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JavaScript implementation of JSON Web Signatures, JSON Web Tokens, and JSON Web Certificates

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JavaScript implementation of JSON Web Signatures and JSON Web Tokens, especially as needed by BrowserID.

  • libs contains third-party libraries that need to be included. See libs/dependencies.txt and libs/package.txt

  • This is written as CommonJS modules for node and such. Browserify is used to bundle it all up.

NOTE: this is written as future documentation of v0.2 APIs, which will not be backwards compatible with v0.1.

Overview

JSON Web Tokens (JWTs) look like:

eyJ0eXAiOiJKV1QiLA0KICJhbGciOiJIUzI1NiJ9
.
eyJpc3MiOiJqb2UiLA0KICJleHAiOjEzMDA4MTkzODAsDQogImh0dHA6Ly9leGFt
cGxlLmNvbS9pc19yb290Ijp0cnVlfQ
.
dBjftJeZ4CVP-mB92K27uhbUJU1p1r_wW1gFWFOEjXk

(line breaks are for readability)

JWTs are made up of three components, each base64url-encoded, joined by a period character. A JWT can be either a JWS (JSON Web Signature) or a JWE (JSON Web Encryption). In this library, we only consider JWS. Because JWT is effectively the abstract superclass of both JWS and JWE, we don't expose JWT APIs directly (as of v0.2.0). We simply expose a JWS API.

We use JWK (JSON Web Keys) to specify keys: http://tools.ietf.org/html/draft-ietf-jose-json-web-key-00

We use JWA (JSON Web Algorithms) to specify algorithms: http://tools.ietf.org/html/draft-ietf-jose-json-web-algorithms-00 (we add algorithm "DS" to indicate DSA, with DS160 the standard DSA 1024/160.)

Usage

  1. ensure that libgmp is installed on your system (e.g. apt-get install libgmp-dev), it's required by bigint, upon which jwcrypto depends
  2. npm install jwcrypto
  3. in javascript: require('jwcrypto')

Basic API

var jwcrypto = require("jwcrypto");

// random number generation is taken care of automatically
// with auto-seeding that is optimized for server or browser
// setup

// more entropy can be added as follows
// this can be useful to incorporate server-provided entropy
// on clients that don't have any good entropy of their own
// entropy should be either a 32 bit int, an array of ints, or a string
jwcrypto.addEntropy(entropy);

// generate a key
// we use DSA, which is "DS" in JSON Web Algorithm parlance
// we use keysize 160, which has a specific interpretation based
// on the algorithm, in this case DSA 1024/160, standard DSA.
jwcrypto.generateKeypair({
    algorithm: 'DS',
    keysize: 160
}, function(err, keypair) {
    // error in err?

    // serialize the public key
    console.log(keypair.publicKey.toString());

    // just the JSON object to embed in another structure
    console.log(JSON.stringify({stuff: keypair.publicKey.toJSONObject()}));

    // create and sign a JWS
    var payload = {principal: {email: 'some@dude.domain'},
                   pubkey: jwcrypto.loadPublicKey(publicKeyToCertify)};

    jwcrypto.sign(payload, keypair.secretKey, function(err, jws) {
       // error in err?

       // serialize it
       console.log(jws.toString());
    });

    // also, if loading a secret key from somewhere
    // note how JWK determines automatically if it's a secret key
    // or public key. XXX should this be more explicit?
    var otherSecretKey = jwcrypto.loadSecretKey(storedSecretKey);

    // verify it
    jwcrypto.verify(signedObject, publicKey, function(err, payload) {
      // if verification fails, then err tells you why
      // if verification succeeds, err is null, and payload is
      // the signed JS object.
    });
});

Assertions

Sometimes the JSON object to sign should be a standard assertion with pre-defined fields.

var assertion = require("jwcrypto").assertion;

// payload of the assertion
var payload = {principal: {email: 'some@dude.domain'}};

// add special fields which will be encoded properly
// payload cannot contain reserved fields
assertion.sign(payload, {issuer: "foo.com", expiresAt: new Date(),
                         issuedAt: new Date(), audience: "https://example.com"},
                  keypair.secretKey,
                  function(err, signedAssertion) {
   // a normal signedObject, much like above
   // can be verified with jwcrypto.verify

   // or verified specifically for jwt, with expiration verification
   var now = new Date();
   assertion.verify(signedObject, keypair.publicKey, now, function(err, payload, assertionParams) {
      // payload is the original payload
      // assertionParams contains issuedAt, expiresAt as dates
      // and issuer and audience as strings.
   });
});

Certs

Sometimes the JSON objects to sign are certificates

var cert = require("jwcrypto").cert;

var keyToCertify = keypairToCertify.publicKey;
var principal = {email: "someone@example.com"};
var assertionParams = {issuer: "foo.com", issuedAt: new Date(),
                       expiresAt: new Date()};
var additionalPayload = {};

// payload cannot contain reserved fields
cert.sign(keyToCertify, principal,
            assertionParams, additionalPayload,
            keypair.secretKey,
            function(err, signedObject) {
   // normal signedObject
   // can be verified with jwcrypto.verify

   // or verified specifically for certification
   // include a date that is considered the "now"
   cert.verify(signedObject, keypair.publicKey, now, function(err, payload, assertionParams, certParams) {
      // the extra payload
      // the assertionParams specifics
      // the certParams include publicKey being certified, and principal bound to it.
   });
});

// bundle a cert chain and an assertion
var bundle = cert.bundle([certs], assertion);

function getPK(issuer, next) {
    // function to get a public key for an issuer
}

var now = new Date();

// verify just the chain of certs
cert.verifyChain([certs], now, getPK, function(err, certParamsArray) {
   // err is an error or null
   // if no error:
   // certParamsArray is the array of individual cert params from each verification
   // including specifically the publicKey and principal parameters
});

// verify a chain of certs and assertion
cert.verifyBundle(bundle, now, getPK, function(err, certParamsArray, payload, assertionParams) {
   // err is an error or null
   // if no error:
   // certParamsArray is the array of individual cert params from each verification
   // payload is the assertion payload, and assertionParams is the assertion params.
});

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