A web socket server that bridges connections between a mobile device and a web page to enable secure, single sign on using private blockchain keys stored on the mobile device.
npm run start
There is an example configuration file located in src/config/index.example.js
. Copy this file to src/config/index.js
.
You must update AUTH_URI
to match the domain name / IP address of the server. You will also need to configure the Auth Client library to use this value as the serverUri
. See Verida Connect SDK / Getting Started / Configuration.
You must configure each application this server will support in the CONTEXTS
section. You can specify a different private key per context. All data is encrypted and signed using the private key. This enables the data to be decrypted by the end user and in the future, will enable Application Contexts to be registered to specific keys, providing enhanced man-in-the-middle attack protection.
You must specify valid DID_CLIENT_CONFIG
if you are registering a new Verida Account (DID) with the private key of a context. See Client SDK / Authentication / Private Key.
The configuration file allows you to provide the private key of a valid blockchain account that can sign messages relating to the login process.
There is a loginOrigin
property that, if specified, will check the origin
HTTP header from each socket request to ensure it's coming from the expected domain. This ensures third party websites can't easily request valid authentication tokens. This also ensures third party websites can be prevented from using the resources of any auth server that is running.
Malicious third parties could obtain a token by spoofing the origin
HTTP header and then presenting that to the user. However, this loginOrigin
property is passed inside the encrypted payload to the Verida Vault and is displayed to the user. This allows the user to visually verify the domain name they are currently on matches the domain name displayed on the Verida Vault login screen. In the future, the Verida Trust Framework will add an additional layer of security by matching on chain metadata against the public key and domain name used to sign the payload.
We recommend using PM2 package to manage running the server.
Starting the server:
$ cd <vault-auth-server-location>
$ pm2 start ~/.nvm/versions/node/v12.14.1/bin/yarn --name vault-auth-server -- serve
Restarting the server:
$ pm2 restart vault-auth-server -- serve
Stopping the server:
$ pm2 stop vault-auth-server -- serve
Monitoring the server:
$ pm2 monit
It's also recommended to install pm2-logrotate
which is useful to manage logs on the server.