Passport-Local Mongoose is a Mongoose plugin that simplifies building username and password login with Passport.
Michael Herman gives a comprehensible walk through for setting up mongoose, passport, passport-local and passport-local-mongoose for user authentication in his blog post User Authentication With Passport.js
> npm install passport-local-mongoose
Passport-Local Mongoose does not require passport
or mongoose
dependencies directly but expects you
to have these dependencies installed.
In case you need to install the whole set of dependencies
> npm install passport mongoose passport-local-mongoose
First you need to plugin Passport-Local Mongoose into your User schema
const mongoose = require('mongoose');
const Schema = mongoose.Schema;
const passportLocalMongoose = require('passport-local-mongoose');
const User = new Schema({});
User.plugin(passportLocalMongoose);
module.exports = mongoose.model('User', User);
You're free to define your User how you like. Passport-Local Mongoose will add a username, hash and salt field to store the username, the hashed password and the salt value.
Additionally, Passport-Local Mongoose adds some methods to your Schema. See the API Documentation section for more details.
You should configure Passport/Passport-Local as described in the Passport Guide.
Passport-Local Mongoose supports this setup by implementing a LocalStrategy
and serializeUser/deserializeUser functions.
To setup Passport-Local Mongoose use this code
// requires the model with Passport-Local Mongoose plugged in
const User = require('./models/user');
// use static authenticate method of model in LocalStrategy
passport.use(new LocalStrategy(User.authenticate()));
// use static serialize and deserialize of model for passport session support
passport.serializeUser(User.serializeUser());
passport.deserializeUser(User.deserializeUser());
Make sure that you have mongoose connected to mongodb and you're done.
Starting from version 0.2.1, passport-local-mongoose adds a helper method createStrategy
as static method to your schema.
The createStrategy
is responsible to setup passport-local LocalStrategy
with the correct options.
const User = require('./models/user');
// CHANGE: USE "createStrategy" INSTEAD OF "authenticate"
passport.use(User.createStrategy());
passport.serializeUser(User.serializeUser());
passport.deserializeUser(User.deserializeUser());
The reason for this functionality is that when using the usernameField
option to specify an alternative usernameField name, for example "email" passport-local would still expect your frontend login form to contain an input field with name "username" instead of email. This can be configured for passport-local but this is double the work. So we got this shortcut implemented.
Starting from version 5.0.0
, passport-local-mongoose is async/await enabled by returning
Promises for all instance and static methods except serializeUser
and deserializeUser
.
const user = new DefaultUser({username: 'user'});
await user.setPassword('password');
await user.save();
const { user } = await DefaultUser.authenticate()('user', 'password');
When plugging in Passport-Local Mongoose plugin, additional options can be provided to configure the hashing algorithm.
User.plugin(passportLocalMongoose, options);
saltlen
: specifies the salt length in bytes. Default: 32iterations
: specifies the number of iterations used in pbkdf2 hashing algorithm. Default: 25000keylen
: specifies the length in byte of the generated key. Default: 512digestAlgorithm
: specifies the pbkdf2 digest algorithm. Default: sha256. (get a list of supported algorithms with crypto.getHashes())interval
: specifies the interval in milliseconds between login attempts, which increases exponentially based on the number of failed attempts, up to maxInterval. Default: 100maxInterval
: specifies the maximum amount of time an account can be locked. Default 300000 (5 minutes)usernameField
: specifies the field name that holds the username. Defaults to 'username'. This option can be used if you want to use a different field to hold the username for example "email".usernameUnique
: specifies if the username field should be enforced to be unique by a mongodb index or not. Defaults to true.saltField
: specifies the field name that holds the salt value. Defaults to 'salt'.hashField
: specifies the field name that holds the password hash value. Defaults to 'hash'.attemptsField
: specifies the field name that holds the number of login failures since the last successful login. Defaults to 'attempts'.lastLoginField
: specifies the field name that holds the timestamp of the last login attempt. Defaults to 'last'.selectFields
: specifies the fields of the model to be selected from mongodb (and stored in the session). Defaults to 'undefined' so that all fields of the model are selected.usernameCaseInsensitive
: specifies the usernames to be case insensitive. Defaults to 'false'.usernameLowerCase
: convert username field value to lower case when saving an querying. Defaults to 'false'.populateFields
: specifies fields to populate in findByUsername function. Defaults to 'undefined'.encoding
: specifies the encoding the generated salt and hash will be stored in. Defaults to 'hex'.limitAttempts
: specifies whether login attempts should be limited and login failures should be penalized. Default: false.maxAttempts
: specifies the maximum number of failed attempts allowed before preventing login. Default: Infinity.unlockInterval
: specifies the interval in milliseconds, which is for unlock user automatically after the interval is reached. Defaults to 'undefined' which means deactivated.passwordValidator
: specifies your custom validation function for the password in the form:Default: validates non-empty passwords.passwordValidator = function(password,cb) { if (someValidationErrorExists(password)) { return cb('this is my custom validation error message') } // return an empty cb() on success return cb() }
passwordValidatorAsync
: specifies your custom validation function for the password with promises in the form:passwordValidatorAsync = function(password) { return someAsyncValidation(password) .catch(function(err){ return Promise.reject(err) }) }
usernameQueryFields
: specifies alternative fields of the model for identifying a user (e.g. email).findByUsername
: Specifies a query function that is executed with query parameters to restrict the query with extra query parameters. For example query only users with field "active" set totrue
. Default:function(model, queryParameters) { return model.findOne(queryParameters); }
. See the examples section for a use case.
Attention! Changing any of the hashing options (saltlen, iterations or keylen) in a production environment will prevent existing users from authenticating!
Override default error messages by setting options.errorMessages
.
MissingPasswordError
: 'No password was given'AttemptTooSoonError
: 'Account is currently locked. Try again later'TooManyAttemptsError
: 'Account locked due to too many failed login attempts'NoSaltValueStoredError
: 'Authentication not possible. No salt value stored'IncorrectPasswordError
: 'Password or username are incorrect'IncorrectUsernameError
: 'Password or username are incorrect'MissingUsernameError
: 'No username was given'UserExistsError
: 'A user with the given username is already registered'
Passport-Local Mongoose use the pbkdf2 algorithm of the node crypto library. Pbkdf2 was chosen because platform independent (in contrary to bcrypt). For every user a generated salt value is saved to make rainbow table attacks even harder.
For a complete example implementing a registration, login and logout see the login example.
Sets a user password. Does not save the user object. If no callback cb
is provided a Promise
is returned.
Changes a user's password hash and salt, resets the user's number of failed password attempts and saves the user object (everything only if oldPassword is correct). If no callback cb
is provided a Promise
is returned. If oldPassword does not match the user's old password, an IncorrectPasswordError
is passed to cb
or the Promise
is rejected.
Authenticates a user object. If no callback cb
is provided a Promise
is returned.
Resets a user's number of failed password attempts and saves the user object. If no callback cb
is provided a Promise
is returned. This method is only defined if options.limitAttempts
is true
.
err
- null unless the hashing algorithm throws an error
thisModel
- the model getting authenticated if authentication was successful otherwise false
passwordErr
- an instance of
AuthenticationError
describing the reason the password failed, else undefined.
- an instance of
Using setPassword()
will only update the document's password fields, but will not save the document.
To commit the changed document, remember to use Mongoose's document.save()
after using setPassword()
.
IncorrectPasswordError
: specifies the error message returned when the password is incorrect. Defaults to 'Incorrect password'.IncorrectUsernameError
: specifies the error message returned when the username is incorrect. Defaults to 'Incorrect username'.MissingUsernameError
: specifies the error message returned when the username has not been set during registration. Defaults to 'Field %s is not set'.MissingPasswordError
: specifies the error message returned when the password has not been set during registration. Defaults to 'Password argument not set!'.UserExistsError
: specifies the error message returned when the user already exists during registration. Defaults to 'User already exists with name %s'.NoSaltValueStored
: Occurs in case no salt value is stored in the MongoDB collection.AttemptTooSoonError
: Occurs if the optionlimitAttempts
is set to true and a login attept occures while the user is still penalized.TooManyAttemptsError
: Returned when the user's account is locked due to too many failed login attempts.
All those errors inherit from AuthenticationError
, if you need a more general error class for checking.
Static methods are exposed on the model constructor. For example to use createStrategy function use
const User = require('./models/user');
User.createStrategy();
authenticate()
Generates a function that is used in Passport's LocalStrategyserializeUser()
Generates a function that is used by Passport to serialize users into the sessiondeserializeUser()
Generates a function that is used by Passport to deserialize users into the sessionregister(user, password, cb)
Convenience method to register a new user instance with a given password. Checks if username is unique. See login example.findByUsername()
Convenience method to find a user instance by it's unique username.createStrategy()
Creates a configured passport-localLocalStrategy
instance that can be used in passport.
First, we define a schema with an additional field active
of type Boolean.
const UserSchema = new Schema({
active: Boolean
});
When plugging in Passport-Local Mongoose, we set usernameUnique
to avoid creating a unique mongodb index on field username
. To avoid
non active users being queried by mongodb, we can specify the option findByUsername
that allows us to restrict a query. In our case
we want to restrict the query to only query users with field active
set to true
. The findByUsername
MUST return a Mongoose query.
UserSchema.plugin(passportLocalMongoose, {
// Set usernameUnique to false to avoid a mongodb index on the username column!
usernameUnique: false,
findByUsername: function(model, queryParameters) {
// Add additional query parameter - AND condition - active: true
queryParameters.active = true;
return model.findOne(queryParameters);
}
});
To test the implementation, we can simply create (register) a user with field active
set to false
and try to authenticate this user
in a second step:
const User = mongoose.model('Users', UserSchema);
User.register({username:'username', active: false}, 'password', function(err, user) {
if (err) { ... }
const authenticate = User.authenticate();
authenticate('username', 'password', function(err, result) {
if (err) { ... }
// Value 'result' is set to false. The user could not be authenticated since the user is not active
});
});
The default digest algorithm was changed due to security implications from sha1 to sha256. If you decide to upgrade a production system from 1.x to 2.x, your users will not be able to login since the digest algorithm was changed! In these cases plan some migration strategy and/or use the sha1 option for the digest algorithm.
Passport-Local Mongoose is licensed under the MIT license.