Using Java and OAuth 2.0 how to maintain the session - java

How to maintain the session by using OAuth 2.0 ?
Like I logged into the Android application , now I want to make user logged in till the user dont logged out manually , so for each span of time and the request the token will change.
How should I handle the same in my Android Application ?
Can Anybody suggest ?
Thanks
Dhiraj

Store the expires_in field and refresh_token delivered along with the access_token, and the unix timestamp of when the token was delivered in somewhere like SharedPreferences.
The next time you need to use something that requires authentication, double check the current unix timestamp with the unix timestamp delivered when you obtained the original access token + the expires_in*1000.
If the current timestamp is greater than the sum of those two, your access_token is expired, and you need to send a request to the authentication service for a new token, using the renewal_token, client_id, and client_secret to the OAuth endpoint.

You can also use this url: https://www.googleapis.com/oauth2/v1/tokeninfo?access_token=your_access_token and get json response like below for valid token:
{
"audience":"8819981768.apps.googleusercontent.com",
"user_id":"123456789",
"scope":"profile email",
"expires_in":436
}
and for invalid token:
{"error":"invalid_token"}
For more information, check this link: Using OAuth 2.0 for Client-side Applications, there is a heading Validating the Token that explains this procedure.

OAuth has no concept of a session. Each REST request needs a valid access token in the Authorization header. Any "session" you want to implement is your responsibility. Any access token you acquire will TYPICALLY (not necessarily) last for 1 hour, but that is NOT the same as a session.

Related

what should I do when the client request to refresh the valid access token

I am write a refresh access token rest api, now I facing a problem that I did not know what is the right way to handle the refresh invalid access token request. For example, when the access token not expired, the client request for a new access token. should I give a new access token? or give the old token? or give the token by the expire time, if the expire than greater than 1 hour give the legacy access token, less than 1 hour, give the new access token.
Yes, issue a new access token. This improves security and avoids token misuse. Access token rotation (even when they are not expired) is preferred whenever possible.
Further, this fully agree to OAuth 2.0 rfc.
Refreshing an Access Token
If valid and authorized, the authorization server issues an access
token as described in Section 5.1. If the request failed
verification or is invalid, the authorization server returns an error
response as described in Section 5.2.

How to expire already generated existing JWT token using Java? [duplicate]

I am using Spring Security OAuth2 and JWT tokens. My question is: How can I revoke a JWT token?
As mentioned here
http://projects.spring.io/spring-security-oauth/docs/oauth2.html, revocation is done by refresh token. But it does not seem to work.
In general the easiest answer would be to say that you cannot revoke a JWT token, but that's simply not true. The honest answer is that the cost of supporting JWT revocation is sufficiently big for not being worth most of the times or plainly reconsider an alternative to JWT.
Having said that, in some scenarios you might need both JWT and immediate token revocation so lets go through what it would take, but first we'll cover some concepts.
JWT (Learn JSON Web Tokens) just specifies a token format, this revocation problem would also apply to any format used in what's usually known as a self-contained or by-value token. I like the latter terminology, because it makes a good contrast with by-reference tokens.
by-value token - associated information, including token lifetime, is contained in the token itself and the information can be verified as originating from a trusted source (digital signatures to the rescue)
by-reference token - associated information is kept on server-side storage that is then obtained using the token value as the key; being server-side storage the associated information is implicitly trusted
Before the JWT Big Bang we already dealt with tokens in our authentication systems; it was common for an application to create a session identifier upon user login that would then be used so that the user did not had to repeat the login process each time. These session identifiers were used as key indexes for server-side storage and if this sounds similar to something you recently read, you're right, this indeed classifies as a by-reference token.
Using the same analogy, understanding revocation for by-reference tokens is trivial; we just delete the server-side storage mapped to that key and the next time the key is provided it will be invalid.
For by-value tokens we just need to implement the opposite. When you request the revocation of the token you store something that allows you to uniquely identify that token so that next time you receive it you can additionally check if it was revoked. If you're already thinking that something like this will not scale, have in mind that you only need to store the data until the time the token would expire and in most cases you could probably just store an hash of the token so it would always be something of a known size.
As a last note and to center this on OAuth 2.0, the revocation of by-value access tokens is currently not standardized. Nonetheless, the OAuth 2.0 Token revocation specifically states that it can still be achieved as long as both the authorization server and resource server agree to a custom way of handling this:
In the former case (self-contained tokens), some (currently non-standardized) backend interaction between the authorization server and the resource server may be used when immediate access token revocation is desired.
If you control both the authorization server and resource server this is very easy to achieve. On the other hand if you delegate the authorization server role to a cloud provider like Auth0 or a third-party component like Spring OAuth 2.0 you most likely need to approach things differently as you'll probably only get what's already standardized.
An interesting reference
This article explain a another way to do that: Blacklist JWT
It contains some interesting pratices and pattern followed by RFC7523
The JWT cann't be revoked.
But here is the a alternative solution called as JWT old for new exchange schema.
Because we can’t invalidate the issued token before expire time, we always use short-time token, such as 30 minute.
When the token expired, we use the old token exchange a new token. The critical point is one old token can exchange one new token only.
In center auth server, we maintain a table like this:
table auth_tokens(
user_id,
jwt_hash,
expire
)
user_id contained in JWT string.
jwt_hash is a hash value of whole JWT string,Such as SHA256.
expire field is optional.
The following is work flow:
User request the login API with username and password, the auth server issue one token, and register the token ( add one row in the table. )
When the token expired, user request the exchange API with the old token. Firstly the auth server validate the old token as normal except expire checking, then create the token hash value, then lookup above table by user id:
If found record and user_id and jwt_hash is match, then issue new token and update the table.
If found record, but user_id and jwt_hash is not match , it means someone has use the token exchanged new token before. The token be hacked, delete records by user_id and response with alert information.
if not found record, user need login again or only input password.
when use changed the password or login out, delete record by user id.
To use token continuously ,both legal user and hacker need exchange new token continuously, but only one can succeed, when one fails, both need to login again at next exchange time.
So if hacker got the token, it can be used for a short time, but can't exchange for a new one if a legal user exchanged new one next time, because the token validity period is short. It is more secure this way.
If there is no hacker, normal user also need exchange new token periodically ,such as every 30 minutes, this is just like login automatically. The extra load is not high and we can adjust expire time for our application.
source: http://www.jianshu.com/p/b11accc40ba7
This doesn't exactly answer you question in regards to the Spring framework, but here's an article that talks about why if you need the ability to revoke JWT's, you might not want to go with JWT's in the first place, and instead use regular, opaque Bearer tokens.
https://www.dinochiesa.net/?p=1388
One way to revoke a JWT is by leveraging a distributed event system that notifies services when refresh tokens have been revoked. The identity provider broadcasts an event when a refresh token is revoked and other backends/services listen for the event. When an event is received the backends/services update a local cache that maintains a set of users whose refresh tokens have been revoked.
This cache is then checked whenever a JWT is verified to determine if the JWT should be revoked or not. This is all based on the duration of JWTs and expiration instant of individual JWTs.
This article, Revoking JWTs, illustrates this concept and has a sample app on Github.
For Googlers:
If you implement pure stateless authentication there is no way to revoke the token as the token itself is the sole source of truth
If you save a list of revoked token IDs on the server and check every request against the list, then it is essentially a variant of stateful authentication
OAuth2 providers like Cognito provides a way to "sign out" a user, however, it only really revokes refresh token, which is usually long-lived and could be used multiple times to generate new access tokens thus has to be revoked; the existing access tokens are still valid until they expire
What about storing the JWT token and referencing it to the user in the database? By extending the Guards/Security Systems in your backend application with an additional DB join after performing the JWT comparison, you would be able to practically 'revoke' it by removing or soft-deleting it from the DB.
In general, the answer about tokens by reference vs. tokens by value has nailed it. For those that stumble upon this space in future.
How to implement revocation on RS side:
TL;DR:
Take a cache or db that is visible to all your backend service instances that are verifying tokens. When a new token arrives for revocation, if it's a valid one, (i.e. verifies against your jwt verification algo), take the exp and jti claims, and save jti to cache until exp is reached. Then expire jti in cache once unixNow becomes > exp.
Then on authorization on other endpoints, you check everytime if a given jti is matching something in this cache, and if yes, you error with 403 saying token revoked. Once it expires, regular Token Expired error kicks in from your verification algo.
P.S. By saving only jti in cache, you make this data useless to anyone since it's just a unique token identifier.
The best solution for JWT revocation, is short exp window, refresh and keeping issued JWT tokens in a shared nearline cache. With Redis for example, this is particularly easy as you can set the cache key as the token itself (or a hash of the token), and specify expiry so that the tokens get automatically evicted.
I found one way of resolving the issue, How to expire already generated existing JWT token using Java?
In this case, we need to use any DB or in-memory where,
Step 1: As soon as the token is generated for the first time for a user, store it in a db with the token and it's "issuedAt()" time.
I stored it in DB in this JSON format,
Ex: {"username" : "username",
"token" : "token",
"issuedAt" : "issuedAt" }
Step 2: Once you get a web service request for the same user with a token to validate, fetch "issuedAt()" timestamp from the token and compare it with stored(DB/in-memory) issued timestamp.
Step 3: If stored issued timestamp is new (using after()/before() method) then return that the token is invalid (in this case we are not actually expiring the token but we are stop giving access on that token).
This is how I resolved the issue.

restapi authentication without OAuth library

I have working REST API and would like to authenticate users by providing tokens with expiry dates but without using OAuth library.
Here is what I'm thinking.
Can I create two methods, first will be having three parameters
Username, Password and Master token
And once its authenticate, it will produce one temporary token with some expiry date. This I will store into in database entry and will return to the client as well.
So when I will make second request with URL having token generated by first method, it will check into second method having parameter "token" where it will match with database entry, and if it agrees data will be exposed.
Can I do it in that way ? Does it makes sense for having authentication in this way ? If no please share your comments.

Spring Security Oauth2. Store refresh_token on server side

There is spring-security-oauth2 service with grant_type=password, refresh token.
I want to store refresh_token in java code and not send it to client via http(s). (why? - here)
So, 2 cases have to be handled:
1. do not send refresh_token in response
2. automatically insert refresh_token in request when in needed
1st can be done as in here
Question: how 2nd case can be done?
Usually, to get access token via refresh_token following request have to be sent:
POST: .../oaut/token?refresh_token=***&grant_type=refresh_token
I want to send
POST: .../oaut/token?access_token=***&grant_type=refresh_token
and then fetch refresh_token corresponding to access_token from some storage and add it as request parameter
Simple custom Spring Filter can help here. In particular OncePerRequestFilter.class [example]

Token based authentication for REST service: where to store generated token on server-side?

I'm trying to implement token authentication for a REST service based on Spring MVC.
I'm followiong this SO answer: https://stackoverflow.com/a/10864088/1061499 as guideline, but now I need to understand some server-side detail.
When an user is successfully authenticated (first time via username + password) I return a token that stores some information.
When the same user sent his token in a request header, I need to identify the associated user and define if is "session" is still alive.
So the way are basically two:
encrypt the token with an algorithm (which one?) I can also use to decrypt on server side and extract user information
store token-user association info in application DB also storing session info.
Most suggest the first solution, without storing any info about authentication in DB, but this solution seems to me less secure.
Any suggestion?

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