Try disabling change_headers_on_each_request
, it's a nice to have security enhancement but not crucial. If you are curious, you can check how we manage the tokens and batch requests
Yes! But you will need to enable the support of separate routes for standard Devise. So do something like this:
DeviseTokenAuth.setup do |config|
config.enable_standard_devise_support = true
end
Rails.application.routes.draw do
# standard devise routes available at /users
# NOTE: make sure this comes first!!!
devise_for :users
# token auth routes available at /api/v1/auth
namespace :api do
scope :v1 do
mount_devise_token_auth_for 'User', at: 'auth'
end
end
end
Some users have been experiencing issues with using this gem alongside standard Devise, with the config.enable_standard_devise_support = true
method.
Another method suggested by jotolo is to have separate child application_controller.rb
files that use either DeviseTokenAuth or standard Devise, which all inherit from a base application_controller.rb
file. For example, you could have an api/v1/application_controller.rb
file for the API of your app (which would use Devise Token Auth), and a admin/application_controller.rb
file for the full stack part of your app (using standard Devise). The idea is to redirect each flow in your application to the appropriate child application_controller.rb
file. Example code below:
Child application controller for your API, using DeviseTokenAuth.
module Api
module V1
class ApplicationController < ::ApplicationController
skip_before_action :verify_authenticity_token
include DeviseTokenAuth::Concerns::SetUserByToken
end
end
end
Child application controller for full stack section, using standard Devise.
module Admin
class ApplicationController < ::ApplicationController
before_action :authenticate_admin!
end
end
The base application controller file. If you're using CSRF token protection, you can skip it in the API specific application controller (api/v1/application_controller.rb
).
class ApplicationController < ActionController::Base
protect_from_forgery with: :exception
end
Keep the enable_standard_devise_support
configuration commented out or set to false
.
# config.enable_standard_devise_support = false
Removing the new
routes will require significant modifications to devise. If the inclusion of the new
routes is causing your app any problems, post an issue in the issue tracker and it will be addressed ASAP.
I'm having trouble using this gem alongside ActiveAdmin...
For some odd reason, ActiveAdmin extends from your own app's ApplicationController
. This becomes a problem if you include the DeviseTokenAuth::Concerns::SetUserByToken
concern in your app's ApplicationController
.
The solution is to use two separate ApplicationController
classes - one for your API, and one for ActiveAdmin. Something like this:
# app/controllers/api_controller.rb
# API routes extend from this controller
class ApiController < ActionController::Base
include DeviseTokenAuth::Concerns::SetUserByToken
end
# app/controllers/application_controller.rb
# leave this for ActiveAdmin, and any other non-api routes
class ApplicationController < ActionController::Base
end
You may be interested in GrapeTokenAuth or GrapeDeviseTokenAuth.
You may be interested in solidus_devise_token_auth.
- First, remove the migration generated by the following command
rails g devise_token_auth:install [USER_CLASS] [MOUNT_PATH]
and then:. - Create another fresh migration:
# create migration by running a command like this (where `User` is your USER_CLASS table):
# `rails g migration AddTokensToUsers provider:string uid:string tokens:text`
def up
add_column :users, :provider, :string, null: false, default: 'email'
add_column :users, :uid, :string, null: false, default: ''
add_column :users, :tokens, :text
# if your existing User model does not have an existing **encrypted_password** column uncomment below line.
# add_column :users, :encrypted_password, :string, null: false, default: ''
# if your existing User model does not have an existing **allow_password_change** column uncomment below line.
# add_column :users, :allow_password_change, :boolean, default: false
# the following will update your models so that when you run your migration
# updates the user table immediately with the above defaults
User.reset_column_information
# finds all existing users and updates them.
# if you change the default values above you'll also have to change them here below:
User.find_each do |user|
user.uid = user.email
user.provider = 'email'
user.save!
end
# to speed up lookups to these columns:
add_index :users, [:uid, :provider], unique: true
end
def down
# if you added **encrypted_password** above, add here to successfully rollback
# if you added **allow_password_change** above, add here to successfully rollback
remove_columns :users, :provider, :uid, :tokens
end