Overview
Auth is an essential piece of any serious application. That's why Wasp provides authentication and authorization support out of the box.
Here's a 1-minute tour of how full-stack auth works in Wasp:
Enabling auth for your app is optional and can be done by configuring the auth
field of your app
declaration:
- JavaScript
- TypeScript
app MyApp {
title: "My app",
//...
auth: {
userEntity: User,
methods: {
usernameAndPassword: {}, // use this or email, not both
email: {}, // use this or usernameAndPassword, not both
google: {},
gitHub: {},
},
onAuthFailedRedirectTo: "/someRoute"
}
}
//...
app MyApp {
title: "My app",
//...
auth: {
userEntity: User,
methods: {
usernameAndPassword: {}, // use this or email, not both
email: {}, // use this or usernameAndPassword, not both
google: {},
gitHub: {},
},
onAuthFailedRedirectTo: "/someRoute"
}
}
//...
Read more about the auth
field options in the API Reference section.
We will provide a quick overview of auth in Wasp and link to more detailed documentation for each auth method.
Available auth methods
Wasp supports the following auth methods:
Email »
Email verification, password reset, etc.
Username & Password »
The simplest way to get started
Google »
Users sign in with their Google account
Github »
Users sign in with their Github account
Keycloak »
Users sign in with their Keycloak account
Discord »
Users sign in with their Discord account
Click on each auth method for more details.
Let's say we enabled the Username & password authentication.
We get an auth backend with signup and login endpoints. We also get the user
object in our Operations and we can decide what to do based on whether the user is logged in or not.
We would also get the Auth UI generated for us. We can set up our login and signup pages where our users can create their account and login. We can then protect certain pages by setting authRequired: true
for them. This will make sure that only logged-in users can access them.
We will also have access to the user
object in our frontend code, so we can show different UI to logged-in and logged-out users. For example, we can show the user's name in the header alongside a logout button or a login button if the user is not logged in.
Protecting a page with authRequired
When declaring a page, you can set the authRequired
property.
If you set it to true
, only authenticated users can access the page. Unauthenticated users are redirected to a route defined by the app.auth.onAuthFailedRedirectTo
field.
- JavaScript
- TypeScript
page MainPage {
component: import Main from "@src/pages/Main",
authRequired: true
}
page MainPage {
component: import Main from "@src/pages/Main",
authRequired: true
}
You can only use authRequired
if your app uses one of the available auth methods.
If authRequired
is set to true
, the page's React component (specified by the component
property) receives the user
object as a prop. Read more about the user
object in the Accessing the logged-in user section.
Logout action
We provide an action for logging out the user. Here's how you can use it:
- JavaScript
- TypeScript
import { logout } from 'wasp/client/auth'
const LogoutButton = () => {
return <button onClick={logout}>Logout</button>
}
import { logout } from 'wasp/client/auth'
const LogoutButton = () => {
return <button onClick={logout}>Logout</button>
}
Accessing the logged-in user
You can get access to the user
object both on the server and on the client. The user
object contains the logged-in user's data.
The user
object has all the fields that you defined in your User
entity, plus the auth
field which contains the auth identities connected to the user. For example, if the user signed up with their email, the user
object might look something like this:
const user = {
id: "19c7d164-b5cb-4dde-a0cc-0daea77cf854",
// Your entity's fields.
address: "My address",
// ...
// Auth identities connected to the user.
auth: {
id: "26ab6f96-ed76-4ee5-9ac3-2fd0bf19711f",
identities: [
{
providerName: "email",
providerUserId: "[email protected]",
providerData: { ... },
},
]
},
}
You can read more about how the User
entity is connected to the rest of the auth system in the Auth Entities section of the docs.
On the client
There are two ways to access the user
object on the client:
- the
user
prop - the
useAuth
hook
Using the user
prop
If the page's declaration sets authRequired
to true
, the page's React component receives the user
object as a prop:
- JavaScript
- TypeScript
// ...
page AccountPage {
component: import Account from "@src/pages/Account",
authRequired: true
}
import Button from './Button'
import { logout } from 'wasp/client/auth'
const AccountPage = ({ user }) => {
return (
<div>
<Button onClick={logout}>Logout</Button>
{JSON.stringify(user, null, 2)}
</div>
)
}
export default AccountPage
// ...
page AccountPage {
component: import Account from "@src/pages/Account",
authRequired: true
}
import { type AuthUser } from 'wasp/auth'
import Button from './Button'
import { logout } from 'wasp/client/auth'
const AccountPage = ({ user }: { user: AuthUser }) => {
return (
<div>
<Button onClick={logout}>Logout</Button>
{JSON.stringify(user, null, 2)}
</div>
)
}
export default AccountPage
Using the useAuth
hook
Wasp provides a React hook you can use in the client components - useAuth
.
This hook is a thin wrapper over Wasp's useQuery
hook and returns data in the same format.
- JavaScript
- TypeScript
import { useAuth, logout } from 'wasp/client/auth'
import { Link } from 'react-router-dom'
import Todo from '../Todo'
export function Main() {
const { data: user } = useAuth()
if (!user) {
return (
<span>
Please <Link to="/login">login</Link> or{' '}
<Link to="/signup">sign up</Link>.
</span>
)
} else {
return (
<>
<button onClick={logout}>Logout</button>
<Todo />
</>
)
}
}
import { useAuth, logout } from 'wasp/client/auth'
import { Link } from 'react-router-dom'
import Todo from '../Todo'
export function Main() {
const { data: user } = useAuth()
if (!user) {
return (
<span>
Please <Link to='/login'>login</Link> or <Link to='/signup'>sign up</Link>.
</span>
)
} else {
return (
<>
<button onClick={logout}>Logout</button>
<Todo />
< />
)
}
}
Since the user
prop is only available in a page's React component: use the user
prop in the page's React component and the useAuth
hook in any other React component.
On the server
Using the context.user
object
When authentication is enabled, all queries and actions have access to the user
object through the context
argument. context.user
contains all User entity's fields and the auth identities connected to the user. We strip out the hashedPassword
field from the identities for security reasons.
- JavaScript
- TypeScript
import { HttpError } from 'wasp/server'
export const createTask = async (task, context) => {
if (!context.user) {
throw new HttpError(403)
}
const Task = context.entities.Task
return Task.create({
data: {
description: task.description,
user: {
connect: { id: context.user.id },
},
},
})
}
import { type Task } from 'wasp/entities'
import { type CreateTask } from 'wasp/server/operations'
import { HttpError } from 'wasp/server'
type CreateTaskPayload = Pick<Task, 'description'>
export const createTask: CreateTask<CreateTaskPayload, Task> = async (
args,
context
) => {
if (!context.user) {
throw new HttpError(403)
}
const Task = context.entities.Task
return Task.create({
data: {
description: args.description,
user: {
connect: { id: context.user.id },
},
},
})
}
To implement access control in your app, each operation must check context.user
and decide what to do. For example, if context.user
is undefined
inside a private operation, the user's access should be denied.
When using WebSockets, the user
object is also available on the socket.data
object. Read more in the WebSockets section.
Sessions
Wasp's auth uses sessions to keep track of the logged-in user. The session is stored in localStorage
on the client and in the database on the server. Under the hood, Wasp uses the excellent Lucia Auth v3 library for session management.
When users log in, Wasp creates a session for them and stores it in the database. The session is then sent to the client and stored in localStorage
. When users log out, Wasp deletes the session from the database and from localStorage
.
User Entity
Password Hashing
If you are saving a user's password in the database, you should never save it as plain text. You can use Wasp's helper functions for serializing and deserializing provider data which will automatically hash the password for you:
// ...
action updatePassword {
fn: import { updatePassword } from "@src/auth",
}
- JavaScript
- TypeScript
import {
createProviderId,
findAuthIdentity,
updateAuthIdentityProviderData,
deserializeAndSanitizeProviderData,
} from 'wasp/server/auth';
export const updatePassword = async (args, context) => {
const providerId = createProviderId('email', args.email)
const authIdentity = await findAuthIdentity(providerId)
if (!authIdentity) {
throw new HttpError(400, "Unknown user")
}
const providerData = deserializeAndSanitizeProviderData(authIdentity.providerData)
// Updates the password and hashes it automatically.
await updateAuthIdentityProviderData(providerId, providerData, {
hashedPassword: args.password,
})
}
import {
createProviderId,
findAuthIdentity,
updateAuthIdentityProviderData,
deserializeAndSanitizeProviderData,
} from 'wasp/server/auth';
import { type UpdatePassword } from 'wasp/server/operations'
export const updatePassword: UpdatePassword<
{ email: string; password: string },
void,
> = async (args, context) => {
const providerId = createProviderId('email', args.email)
const authIdentity = await findAuthIdentity(providerId)
if (!authIdentity) {
throw new HttpError(400, "Unknown user")
}
const providerData = deserializeAndSanitizeProviderData<'email'>(authIdentity.providerData)
// Updates the password and hashes it automatically.
await updateAuthIdentityProviderData(providerId, providerData, {
hashedPassword: args.password,
})
}
Default Validations
When you are using the default authentication flow, Wasp validates the fields with some default validations. These validations run if you use Wasp's built-in Auth UI or if you use the provided auth actions.
If you decide to create your custom auth actions, you'll need to run the validations yourself.
Default validations depend on the auth method you use.
Username & Password
If you use Username & password authentication, the default validations are:
- The
username
must not be empty - The
password
must not be empty, have at least 8 characters, and contain a number
Note that username
s are stored in a case-insensitive manner.
Email
If you use Email authentication, the default validations are:
- The
email
must not be empty and a valid email address - The
password
must not be empty, have at least 8 characters, and contain a number
Note that email
s are stored in a case-insensitive manner.
Customizing the Signup Process
Sometimes you want to include extra fields in your signup process, like first name and last name and save them in the User
entity.
For this to happen:
- you need to define the fields that you want saved in the database,
- you need to customize the
SignupForm
(in the case of Email or Username & Password auth)
Other times, you might need to just add some extra UI elements to the form, like a checkbox for terms of service. In this case, customizing only the UI components is enough.
Let's see how to do both.
1. Defining Extra Fields
If we want to save some extra fields in our signup process, we need to tell our app they exist.
We do that by defining an object where the keys represent the field name, and the values are functions that receive the data sent from the client* and return the value of the field.
* We exclude the password
field from this object to prevent it from being saved as plain-text in the database. The password
field is handled by Wasp's auth backend.
First, we add the auth.methods.{authMethod}.userSignupFields
field in our main.wasp
file. The {authMethod}
depends on the auth method you are using.
For example, if you are using Username & Password, you would add the auth.methods.usernameAndPassword.userSignupFields
field:
- JavaScript
- TypeScript
app crudTesting {
// ...
auth: {
userEntity: User,
methods: {
usernameAndPassword: {
userSignupFields: import { userSignupFields } from "@src/auth/signup",
},
},
onAuthFailedRedirectTo: "/login",
},
}
entity User {=psl
id Int @id @default(autoincrement())
address String?
psl=}
Then we'll define the userSignupFields
object in the src/auth/signup.js
file:
import { defineUserSignupFields } from 'wasp/server/auth'
export const userSignupFields = defineUserSignupFields({
address: async (data) => {
const address = data.address
if (typeof address !== 'string') {
throw new Error('Address is required')
}
if (address.length < 5) {
throw new Error('Address must be at least 5 characters long')
}
return address
},
})
app crudTesting {
// ...
auth: {
userEntity: User,
methods: {
usernameAndPassword: {
userSignupFields: import { userSignupFields } from "@src/auth/signup",
},
},
onAuthFailedRedirectTo: "/login",
},
}
entity User {=psl
id Int @id @default(autoincrement())
address String?
psl=}
Then we'll define the userSignupFields
object in the src/auth/signup.js
file:
import { defineUserSignupFields } from 'wasp/server/auth'
export const userSignupFields = defineUserSignupFields({
address: async (data) => {
const address = data.address
if (typeof address !== 'string') {
throw new Error('Address is required')
}
if (address.length < 5) {
throw new Error('Address must be at least 5 characters long')
}
return address
},
})
Read more about the userSignupFields
object in the API Reference.
Keep in mind, that these field names need to exist on the userEntity
you defined in your main.wasp
file e.g. address
needs to be a field on the User
entity.
The field function will receive the data sent from the client and it needs to return the value that will be saved into the database. If the field is invalid, the function should throw an error.
You can use any validation library you want to validate the fields. For example, you can use zod
like this:
Click to see the code
- JavaScript
- TypeScript
import { defineUserSignupFields } from 'wasp/server/auth'
import * as z from 'zod'
export const userSignupFields = defineUserSignupFields({
address: (data) => {
const AddressSchema = z
.string({
required_error: 'Address is required',
invalid_type_error: 'Address must be a string',
})
.min(10, 'Address must be at least 10 characters long')
const result = AddressSchema.safeParse(data.address)
if (result.success === false) {
throw new Error(result.error.issues[0].message)
}
return result.data
},
})
import { defineUserSignupFields } from 'wasp/server/auth'
import * as z from 'zod'
export const userSignupFields = defineUserSignupFields({
address: (data) => {
const AddressSchema = z
.string({
required_error: 'Address is required',
invalid_type_error: 'Address must be a string',
})
.min(10, 'Address must be at least 10 characters long')
const result = AddressSchema.safeParse(data.address)
if (result.success === false) {
throw new Error(result.error.issues[0].message)
}
return result.data
},
})
Now that we defined the fields, Wasp knows how to:
- Validate the data sent from the client
- Save the data to the database
Next, let's see how to customize Auth UI to include those fields.
2. Customizing the Signup Component
If you are using Wasp's Auth UI, you can customize the SignupForm
component by passing the additionalFields
prop to it. It can be either a list of extra fields or a render function.
Using a List of Extra Fields
When you pass in a list of extra fields to the SignupForm
, they are added to the form one by one, in the order you pass them in.
Inside the list, there can be either objects or render functions (you can combine them):
- Objects are a simple way to describe new fields you need, but a bit less flexible than render functions.
- Render functions can be used to render any UI you want, but they require a bit more code. The render functions receive the
react-hook-form
object and the form state object as arguments.
- JavaScript
- TypeScript
import {
SignupForm,
FormError,
FormInput,
FormItemGroup,
FormLabel,
} from 'wasp/client/auth'
export const SignupPage = () => {
return (
<SignupForm
additionalFields={[
/* The address field is defined using an object */
{
name: 'address',
label: 'Address',
type: 'input',
validations: {
required: 'Address is required',
},
},
/* The phone number is defined using a render function */
(form, state) => {
return (
<FormItemGroup>
<FormLabel>Phone Number</FormLabel>
<FormInput
{...form.register('phoneNumber', {
required: 'Phone number is required',
})}
disabled={state.isLoading}
/>
{form.formState.errors.phoneNumber && (
<FormError>
{form.formState.errors.phoneNumber.message}
</FormError>
)}
</FormItemGroup>
)
},
]}
/>
)
}
import {
SignupForm,
FormError,
FormInput,
FormItemGroup,
FormLabel,
} from 'wasp/client/auth'
export const SignupPage = () => {
return (
<SignupForm
additionalFields={[
/* The address field is defined using an object */
{
name: 'address',
label: 'Address',
type: 'input',
validations: {
required: 'Address is required',
},
},
/* The phone number is defined using a render function */
(form, state) => {
return (
<FormItemGroup>
<FormLabel>Phone Number</FormLabel>
<FormInput
{...form.register('phoneNumber', {
required: 'Phone number is required',
})}
disabled={state.isLoading}
/>
{form.formState.errors.phoneNumber && (
<FormError>
{form.formState.errors.phoneNumber.message}
</FormError>
)}
</FormItemGroup>
)
},
]}
/>
)
}
Read more about the extra fields in the API Reference.
Using a Single Render Function
Instead of passing in a list of extra fields, you can pass in a render function which will receive the react-hook-form
object and the form state object as arguments. What ever the render function returns, will be rendered below the default fields.
- JavaScript
- TypeScript
import { SignupForm, FormItemGroup } from 'wasp/client/auth'
export const SignupPage = () => {
return (
<SignupForm
additionalFields={(form, state) => {
const username = form.watch('username')
return (
username && (
<FormItemGroup>
Hello there <strong>{username}</strong> 👋
</FormItemGroup>
)
)
}}
/>
)
}
import { SignupForm, FormItemGroup } from 'wasp/client/auth'
export const SignupPage = () => {
return (
<SignupForm
additionalFields={(form, state) => {
const username = form.watch('username')
return (
username && (
<FormItemGroup>
Hello there <strong>{username}</strong> 👋
</FormItemGroup>
)
)
}}
/>
)
}
Read more about the render function in the API Reference.
API Reference
Auth Fields
- JavaScript
- TypeScript
title: "My app",
//...
auth: {
userEntity: User,
methods: {
usernameAndPassword: {}, // use this or email, not both
email: {}, // use this or usernameAndPassword, not both
google: {},
gitHub: {},
},
onAuthFailedRedirectTo: "/someRoute",
}
}
//...
app MyApp {
title: "My app",
//...
auth: {
userEntity: User,
methods: {
usernameAndPassword: {}, // use this or email, not both
email: {}, // use this or usernameAndPassword, not both
google: {},
gitHub: {},
},
onAuthFailedRedirectTo: "/someRoute",
}
}
//...
app.auth
is a dictionary with the following fields:
userEntity: entity
required
The entity representing the user connected to your business logic.
You can read more about how the User
entity is connected to the rest of the auth system in the Auth Entities section of the docs.
methods: dict
required
A dictionary of auth methods enabled for the app.
Email »
Email verification, password reset, etc.
Username & Password »
The simplest way to get started
Google »
Users sign in with their Google account
Github »
Users sign in with their Github account
Keycloak »
Users sign in with their Keycloak account
Discord »
Users sign in with their Discord account
Click on each auth method for more details.
onAuthFailedRedirectTo: String
required
The route to which Wasp should redirect unauthenticated user when they try to access a private page (i.e., a page that has authRequired: true
).
Check out these essentials docs on auth to see an example of usage.
onAuthSucceededRedirectTo: String
The route to which Wasp will send a successfully authenticated after a successful login/signup.
The default value is "/"
.
Automatic redirect on successful login only works when using the Wasp-provided Auth UI.
Signup Fields Customization
If you want to add extra fields to the signup process, the server needs to know how to save them to the database. You do that by defining the auth.methods.{authMethod}.userSignupFields
field in your main.wasp
file.
- JavaScript
- TypeScript
app crudTesting {
// ...
auth: {
userEntity: User,
methods: {
usernameAndPassword: {
userSignupFields: import { userSignupFields } from "@src/auth/signup",
},
},
onAuthFailedRedirectTo: "/login",
},
}
Then we'll export the userSignupFields
object from the src/auth/signup.js
file:
import { defineUserSignupFields } from 'wasp/server/auth'
export const userSignupFields = defineUserSignupFields({
address: async (data) => {
const address = data.address
if (typeof address !== 'string') {
throw new Error('Address is required')
}
if (address.length < 5) {
throw new Error('Address must be at least 5 characters long')
}
return address
},
})
app crudTesting {
// ...
auth: {
userEntity: User,
methods: {
usernameAndPassword: {
userSignupFields: import { userSignupFields } from "@src/auth/signup",
},
},
onAuthFailedRedirectTo: "/login",
},
}
Then we'll export the userSignupFields
object from the src/auth/signup.ts
file:
import { defineUserSignupFields } from 'wasp/server/auth'
export const userSignupFields = defineUserSignupFields({
address: async (data) => {
const address = data.address
if (typeof address !== 'string') {
throw new Error('Address is required')
}
if (address.length < 5) {
throw new Error('Address must be at least 5 characters long')
}
return address
},
})
The userSignupFields
object is an object where the keys represent the field name, and the values are functions that receive the data sent from the client* and return the value of the field.
If the value that the function received is invalid, the function should throw an error.
* We exclude the password
field from this object to prevent it from being saved as plain text in the database. The password
field is handled by Wasp's auth backend.
SignupForm
Customization
To customize the SignupForm
component, you need to pass in the additionalFields
prop. It can be either a list of extra fields or a render function.
- JavaScript
- TypeScript
import {
SignupForm,
FormError,
FormInput,
FormItemGroup,
FormLabel,
} from 'wasp/client/auth'
export const SignupPage = () => {
return (
<SignupForm
additionalFields={[
{
name: 'address',
label: 'Address',
type: 'input',
validations: {
required: 'Address is required',
},
},
(form, state) => {
return (
<FormItemGroup>
<FormLabel>Phone Number</FormLabel>
<FormInput
{...form.register('phoneNumber', {
required: 'Phone number is required',
})}
disabled={state.isLoading}
/>
{form.formState.errors.phoneNumber && (
<FormError>
{form.formState.errors.phoneNumber.message}
</FormError>
)}
</FormItemGroup>
)
},
]}
/>
)
}
import {
SignupForm,
FormError,
FormInput,
FormItemGroup,
FormLabel,
} from 'wasp/client/auth'
export const SignupPage = () => {
return (
<SignupForm
additionalFields={[
{
name: 'address',
label: 'Address',
type: 'input',
validations: {
required: 'Address is required',
},
},
(form, state) => {
return (
<FormItemGroup>
<FormLabel>Phone Number</FormLabel>
<FormInput
{...form.register('phoneNumber', {
required: 'Phone number is required',
})}
disabled={state.isLoading}
/>
{form.formState.errors.phoneNumber && (
<FormError>
{form.formState.errors.phoneNumber.message}
</FormError>
)}
</FormItemGroup>
)
},
]}
/>
)
}
The extra fields can be either objects or render functions (you can combine them):
Objects are a simple way to describe new fields you need, but a bit less flexible than render functions.
The objects have the following properties:
name
required- the name of the field
label
required- the label of the field (used in the UI)
type
required- the type of the field, which can be
input
ortextarea
- the type of the field, which can be
validations
- an object with the validation rules for the field. The keys are the validation names, and the values are the validation error messages. Read more about the available validation rules in the react-hook-form docs.
Render functions receive the
react-hook-form
object and the form state as arguments, and they can use them to render arbitrary UI elements.The render function has the following signature:
(form: UseFormReturn, state: FormState) => React.ReactNode
form
required- the
react-hook-form
object, read more about it in the react-hook-form docs - you need to use the
form.register
function to register your fields
- the
state
required- the form state object which has the following properties:
isLoading: boolean
- whether the form is currently submitting
- the form state object which has the following properties: