Hi there! I’ve obviously long neglected this library. If anyone would like to take it over I’d be happy to transfer it.
This is the raddest client-side solution for user authentication using React and Redux with a Rails backend that uses Devise Token Auth.
Given a Rails backend using Devise Token Auth, this module provides several asynchronous Redux Thunk actions to:
- Register a user (
registerUser
). - Sign in a user (
signInUser
). - Sign out a user (
signOutUser
). - Verify the current user’s auth token (
verifyToken
).
It also provides the corresponding Redux reducer to handle these actions.
Additionally, a helper function is provided to verify the current user's auth token upon initialization of your application (verifyCredentials
).
Finally, redux-token-auth
provides a component wrapper that will gate your specified page components if the user is not signed in This is to prevent unauthorized users from accessing particular pages in your app. React Router v4.0.0+ is required for this to work properly.
npm install --save redux-token-auth
Have you ever installed an NPM module any other way?
Your project will need the popular Redux Thunk middleware (written by none other than the man, the myth, the legend Dan Abramov himself) in order to function properly.
There are four main things you need to do in order to get redux-token-auth
rigged up:
- Integrate
reduxTokenAuthReducer
into your Redux store. - Generate the Redux Thunk actions and credential verification helper function.
- Call
verifyCredentials
in yourindex.js
file. - Generate the component wrapper to gate your protected pages by invoking
generateRequireSignInWrapper
.
redux-token-auth
has two exports: a Redux reducer, and a function that generates a handful of asynchronous Redux Thunk actions, and a helper function that verifies the current user's credentials as stored in the browser's localStorage
. React Native equivalents using AsyncStorage
are roadmapped but not yet supported.
redux-token-auth
ships with a reducer to integrate into your Redux store. Wherever you define your root reducer, simply import and include reduxTokenAuthReducer
in your call to combineReducers
:
import { combineReducers } from 'redux'
import { reduxTokenAuthReducer } from 'redux-token-auth'
const rootReducer = combineReducers({
reduxTokenAuth: reduxTokenAuthReducer,
})
export default rootReducer
We'll note here again that you need Redux Thunk integrated into your store in order for redux-token-auth
to work properly.
As with any Redux application, when configuring your store you’ll need to specify the initial state. Given the structure of redux-token-auth
’s reducer, the initial state should be structured something like this:
// redux/initial-state.js
const initialState = {
reduxTokenAuth: {
currentUser: {
isLoading: false,
isSignedIn: false,
attributes: {
firstName: null, // <-- Just an example. Attributes are whatever you specify in your cofig (below).
},
},
},
// All your other state
}
export default initialState
redux-token-auth
provides a function called generateAuthActions
that takes a config object and returns the asynchronous Redux Thunks actions and the helper function to verify the user’s credentials upon initialization of your application. The following paragraphs explain the config object.
In order for redux-token-auth
to communicate with your backend, you'll need to provide it with the base URL for your authentication endpoint. It's often a good idea to place this URL somewhere in a config file that sets it depending on the environment (development, test, or production). Here we'll assume you have a file called constants.js
in the root directory of your project that does just that. The URL should be the full URL not end with /
. For example https://radapp.io/auth
or http://localhost:300/auth
.
Now we'll be adding that URL to a config object that has three keys:
authUrl
userAttributes
userRegistrationAttributes
The userAttributes
and userRegistrationAttributes
values are themselves objects that contain the shape of your User
model. redux-token-auth
will parse these objects in order to send the appropriate request bodies as well as to interpret response data to populate your client-side Redux state.
Regarding the difference between userAttributes
and userRegistrationAttributes
, while userAttributes
contains all the attributes of your User
model, userRegistrationAttributes
contains only those attributes necessary for registration.
For each of these objects, the keys will be the names of the attributes as known to your frontend and the values will be strings that are the names of the attributes as known to your backend. An example would be:
userAttributes: {
firstName: 'first_name',
lastName: 'last_name',
imageUrl: 'image',
}
This is to account for the different case conventions between JavaScript and Ruby, and allows redux-token-auth
to facilitate communication between the two. It can also bridge the gap between however you want to name your user attributes on the backend versus how you want to name them on the frontend. Maybe you want to call it imageUrl
on the frontend and image
on the backend. It’s your call. Go nuts.
It is important to note that email
and password
should not be included in these objects as they are already accounted for and adding them may result in unexpected behavior.
Create a file called something like redux-token-auth-config.js
in the root directory of your project. Honestly, it doesn't need to be named that but that's what we'll call it here. Open that file and import generateAuthActions
from the redux-token-auth
. As noted above, this is a function that takes your config object as its only input. It returns an object containing several named Redux Thunk actions and the helper function to verify user credentials upon initialization of your app. Here's an example:
// redux-token-auth-config.js
import { generateAuthActions } from 'redux-token-auth'
import { authUrl } from './constants'
const config = {
authUrl,
userAttributes: {
firstName: 'first_name',
imageUrl: 'image',
},
userRegistrationAttributes: {
firstName: 'first_name',
},
}
const {
registerUser,
signInUser,
signOutUser,
verifyCredentials,
} = generateAuthActions(config)
export {
registerUser,
signInUser,
signOutUser,
verifyCredentials,
}
Simply export these functions from your config file. Now they're available throughout your app by importing them from your config file.
registerUser
, signInUser
, and signOutUser
are Redux Thunk actions and thus, when wired through mapDispatchToProps
return Promises.
Upon initialization of your app, your user could potentially be logged in from their previous session and your application state should reflect that. redux-token-auth
stores an authenticated user’s auth token in localStorage
. In order to sync the stored token with both your backend and your Redux store, you’ll use the verifyCredentials
function that was returned from generateAuthActions
. In short, it checks for a token, sends a verification request to the backend, and upon receiving a successful response, updates your Redux store. Here's an example of how you wire it up in your index.js
file, with a single line:
// index.js
import * as React from 'react';
import * as ReactDOM from 'react-dom';
import { Provider } from 'react-redux'
import App from './components/App'
import configureStore from './redux/configure-store'
import { verifyCredentials } from './redux-token-auth-config' // <-- note this is YOUR file, not the redux-token-auth NPM module
const store = configureStore()
verifyCredentials(store) // <-<-<-<-<- here's the important part <-<-<-<-<-
ReactDOM.render(
<Provider store={store}>
<App />
</Provider>,
document.getElementById('root'),
)
And that's really all there is to it!
Naturally, some of the pages of your application will only pertain to authorized users and shouldn’t be accessible to users who are not signed in. redux-token-auth
provides a way to wrap these protected page components so that unauthorized users will be redirected away if they try to access them.
You’re given the flexibility to specify where those users are redirected to with a simple config object. In the file where you specify your client-side routing, import generateRequireSignInWrapper
from redux-token-auth
. This is a function that takes a single config object in order to specify the route you’d like unauthorized users redirected to, using the redirectPathIfNotSignedIn
attribute. It’s important to note, the path you pass in should begin with /
. For example:
import * as React from 'react'
import {
Router,
Route,
} from 'react-router-dom'
import { createBrowserHistory } from 'history'
import HomePage from './components/HomePage'
import SomeProtectedPageComponent from './components/SomeProtectedPageComponent'
import SignInPage from './components/SignInPage'
import { generateRequireSignInWrapper } from 'redux-token-auth'
const requireSignIn = generateRequireSignInWrapper({
redirectPathIfNotSignedIn: '/signin',
})
const history = createBrowserHistory({})
const Routes = () => (
<Router history={history}>
<div>
<Route exact={true} path="/" component={HomePage} />
<Route path="/protected" component={requireSignIn(SomeProtectedPageComponent)} />
<Route path="/signin" component={SignInPage} />
</div>
</Router>
)
Simply wrap the page components you want protected with the generated wrapper and you’re good to go!
Now that everything's set up, let’s take a look at how you’ll use the generated thunk actions in your application.
// components/RegisterScreen.jsx
import React, { Component } from 'react'
import { connect } from 'react-redux'
import { registerUser } from '../redux-token-auth-config' // <-- note this is YOUR file, not the redux-token-auth NPM module
class RegisterScreen extends Component {
constructor (props) { ... }
...
submitForm (e) {
e.preventDefault()
const { registerUser } = this.props
const {
email,
firstName,
password,
} = this.state
registerUser({ email, firstName, password }) // <-<-<-<-<- here's the important part <-<-<-<-<-
.then(...)
.catch(...)
}
render () {
const { submitForm } = this
<div>
<form onSubmit={submitForm}>...</form>
</div>
}
}
export default connect(
null,
{ registerUser },
)(RegisterScreen)
// components/SignInScreen.jsx
import React, { Component } from 'react'
import { connect } from 'react-redux'
import { signInUser } from '../redux-token-auth-config' // <-- note this is YOUR file, not the redux-token-auth NPM module
class SignInScreen extends Component {
constructor (props) { ... }
...
submitForm (e) {
e.preventDefault()
const { signInUser } = this.props
const {
email,
password,
} = this.state
signInUser({ email, password }) // <-<-<-<-<- here's the important part <-<-<-<-<-
.then(...)
.catch(...)
}
render () {
const { submitForm } = this
<div>
<form onSubmit={submitForm}>...</form>
</div>
}
}
export default connect(
null,
{ signInUser },
)(SignInScreen)
// components/SiteHeader.jsx
import React, { Component } from 'react'
import { connect } from 'react-redux'
import { signOutUser } from '../redux-token-auth-config' // <-- note this is YOUR file, not the redux-token-auth NPM module
class SiteHeader extends Component {
constructor (props) {...}
signOut (e) {
e.preventDefault()
const { signOutUser } = this.props
signOutUser() // <-<-<-<-<- here's the important part <-<-<-<-<-
.then(...)
.catch(...)
}
render () {
const { signOut } = this
<div>
<a href="#" onClick={signOut}>Sign Out</a>
</div>
}
}
export default connect(
null,
{ signOutUser },
)(SiteHeader)
- React Native support
- Password reset support
- Email verification support
- Delete account support
- Kyle Corbelli