ActionAuth is an authentication Rails engine crafted to integrate seamlessly with your Rails application. Optimized for Rails 7.1.0, it employs the most modern authentication techniques and streamlined token reset processes. Its simplicity and ease of use let you concentrate on developing your application, while its reliance on ActiveSupport::CurrentAttributes ensures a user experience akin to that offered by the well-regarded Devise gem.
- Introduction
- Installation
- Features
- Usage
- Have I Been Pwned
- Magic Links
- SMS Authentication
- Account Deletion
- WebAuthn
- Within Your Application
- Customizing
With the release of v1.0.0, there are some breaking changes that have been introduced. The
biggest change is that the ActionAuth::User
model now uses the table name of users
instead
of action_auth_users
. This was done to make it easier to integrate with your application
without having to worry about the table name. If you have an existing application that is
using ActionAuth, you will need to rename the table to users
with a migration like
rename_table :action_auth_users, :users
Coming from v0.3.0
to v1.0.0
, you will need to create a migration to rename the table and foreign keys.
class UpgradeActionAuth < ActiveRecord::Migration[7.1]
def change
rename_table :action_auth_users, :users
rename_table :action_auth_sessions, :sessions
rename_column :sessions, :action_auth_user_id, :user_id
rename_table :action_auth_webauthn_credentials, :webauthn_credentials
rename_column :webauthn_credentials, :action_auth_user_id, :user_id
end
end
You will then need to undo the migrations where the foreign keys were added in cases where foreign_key: true
was
changed to foreign_key: { to_table: 'action_auth_users' }
. You can do this for each table with a migration like:
add_foreign_key :user_settings, :users, column: :user_id unless foreign_key_exists?(:user_settings, :users)
add_foreign_key :profiles, :users, column: :user_id unless foreign_key_exists?(:profiles, :users)
add_foreign_key :nfcs, :users, column: :user_id unless foreign_key_exists?(:nfcs, :users)
Add this line to your application's Gemfile:
bundle add action_auth
Then run the rake task to copy over the migrations, config and routes.
bin/rails action_auth:install
Add this line to your application's Gemfile:
bundle add action_auth
bin/rails action_auth:install:migrations
Modify config/routes.rb to include the following (note that the path can be anything you want):
mount ActionAuth::Engine => 'action_auth'
In your view layout
<% if user_signed_in? %>
<li><%= link_to "Security", user_sessions_path %></li>
<li><%= button_to "Sign Out", user_session_path(current_session), method: :delete %></li>
<% else %>
<li><%= link_to "Sign In", new_user_session_path %></li>
<li><%= link_to "Sign Up", new_user_registration_path %></li>
<% end %>
If you're using something like importmaps and plain css, then you may need to add the lines below to your app/assets/config/manifest.js
file.
//= link action_auth/application.css
//= link action_auth/application.js
See WebAuthn for additional configuration steps if you want to enable WebAuthn.
In your config/initializers/action_auth.rb
file, you can add the following configuration
settings.
ActionAuth.configure do |config|
config.allow_user_deletion = true
config.default_from_email = "from@example.com"
config.magic_link_enabled = true
config.passkey_only = true # Allows sign in with only a passkey
config.pwned_enabled = true # defined?(Pwned)
config.sms_auth_enabled = false
config.verify_email_on_sign_in = true
config.webauthn_enabled = true # defined?(WebAuthn)
config.webauthn_origin = "http://localhost:3000" # or "https://example.com"
config.webauthn_rp_name = Rails.application.class.to_s.deconstantize
config.insert_cookie_domain = false
end
Rails.application.config.after_initialize do
ActionAuth.configure do |config|
config.sms_send_class = SmsSender
end
end
These are the planned features for ActionAuth. The ones that are checked off are currently implemented. The ones that are not checked off are planned for future releases.
✅ - Sign Up, Sign In, Sign Out
✅ - Password reset
✅ - Account Email Verification
✅ - Cookie-based sessions
✅ - Device Session Management
✅ - Multifactor Authentication (through Passkeys)
✅ - Passkeys/Hardware Security Keys
✅ - Passkeys sign in without email/password
✅ - Magic Links
⏳ - OAuth with Google, Facebook, Github, Twitter, etc.
✅ - SMS Authentication
✅ - Have I Been Pwned Integration
✅ - Account Deletion
⏳ - Account Lockout
⏳ - Account Suspension
⏳ - Account Impersonation
Within your application, you'll have access to these routes. They have been styled to be consistent with Devise.
Method Verb Params Description
user_sessions_path GET Device session management
user_session_path DELETE [:id] Log Out
new_user_session_path GET Log in
new_user_registration_path GET Sign Up
edit_password_path GET Change Password
password_path PATCH Update Password
Method Description
current_user Returns the currently logged in user
user_signed_in? Returns true if the user is logged in
current_session Returns the current session
Sometimes, there could be some routes that you would want to prevent access to unless the user is an admin. These routes could be for managing users, or other sensitive data. You can create a constraint to restrict access to these routes.
# app/constraints/admin_constraint.rb
class AdminConstraint
def self.matches?(request)
user = current_user(request)
user && user.admin?
end
def self.current_user(request)
session_token = request.cookie_jar.signed[:session_token]
session = ActionAuth::Session.find_by(id: session_token)
return nil unless session.present?
session.action_auth_user&.becomes(User)
end
end
# config/routes.rb
constraints AdminConstraint do
mount GoodJob::Engine => 'good_job'
end
Other times, you may want to have a different kind of view for a user that is logged in versus a user that is not logged in.
# app/constraints/authenticated_constraint.rb
class AuthenticatedConstraint
def self.matches?(request)
session_token = request.cookie_jar.signed[:session_token]
ActionAuth::Session.exists?(session_token)
end
end
# config/routes.rb
constraints AuthenticatedConstraint do
root to: 'dashboard#index'
end
root to: 'welcome#index'
Have I Been Pwned is a way that youre able to check if a password has been compromised in a data breach. This is a great way to ensure that your users are using secure passwords.
Add the pwned
gem to your Gemfile. That's all you'll have to do to enable this functionality.
bundle add pwned
Magic Links are a way to authenticate a user without requiring a password. This is done by sending an email to the user with a link that will log them in. This is a great way to allow users to log in without having to remember a password. This is especially useful for users who may not have a password manager or have a hard time remembering passwords.
SMS Authentication is disabled by default. The purpose of this is to allow users to authenticate with a phone number. This is useful and specific to applications that may require a phone number instead of an email address for authentication. The basic workflow for this is to register a phone number, and then send a code to the phone number. The user will then enter the code to authenticate.
No password or email is required for this. I do not recommend enabling this feature for most applications.
You must set up your own SMS Provider. This is not included in the gem. You will need to configure the
sms_send_class
to send the SMS code. This will expect a class method called send_code
that will take in the parameters
phone_number
and code
.
require 'twilio-ruby'
class SmsSender
def self.send_code(phone_number, code)
account_sid = ENV['TWILIO_ACCOUNT_SID']
auth_token = ENV['TWILIO_AUTH_TOKEN']
from_number = ENV['TWILIO_PHONE_NUMBER']
client = Twilio::REST::Client.new(account_sid, auth_token)
client.messages.create(
from: from_number,
to: phone_number,
body: "Your verification code is #{code}"
)
end
end
Since this file could live in the app/models
or elsewhere, we will need to set its configuration after the Rails
application has been loaded. This can be done in an initializer.
Rails.application.config.after_initialize do
ActionAuth.configure do |config|
config.sms_send_class = SmsSender
end
end
Account deletion is a feature that is enabled by default. When a user deletes their account, the account is marked as deleted and the user is logged out. The user will no longer be able to log in with their email and password. The user will need to create a new account if they wish to continue using the application.
Here's an example of how you may want to add a delete account button to your application. Obviously, you will want to style this to fit your application and have some kind of confirmation dialog.
<p>
Unhappy with the service?
<%= button_to "Delete Account", action_auth.users_path, method: :delete %>
</p>
ActionAuth's approach for WebAuthn is simplicity. It is used as a multifactor authentication step, so users will still need to register their email address and password. Once the user is registered, they can add a Passkey to their account. The Passkey could be an iCloud Keychain, a hardware security key like a Yubikey, or a mobile device. If enabled and configured, the user will be prompted to use their Passkey after they log in.
The migrations are already copied over to your application when you run
bin/rails action_auth:install:migrations
. There are only two steps that you have to take to enable
WebAuthn for your application.
The reason why you need to add the gem is because it's not added to the gemspec of ActionAuth. This is intentional as not all users will want to add this functionality. This will help minimize the number of gems that your application relies on unless if they are features that you want to use.
bundle add webauthn
Note: that the origin name does not have a trailing / or a port number.
ActionAuth.configure do |config|
config.webauthn_enabled = true
config.webauthn_origin = "http://localhost:3000" # or "https://example.com"
config.webauthn_rp_name = Rails.application.class.to_s.deconstantize
config.verify_email_on_sign_in = true
config.default_from_email = "from@example.com"
end
Here's a view of the experience with WebAuthn
It can be cumbersome to have to reference ActionAuth::User within the application as well as in the relationships between models. Luckily, we can use ActiveSupport::CurrentAttributes to make this process easier as well as inheritance of our models.
# app/models/user.rb
class User < ActionAuth::User
has_many :posts, dependent: :destroy
end
We can set the user to become a User record instead of an ActionAuth::User record. This will then allow Current.user.posts
to work.
# app/models/current.rb
class Current < ActiveSupport::CurrentAttributes
def user
return unless ActionAuth::Current.user
ActionAuth::Current.user&.becomes(User)
end
end
We are using user:belongs_to
instead of action_auth_user:belongs_to
.
bin/rails g scaffold posts user:belongs_to title
And the post model doesn't need anything special to ActionAuth.
# app/models/post.rb
class Post < ApplicationRecord
belongs_to :user
end
Now, you'll be able to do things like Current.user
and Current.user.posts
within your application. However, I recommend that you still use
the helpers around user_signed_in?
to verify that the ActionAuth::Current.user
is not nil (or nil if they are signed out). This will help ensure that any thread safety issues are avoided.
The gem is available as open source under the terms of the MIT License.
❤️ Heavily inspired by Drifting Ruby #300 and Authentication Zero and cedarcode.