The simplest way to add authentication to your React app. Handles everything for you. Users, login forms, redirects, sharing state between components. Everything
useAuth
is designed to be quick to setup. You'll need an Auth0 account with an app domain and client id.
$ yarn add react-use-auth
Downloads from npm, adds to your package.json, etc. You can use npm
as well.
useAuth uses an AuthProvider
component to configure the Auth0 client and share state between components. It's using React context with a reducer behind the scenes, but that's an implementation detail.
I recommend adding this around your root component. In Gatsby that's done in gatsby-browser.js
and gatsby-ssr.js
. Yes useAuth
is built so it doesn't break server-side rendering. ✌️
But of course server-side "you" will always be logged out.
// gatsby-browser.js
import React from "react";
import { navigate } from "gatsby";
import { AuthProvider } from "react-use-auth";
export const wrapRootElement = ({ element }) => (
<AuthProvider
navigate={navigate}
auth0_domain="useauth.auth0.com"
auth0_client_id="GjWNFNOHq1ino7lQNJBwEywa1aYtbIzh"
>
{element}
</AuthProvider>
);
<AuthProvider>
creates a context, sets up a state reducer, initializes an Auth0 client and so on. Everything you need for authentication to work in your whole app :)
The API takes a couple config options:
navigate
– your navigation function, used for redirects. I've tested with Gatsby, but anything should workauth0_domain
– from your Auth0 appauth0_client_id
– from your Auth0 appauth0_params
– an object that lets you overwrite any of the default Auth0 client parameters
PS: even though Auth doesn't do anything server-side, useAuth will throw errors during build, if its context doesn't exist
By default useAuth
's Auth0 client uses these params:
const params = {
domain: auth0_domain,
clientID: auth0_client_id,
redirectUri: `${callback_domain}/auth0_callback`,
audience: `https://${auth0_domain}/api/v2/`,
responseType: "token id_token",
scope: "openid profile email"
};
domain
and clientID
come from your props.
redirectUri
is set to use the auth0_callback
page on the current domain. Auth0 redirects here after users login so you can set cookies and stuff. useAuth
will handle this for you ✌️
audience
is set to use api/v2. I know this is necessary but honestly have been copypasting it through several of my projects.
responseType
same here. I copy paste this from old projects so I figured it's a good default.
scope
you need openid
for social logins and to be able to fetch user profiles after authentication. Profile and Email too. You can add more via the auth0_params
override.
Auth0 and most other authentication providers use OAuth. That requires redirecting your user to their login form. After login, the provider redirects the user back to your app.
Any way of creating React pages should work, here's what I use for Gatsby.
// src/pages/auth0_callback
import React, { useEffect } from "react";
import { useAuth } from "react-use-auth";
import Layout from "../components/layout";
const Auth0CallbackPage = () => {
const { handleAuthentication } = useAuth();
useEffect(() => {
handleAuthentication();
}, []);
return (
<Layout>
<h1>
This is the auth callback page, you should be redirected
immediately.
</h1>
</Layout>
);
};
export default Auth0CallbackPage;
The goal is to load a page, briefly show some text, and run the handleAuthentication
method from useAuth
on page load.
That method will create a cookie in local storage with your user's information and redirect back to the homepage by default.
To redirect to a route other than the homepage after the user is logged in, supply the handleAuthentication
function an Object Literal with the postLoginRoute
key and an associated route value. For example, to route to /account
, call handleAuthentication
as follows:
handleAuthentication({ postLoginRoute: "/account" });
PS: Make sure you add <domain>/auth0_callback
as a valid callback URL in your Auth0 config
You're ready to use useAuth
for authentication in your React app.
Here's a login button for example:
// src/pages/index.js
const Login = () => {
const { isAuthenticated, login, logout } = useAuth();
if (isAuthenticated()) {
return <Button onClick={logout}>Logout</Button>;
} else {
return <Button onClick={login}>Login</Button>;
}
};
isAuthenticated
is a method that checks if the user's cookie is still valid. login
and logout
trigger their respective actions.
You can even say hello to your users
// src/pages/index.js
const IndexPage = () => {
const { isAuthenticated, user } = useAuth()
return (
<Layout>
<SEO title="Home" />
<h1>Hi {isAuthenticated() ? user.name : "people"}</h1>
Check isAuthenticated
then use the user object. Simple as that.
isAuthenticating
is a flag for checking whether or not useAuth
is in the middle of validating login details. This allows you to then make requests to your user database and work out where to send users from the auth0_callback
page, e.g. profile page or sign up.
const Auth0CallbackPage = () => {
const { user, isAuthenticating, handleAuthentication } = useAuth();
const { loading, data, error } = useQuery(QUERY, {
variables: { id: user.sub }
});
if (error) {
return <h1>There was an error</h1>;
}
if (isAuthenticating || loading) {
return (
<h1>
This is the auth callback page, you should be redirected
immediately.
</h1>
);
}
const { user: dbUser } = data || {};
const redirectUrl = dbUser ? "/app/profile" : "/app/signup";
handleAuthentication({ postLoginRoute: redirectUrl });
};
There's a couple of required configurations you need to make in Auth0 to make useAuth run smoothly.
Callback URLs
You need to allow both local development and your production app in callback URLs. It's a whitelist that tells Auth0 that your login request is coming from the right source.
Allowed Web Origins
useAuth avoids using local storage for secure tokens. For Auth0 to know that our checkSession
request is coming from the right source, you need to add your URLs to allowed web origins.
Allowed logout urls
After logging out, Auth0 redirects back to your app. Again, it needs to know you aren't up to anything shady.
NB Make sure you're not blocking cookies! Extensions like privacy badger will prevent Auth0 from setting cookies so refreshing between logins wont work
After you've set everything up (and you're using social sign on methods) you'll notice that refreshing doesn't keep your user logged in... 👎
If you're using an IdP such as Google or Github to provide identity, you will need to register an app on Auth0 to enable this behaviour. The steps to create this behaviour are a bit nested in docs but can be achieved relatively simply by following the guide Set Up Social Connections
on the Auth0 site. The guide follows steps for Google sign on, your mileage with other providers may vary...
For a more detailed understanding of why this is happening you can have a read through this section of Auth0s guide to setting up a secure React application. (Pro tip: search for Keeping Users Signed In after a Refresh
to jump straight to the section in question).
Since version 0.4.0 useAuth exposes the entire Auth0 authResult object so you can access your user's id or access token. This is useful when you have to log the user into your own backend as well as the frontend.
For reference:
Like this:
function SomeComponent() {
const { authResult } = useAuth();
console.log(authResult.idToken);
console.log(authResult.accessToken);
// etc, I recommend printing the authResult object to see everything that's available
}
You can try it out here 👉 https://gatsby-useauth-example.now.sh/
👤 Swizec Teller [email protected]
- Github: @swizec
- Twitter: @swizec
- Blog: swizec.com/blog
Contributions, issues and feature requests are welcome!
Feel free to check issues page.
I am looking to support other authentication providers. Please help :)
Give a ⭐️ if this project helped you!
Copyright © 2019 Swizec Teller [email protected].
This project is MIT licensed.
This README was generated with ❤️ by readme-md-generator
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This project follows the all-contributors specification. Contributions of any kind welcome!