A simple framework-agnostic library for authentication. seraph provides an API for implementing User authentication inside your app. It doesn't make any assumptions about your setup, so you do not have to have a User
class that inherits from ActiveRecord::Base
.
Enter in your terminal
gem install seraph
or put
gem 'seraph'
inside your Gemfile
You can set the pepper that will be used when encrypting the password.
Pepper strenghtens the security of your encrypted passwords, because even if you have an SQL Injection vulnerability in your code, the attacker won't be able to get the passwords, because the pepper will be added to each password before encryption. This is ofcourse true only if the attacker doesn't have access to your application code!
To get a random, high-entropy pepper, you can use /dev/urandom
:
xxd -l 32 -p /dev/urandom
Then use in the configuration block
Seraph.configure do |config|
config.pepper = 'GENERATED-PEPPER'
end
But remember to save the pepper, because if you lose it, none of your users will be able to login!
Seraph offers two basic functionalities:
- encrypting the password (registration)
- checking if provided password matches the encrypted password (authentication)
Seraph uses BCrypt to hash the password. If you configure Seraph and set the pepper, it will be used in the encryption process.
To encrypt a password simply run:
Seraph::PasswordEncryptor.call('foobar12')
# => "$2a$10$f1PWs.Qi3mtcL/fMaypEJu9HI0SchWLhsMd9kRhHEjP4v/3oqnB5G"
As a result you get the encrypted password, which you can be persisted in the database, alongside other user data (e-mail, login, etc.)
Comparison is done using a constant-time secure comparison method from the gem fast_secure_compare
To do it simply run:
Seraph::PasswordComparator.call(encrypted_password, plaintext_password)
# => true or false
If the pepper was set in the configuration block, it will be automatically used in the comparison.
Copyright (c) 2016 Szymon Szeliga
See LICENSE.txt for details.