify a **relative** expiration time, in seconds.
.. code-block:: http
HTTP/1.1 200 OK
Content-Type: application/json
{
"X-Hasura-User-Id": "26",
"X-Hasura-Role": "user",
"X-Hasura-Is-Owner": "false",
"Cache-Control": "max-age=600"
}
* an ``Expires`` variable, modeled on the `Expires HTTP Header <https://developer.mozilla.org/en-US/docs/Web/HTTP/Headers/Expires>`__, to specify an **absolute** expiration time. The expected format is ``"%a, %d %b %Y %T GMT"``.
.. code-block:: http
HTTP/1.1 200 OK
Content-Type: application/json
{
"X-Hasura-User-Id": "27",
"X-Hasura-Role": "user",
"X-Hasura-Is-Owner": "false",
"Expires": "Mon, 30 Mar 2020 13:25:18 GMT"
}
Failure
+++++++
If you want to deny the GraphQL request, return a ``401 Unauthorized`` exception.
.. code-block:: http
HTTP/1.1 401 Unauthorized
.. note::
Anything other than a ``200`` or ``401`` response from webhook makes the server raise a ``500 Internal Server Error``
exception.
Auth webhook samples
--------------------
We have put together a `GitHub Node.js repo <https://github.com/hasura/graphql-engine/tree/master/community/boilerplates/auth-webhooks/nodejs-express>`__ that has some sample auth
webhooks configured.
You can deploy these samples using `glitch <https://glitch.com/>`__:
.. image:: https://raw.githubusercontent.com/hasura/sample-auth-webhook/master/assets/deploy-glitch.png
:width: 200px
:alt: deploy_auth_webhook_with_glitch
:class: no-shadow
:target: http://glitch.com/edit/#!/import/github/hasura/sample-auth-webhook
Once deployed, you can use any of the following endpoints as your auth webhook in the GraphQL engine:
- ``/simple/webhook`` (`View source <https://github.com/hasura/graphql-engine/blob/master/community/boilerplates/auth-webhooks/nodejs-express/server.js>`__)
- ``/firebase/webhook`` (`View source <https://github.com/hasura/graphql-engine/blob/master/community/boilerplates/auth-webhooks/nodejs-firebase/firebase/firebaseHandler.js>`__)
.. note::
If you are using ``Firebase``, you will have to set the associated environment variables.