Skip to main content

Framework-agnostic authentication wrapper

Project description

Authl

A Python library for managing federated identity

Documentation Status

About

Authl is intended to make it easy to add federated identity to Python-based web apps without requiring the creation of site-specific user accounts, but also without requiring the user to choose from a myriad of buttons or links to select any specific login provider.

All it should take is a single login form that asks for how the user wants to be identified.

Current state

The basic API works, and provides an easy drop-in set of endpoints for Flask.

Currently supported authentication mechanisms:

  • Directly authenticating against email using a magic link
  • Federated authentication against Fediverse providers (Mastodon, Pleroma)
  • Federated authentication against IndieAuth
  • Silo authentication against Twitter
  • Test/loopback authentication for development purposes

Planned functionality:

  • Pluggable OAuth mechanism to easily support additional identity providers such as:
    • OpenID Connect (Google et al)
    • Facebook
    • GitHub
  • OpenID 1.x (Wordpress, LiveJournal, Dreamwidth, etc.)
  • A more flexible configuration system

Rationale

Identity is hard, and there are so many competing standards which try to be the be-all end-all Single Solution. OAuth and OpenID Connect want lock-in to silos, IndieAuth wants every user to self-host their own identity site, and OpenID 1.x has fallen by the wayside. Meanwhile, users just want to be able to log in with the social media they're already using (siloed or not).

Any solution which requires all users to have a certain minimum level of technical ability is not a workable solution.

All of these solutions are prone to the so-called "NASCAR problem" where every supported login provider needs its own UI. But being able to experiment with a more unified UX might help to fix some of that.

Documentation

Full API documentation is hosted on readthedocs.

Usage

Basic usage is as follows:

  1. Create an Authl object with your configured handlers

    This can be done by instancing individual handlers yourself, or you can use authl.from_config

  2. Make endpoints for initiation and progress callbacks

    The initiation callback receives an identity string (email address/URL/etc.) from the user, queries Authl for the handler and its ID, and builds a callback URL for that handler to use. Typically you'll have a single callback endpoint that includes the handler's ID as part of the URL scheme.

    The callback endpoint needs to be able to receive a GET or POST request and use that to validate the returned data from the authorization handler.

    Your callback endpoint (and generated URL thereof) should also include whatever intended forwarding destination.

  3. Handle the authl.disposition object types accordingly

    A disposition is what should be done with the agent that initiated the endpoint call. Currently there are the following:

    • Redirect: return an HTTP redirection to forward it along to another URL
    • Notify: return a notification to the user that they must take another action (e.g. check their email)
    • Verified: indicates that the user has been verified; set a session cookie (or whatever) and forward them along to their intended destination
    • Error: An error occurred; return it to the user as appropriate

Flask usage

To make life easier with Flask, Authl provides an authl.flask.AuthlFlask wrapper. You can use it from a Flask app with something like the below:

import uuid
import logging

import flask
import authl.flask

logging.basicConfig(level=logging.INFO)
LOGGER = logging.getLogger(__name__)

app = flask.Flask('authl-test')

app.secret_key = str(uuid.uuid4())
authl = authl.flask.AuthlFlask(
    app,
    {
        'SMTP_HOST': 'localhost',
        'SMTP_PORT': 25,
        'EMAIL_FROM': 'authl@example.com',
        'EMAIL_SUBJECT': 'Login attempt for Authl test',
        'INDIELOGIN_CLIENT_ID': authl.flask.client_id,
        'TEST_ENABLED': True,
        'MASTODON_NAME': 'authl testing',
        'MASTODON_HOMEPAGE': 'https://github.com/PlaidWeb/Authl'
    },
    tester_path='/check_url'
)


@app.route('/')
@app.route('/some-page')
def index():
    """ Just displays a very basic login form """
    LOGGER.info("Session: %s", flask.session)
    LOGGER.info("Request path: %s", flask.request.path)

    if 'me' in flask.session:
        return 'Hello {me}. Want to <a href="{logout}">log out</a>?'.format(
            me=flask.session['me'], logout=flask.url_for(
                'logout', redir=flask.request.path[1:])
        )

    return 'You are not logged in. Want to <a href="{login}">log in</a>?'.format(
        login=flask.url_for('authl.login', redir=flask.request.path[1:]))


@app.route('/logout/')
@app.route('/logout/<path:redir>')
def logout(redir=''):
    """ Log out from the thing """
    LOGGER.info("Logging out")
    LOGGER.info("Redir: %s", redir)
    LOGGER.info("Request path: %s", flask.request.path)

    flask.session.clear()
    return flask.redirect('/' + redir)

This will configure the Flask app to allow IndieLogin, Mastodon, and email-based authentication (using the server's local sendmail), and use the default login endpoint of /login/. The index() endpoint handler always redirects logins and logouts back to the same page when you log in or log out (the [1:] is to trim off the initial / from the path). The logout handler simply clears the session and redirects back to the redirection path.

The above configuration uses Flask's default session lifetime of one month (this can be configured by setting app.permanent_session_lifetime to a timedelta object, e.g. app.permanent_session_lifetime = datetime.timedelta(hours=20)). Sessions will also implicitly expire whenever the application server is restarted, as app.secret_key is generated randomly at every startup.

Accessing the default stylesheet

If you would like to access authl.flask's default stylesheet, you can do it by passing the argument asset='css' to the login endpoint. For example, if you are using the default endpoint name of authl.login, you can use:

flask.url_for('authl.login', asset='css')

from Python, or e.g.

<link rel="stylesheet" href="{{url_for('authl.login', asset='css')}}">

from a Jinja template.

Project details


Download files

Download the file for your platform. If you're not sure which to choose, learn more about installing packages.

Source Distribution

authl-0.7.0.tar.gz (40.2 kB view details)

Uploaded Source

Built Distribution

authl-0.7.0-py3-none-any.whl (45.2 kB view details)

Uploaded Python 3

File details

Details for the file authl-0.7.0.tar.gz.

File metadata

  • Download URL: authl-0.7.0.tar.gz
  • Upload date:
  • Size: 40.2 kB
  • Tags: Source
  • Uploaded using Trusted Publishing? No
  • Uploaded via: poetry/1.3.2 CPython/3.11.2 Darwin/22.3.0

File hashes

Hashes for authl-0.7.0.tar.gz
Algorithm Hash digest
SHA256 29de8a531f9629a159ab1dc03fb57939020632dd1050456ff14a457082fdf41c
MD5 332b4a4037bd5bfa70fb81b9830e4afc
BLAKE2b-256 bb0bfd36d2202778647db2ce7cfb753ea66ad968353f175bdc95cb1d5c6984e7

See more details on using hashes here.

File details

Details for the file authl-0.7.0-py3-none-any.whl.

File metadata

  • Download URL: authl-0.7.0-py3-none-any.whl
  • Upload date:
  • Size: 45.2 kB
  • Tags: Python 3
  • Uploaded using Trusted Publishing? No
  • Uploaded via: poetry/1.3.2 CPython/3.11.2 Darwin/22.3.0

File hashes

Hashes for authl-0.7.0-py3-none-any.whl
Algorithm Hash digest
SHA256 18419f59ad1dfd56edc04b50979653337058b5f9a2174ece868030cd9c14308a
MD5 4ecc0680927f44d696345afcff8b3564
BLAKE2b-256 468944af909a756016e2bb6f45fd7e415781d88846817ce285e85cbf3a57271e

See more details on using hashes here.

Supported by

AWS AWS Cloud computing and Security Sponsor Datadog Datadog Monitoring Fastly Fastly CDN Google Google Download Analytics Microsoft Microsoft PSF Sponsor Pingdom Pingdom Monitoring Sentry Sentry Error logging StatusPage StatusPage Status page