NAME

   Dancer2::Plugin::Auth::Extensible - extensible authentication framework
   for Dancer2 apps

DESCRIPTION

   A user authentication and authorisation framework plugin for Dancer2
   apps.

   Makes it easy to require a user to be logged in to access certain
   routes, provides role-based access control, and supports various
   authentication methods/sources (config file, database, Unix system
   users, etc).

   Designed to support multiple authentication realms and to be as
   extensible as possible, and to make secure password handling easy. The
   base class for auth providers makes handling RFC2307-style hashed
   passwords really simple, so you have no excuse for storing plain-text
   passwords. A simple script called generate-crypted-password to generate
   RFC2307-style hashed passwords is included, or you can use
   Crypt::SaltedHash yourself to do so, or use the slappasswd utility if
   you have it installed.

SYNOPSIS

   Configure the plugin to use the authentication provider class you wish
   to use:

     plugins:
           Auth::Extensible:
               realms:
                   users:
                       provider: Example
                       ....

   The configuration you provide will depend on the authentication
   provider module in use. For a simple example, see
   Dancer2::Plugin::Auth::Extensible::Provider::Config.

   Define that a user must be logged in and have the proper permissions to
   access a route:

       get '/secret' => require_role Confidant => sub { tell_secrets(); };

   Define that a user must be logged in to access a route - and find out
   who is logged in with the logged_in_user keyword:

       get '/users' => require_login sub {
           my $user = logged_in_user;
           return "Hi there, $user->{username}";
       };

AUTHENTICATION PROVIDERS

   For flexibility, this authentication framework uses simple
   authentication provider classes, which implement a simple interface and
   do whatever is required to authenticate a user against the chosen
   source of authentication.

   For an example of how simple provider classes are, so you can build
   your own if required or just try out this authentication framework
   plugin easily, see
   Dancer2::Plugin::Auth::Extensible::Provider::Example.

   This framework supplies the following providers out-of-the-box:

   Dancer2::Plugin::Auth::Extensible::Provider::Unix

     Authenticates users using system accounts on Linux/Unix type boxes

   Dancer2::Plugin::Auth::Extensible::Provider::Database

     Authenticates users stored in a database table

   Dancer2::Plugin::Auth::Extensible::Provider::DBIC

     Authenticates users stored in a database table using
     Dancer2::Plugin::DBIC

   Dancer2::Plugin::Auth::Extensible::Provider::Config

     Authenticates users stored in the app's config

   Need to write your own? Just subclass
   Dancer2::Plugin::Auth::Extensible::Provider::Base and implement the
   required methods, and you're good to go!

CONTROLLING ACCESS TO ROUTES

   Keywords are provided to check if a user is logged in / has appropriate
   roles.

   require_login - require the user to be logged in

         get '/dashboard' => require_login sub { .... };

     If the user is not logged in, they will be redirected to the login
     page URL to log in. The default URL is /login - this may be changed
     with the login_page option.

   require_role - require the user to have a specified role

         get '/beer' => require_role BeerDrinker => sub { ... };

     Requires that the user be logged in as a user who has the specified
     role. If the user is not logged in, they will be redirected to the
     login page URL. If they are logged in, but do not have the required
     role, they will be redirected to the access denied URL.

   require_any_roles - require the user to have one of a list of roles

         get '/drink' => require_any_role [qw(BeerDrinker VodaDrinker)] => sub {
             ...
         };

     Requires that the user be logged in as a user who has any one (or
     more) of the roles listed. If the user is not logged in, they will be
     redirected to the login page URL. If they are logged in, but do not
     have any of the specified roles, they will be redirected to the
     access denied URL.

   require_all_roles - require the user to have all roles listed

         get '/foo' => require_all_roles [qw(Foo Bar)] => sub { ... };

     Requires that the user be logged in as a user who has all of the
     roles listed. If the user is not logged in, they will be redirected
     to the login page URL. If they are logged in but do not have all of
     the specified roles, they will be redirected to the access denied
     URL.

Replacing the Default  /login  and  /login/denied  Routes

   By default, the plugin adds a route to present a simple login form at
   that URL. If you would rather add your own, set the no_default_pages
   setting to a true value, and define your own route which responds to
   /login with a login page. Alternatively you can let DPAE add the routes
   and handle the status codes, etc. and simply define the setting
   login_page_handler and/or permission_denied_page_handler with the name
   of a subroutine to be called to handle the route. Note that it must be
   a fully qualified sub. E.g.

       plugins:
         Auth::Extensible:
           login_page_handler: 'My::App::login_page_handler'
           permission_denied_page_handler: 'My::App::permission_denied_page_handler'

   Then in your code you might simply use a template:

       sub permission_denied_page_handler {
           template 'account/login';
       }

   If the user is logged in, but tries to access a route which requires a
   specific role they don't have, they will be redirected to the
   "permission denied" page URL, which defaults to /login/denied but may
   be changed using the denied_page option.

   Again, by default a route is added to respond to that URL with a
   default page; again, you can disable this by setting no_default_pages
   and creating your own.

   This would still leave the routes post '/login' and any '/logout'
   routes in place. To disable them too, set the option no_login_handler
   to a true value. In this case, these routes should be defined by the
   user, and should do at least the following:

       post '/login' => sub {
           my ($success, $realm) = authenticate_user(
               params->{username}, params->{password}
           );
           if ($success) {
               session logged_in_user => params->{username};
               session logged_in_user_realm => $realm;
               # other code here
           } else {
               # authentication failed
           }
       };

       any '/logout' => sub {
           session->destroy;
       };


   If you want to use the default post '/login' and any '/logout' routes
   you can configure them. See below.

   The default routes also contain functionality for a user to perform
   password resets. See the "PASSWORD RESETS" documentation for more
   details.

Keywords

   require_login

     Used to wrap a route which requires a user to be logged in order to
     access it.

         get '/secret' => require_login sub { .... };

   require_role

     Used to wrap a route which requires a user to be logged in as a user
     with the specified role in order to access it.

         get '/beer' => require_role BeerDrinker => sub { ... };

     You can also provide a regular expression, if you need to match the
     role using a regex - for example:

         get '/beer' => require_role qr/Drinker$/ => sub { ... };

   require_any_role

     Used to wrap a route which requires a user to be logged in as a user
     with any one (or more) of the specified roles in order to access it.

         get '/foo' => require_any_role [qw(Foo Bar)] => sub { ... };

   require_all_roles

     Used to wrap a route which requires a user to be logged in as a user
     with all of the roles listed in order to access it.

         get '/foo' => require_all_roles [qw(Foo Bar)] => sub { ... };

   logged_in_user

     Returns a hashref of details of the currently logged-in user, if
     there is one.

     The details you get back will depend upon the authentication provider
     in use.

   get_user_details

     Returns a hashref of details of the specified user. The realm can
     optionally be specified as the second parameter. If the realm is not
     specified, each realm will be checked, and the first matching user
     will be returned.

     The details you get back will depend upon the authentication provider
     in use.

   user_has_role

     Check if a user has the role named.

     By default, the currently-logged-in user will be checked, so you need
     only name the role you're looking for:

         if (user_has_role('BeerDrinker')) { pour_beer(); }

     You can also provide the username to check;

         if (user_has_role($user, $role)) { .... }

   user_roles

     Returns a list of the roles of a user.

     By default, roles for the currently-logged-in user will be checked;
     alternatively, you may supply a username to check.

     Returns a list or arrayref depending on context.

   authenticate_user

     Usually you'll want to let the built-in login handling code deal with
     authenticating users, but in case you need to do it yourself, this
     keyword accepts a username and password, and optionally a specific
     realm, and checks whether the username and password are valid.

     For example:

         if (authenticate_user($username, $password)) {
             ...
         }

     If you are using multiple authentication realms, by default each
     realm will be consulted in turn. If you only wish to check one of
     them (for instance, you're authenticating an admin user, and there's
     only one realm which applies to them), you can supply the realm as an
     optional third parameter.

     In boolean context, returns simply true or false; in list context,
     returns ($success, $realm).

   logged_in_user_lastlogin

     Returns (as a DateTime object) the time of the last successful login
     of the current logged in user.

     To enable this functionality, set the configuration key
     record_lastlogin to a true value. The backend provider must support
     write access for a user and have lastlogin functionality implemented.

   update_user

     Updates a user's details. If the authentication provider supports it,
     this keyword allows a user's details to be updated within the backend
     data store.

     In order to update the user's details, the keyword should be called
     with the username to be updated, followed by a hash of the values to
     be updated. Note that whilst the password can be updated using this
     method, any new value will be stored directly into the provider
     as-is, not encrypted. It is recommended to use user_password instead.

     If only one realm is configured then this will be used to search for
     the user. Otherwise, the realm must be specified with the realm key.

         # Update user, only one realm configured
         update_user "jsmith", surname => "Smith"

         # Update a user's username, more than one realm
         update_user "jsmith", realm => "dbic", username => "jjones"

     The updated user's details are returned, as per logged_in_user.

   update_current_user

     The same as update_user, but does not take a username as the first
     parameter, instead updating the currently logged-in user.

         # Update user, only one realm configured
         update_current_user surname => "Smith"

     The updated user's details are returned, as per logged_in_user.

   create_user

     Creates a new user, if the authentication provider supports it.
     Optionally sends a welcome message with a password reset request, in
     which case an email key must be provided.

     This function works in the same manner as update_user, except that
     the username key is mandatory. As with update_user, it is recommended
     not to set a password directly using this method, otherwise it will
     be stored in plain text.

     The realm to use must be specified with the key realm if there is
     more than one realm configured.

         # Create new user
         create_user username => "jsmith", realm => "dbic", surname => "Smith"

         # Create new user and send welcome email
         create_user username => "jsmith", email => "[email protected]", email_welcome => 1

     On success, the created user's details are returned, as per
     logged_in_user.

     The text sent in the welcome email can be customised in 2 ways, in
     the same way as password_reset_send:

     welcome_send

       This can be used to specify a subroutine that will be called to
       perform the entire message construction and email sending. Note
       that it must be a fully-qualified sub such as
       My::App:email_welcome_send. The subroutine will be passed the dsl
       as the first parameter, followed by a hash with the keys code,
       email and user, which contain the generated reset code, user email
       address, and user hashref respectively. For example:

           sub reset_send_handler {
               my ($dsl, %params) = @_;
               my $user_email = $params{email};
               my $reset_code = $params{code};
               # Send email
               return $result;
           }

     welcome_text

       This can be used to generate the text for the welcome email, with
       this module sending the actual email itself. It must be a
       fully-qualified sub, as per the previous option. It will be passed
       the same parameters as welcome_send, and should return a hash with
       the same keys as password_reset_send_email.

   password_reset_send

     password_reset_send sends a user an email with a password reset link.
     Along with user_password, it allows a user to reset their password.

     The function must be called with the key username and a value that is
     the username. The username specified will be sent an email with a
     link to reset their password. Note that the provider being used must
     return the email address in the key email, which in the case of a
     database will normally require that column to exist in the user's
     table. The provider must be able to write values to the user in order
     for this function to store the generated code.

     If the username is not found, a value of 0 is returned. If the
     username is found and the email is sent successfully, 1 is returned.
     Otherwise undef is returned. Note: if you are displaying a success
     message, and you do not want people to be able to check the existance
     of a user on your system, then you should check for the return value
     being defined, not true. For example:

         say "Success" if defined password_reset_send username => username;

     Note that this still leaves the possibility of checking the existance
     of a user if the email send mechanism is failing.

     The realm can also be specified using the key realm:

         password_reset_send username => 'jsmith', realm => 'dbic'

     Default text for the email is automatically produced and emailed.
     This can be customized with one of 2 config parameters:

     password_reset_send_email

       This can be used to specify a subroutine that will be called to
       perform the entire message construction and email sending. Note
       that it must be a fully-qualified sub such as
       My::App:reset_send_handler. The subroutine will be passed the dsl
       as the first parameter, followed by a hash with the keys code and
       email, which contain the generated reset code and user email
       address respectively. For example:

           sub reset_send_handler {
               my ($dsl, %params) = @_;
               my $user_email = $params{email};
               my $reset_code = $params{code};
               # Send email
               return $result;
           }

     password_reset_text

       This can be used to generate the text for the email, with this
       module sending the actual email itself. It must be a
       fully-qualified sub, as per the previous option. It will be passed
       the same parameters as password_reset_send_email, and should return
       a hash with the following keys:

       subject

         The subject of the email message.

       from

         The sender of the email message (optional, can also be specified
         using mail_from.

       plain

         Plain text for the email. Either this, or html, or both should be
         returned.

       html

         HTML text for the email (optional, as per plain).

       Here is an example subroutine:

           sub reset_text_handler {
               my ($dsl, %params) = @_;
               return (
                   from    => '"My name" <[email protected]',
                   subject => 'the subject',
                   plain   => "reset here: $params{code}",
               );
           }

       # Example configuration

           Auth::Extensible:
               mailer:
                   module: Mail::Message # Module to send email with
                   options:              # Module options
                       via: sendmail
               mail_from: '"My app" <[email protected]>'
               password_reset_text: MyApp::reset_send

   user_password

     This provides various functions to check or reset a user's password,
     either from a reset code that was previously send by
     password_reset_send or directly by specifying a username and
     password. Functions that update a password rely on a provider that
     has write access to a user's details.

     By default, the user to update is the currently logged-in user. A
     specific user can be specified with the key username for a certain
     username, or code for a previously sent reset code. Using these
     parameters on their own will return the username if it is a valid
     request.

     If the above parameters are specified with the additional parameter
     new_password, then the password will be set to that value, assuming
     that it is a valid request.

     The realm can be optionally specified with the keyword realm.

     Examples:

     Check the logged-in user's password:

         user_password password => 'mysecret'

     Check a specific user's password:

         user_password username => 'jsmith', password => 'bigsecret'

     Check a previously sent reset code:

         user_password code => 'XXXX'

     Reset a password with a previously sent code:

         user_password code => 'XXXX', new_password => 'newsecret'

     Change a user's password (username optional)

         user_password username => 'jbloggs', password => 'old', new_password => 'secret'

     Force set a specific user's password, without checking existing
     password:

         user_password username => 'jbloggs', new_password => 'secret'

   logged_in_user_password_expired

     Returns true if the password of the currently logged in user has
     expired. To use this functionality, the provider must support the
     password_expired function, and must be configured accordingly. See
     the relevant provider for full configuration details.

     Note that this functionality does not prevent the user accessing any
     protected pages, even if the password has expired. This is so that
     the developer can still leave some protected routes available, such
     as a page to change the password. Therefore, if using this
     functionality, it is suggested that a check is done in the before
     hook:

         hook before => sub {
             if (logged_in_user_password_expired)
             {
                 # Redirect to user details page if password expired, but only if that
                 # is not the currently request page to prevent redirect loops
                 redirect '/password_update' unless request->uri eq '/password_update';
             }
         }

PASSWORD RESETS

   A variety of functionality is provided to make it easier to manage
   requests from users to reset their passwords. The keywords
   password_reset_send and user_password form the core of this
   functionality - see the documentation of these keywords for full
   details. This functionality can only be used with a provider that
   supports write access.

   When utilising this functionality, it is wise to only allow passwords
   to be reset with a POST request. This is because some email scanners
   "open" links before delivering the email to the end user. With only a
   single-use GET request, this will result in the link being "used" by
   the time it reaches the end user, thus rendering it invalid.

   Password reset functionality is also built-in to the default route
   handlers. To enable this, set the configuration value
   reset_password_handler to a true value (having already configured the
   mail handler, as per the keyword documentation above). Once this is
   done, the default login page will contain additional form controls to
   allow the user to enter their username and request a reset password
   link.

   By default, the default handlers will generate a random 8 character
   password using Session::Token. To use your own function, set
   password_generator in your configuration. See the "SAMPLE
   CONFIGURATION" for an example.

   If using login_page_handler to replace the default login page, you can
   still use the default password reset handlers. Add 2 controls to your
   form for submitting a password reset request: a text input called
   username_reset for the username, and submit_reset to submit the
   request. Your login_page_handler is then passed the following
   additional params:

   new_password

     Contains the new automatically-generated password, once the password
     reset has been performed successfully.

   reset_sent

     Is true when a password reset has been emailed to the user.

   password_code_valid

     Is true when a valid password reset code has been submitted with a
     GET request. In this case, the user should be given the chance to
     confirm with a POST request, with a form control called
     confirm_reset.

     For a full example, see the default handler in this module's code.

SAMPLE CONFIGURATION

   In your application's configuation file:

       session: simple
       plugins:
           Auth::Extensible:
               # Set to 1 if you want to disable the use of roles (0 is default)
               disable_roles: 0
               # After /login: If no return_url is given: land here ('/' is default)
               user_home_page: '/user'
               # After /logout: If no return_url is given: land here (no default)
               exit_page: '/'

               # Mailer options for reset password and welcome emails
               mailer:
                   module: Mail::Message # Email module to use
                   options:              # Options for module
                       via: sendmail     # Options passed to $msg->send
               mail_from: '"App name" <[email protected]>' # From email address

               # Set to true to enable password reset code in the default handlers
               reset_password_handler: 1
               password_generator: My::App::random_pw # Optional random password generator

               # Set to a true value to enable recording of successful last login times
               record_lastlogin: 1

               # Password reset functionality
               password_reset_send_email: My::App::reset_send # Customise sending sub
               password_reset_text: My::App::reset_text # Customise reset text

               # create_user options
               welcome_send: My::App::welcome_send # Customise welcome email sub
               welcome_text: My::App::welcome_text # Customise welcome email text

               # List each authentication realm, with the provider to use and the
               # provider-specific settings (see the documentation for the provider
               # you wish to use)
               realms:
                   realm_one:
                       provider: Database
                           db_connection_name: 'foo'

   Please note that you must have a session provider configured. The
   authentication framework requires sessions in order to track
   information about the currently logged in user. Please see
   Dancer2::Core::Session for information on how to configure session
   management within your application.

FUNCTIONS

auth_provider($dsl, $realm)

   Given a realm, returns a configured and ready to use instance of the
   provider specified by that realm's config.

AUTHOR

   David Precious, <davidp at preshweb.co.uk>

   Dancer2 port of Dancer::Plugin::Auth::Extensible by:

   Stefan Hornburg (Racke), <racke at linuxia.de>

BUGS / FEATURE REQUESTS

   This is an early version; there may still be bugs present or features
   missing.

   This is developed on GitHub - please feel free to raise issues or pull
   requests against the repo at:
   https://github.com/PerlDancer/Dancer2-Plugin-Auth-Extensible

ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS

   Valuable feedback on the early design of this module came from many
   people, including Matt S Trout (mst), David Golden (xdg), Damien
   Krotkine (dams), Daniel Perrett, and others.

   Configurable login/logout URLs added by Rene (hertell)

   Regex support for require_role by chenryn

   Support for user_roles looking in other realms by Colin Ewen (casao)

   LDAP provider added by Mark Meyer (ofosos)

   Documentation fix by Vince Willems.

   Henk van Oers (GH #8, #13).

   Andrew Beverly (GH #6, #7, #10, #17, #22, #24, #25, #26). This includes
   support for creating and editing users and manage user passwords.

   Gabor Szabo (GH #11, #16, #18).

   Evan Brown (GH #20, #32).

LICENSE AND COPYRIGHT

   Copyright 2012-13 David Precious.

   This program is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify it
   under the terms of either: the GNU General Public License as published
   by the Free Software Foundation; or the Artistic License.

   See http://dev.perl.org/licenses/ for more information.