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node.js - SocketIO + MySQL Authentication

I am trying to authenticate over a MySQL DB via socketIO. I have established the connection and can query results without an issue, but for some reason I cannot pass whether or not the user is authenticated into the connection part of socketio. The idea is my app has hosts and viewers. If connecting to the app without sending a password in the QueryString the app assumes its a viewer and accepts connection. If a password is sent, it is checked against the DB and accepts/rejects the connection. I want a variable to pass into the connection so I can use it inside of my apps events. Here's what I have so far but apparently the data.query['ishost'] isn't passing into the app.

sio.configure(function() {
    sio.set('authorization', function (data, accept) {
        UserID = data.query['username'];

        try {
            UserID = UserID.toLowerCase();
        } catch(err) {
            return accept("No WebBot Specified. ("+err+")", false);
        }

        // if not sending a password, skip authorization and connect as a viewer
        if (data.query['password'] === 'undefined')
        {
            return accept(null, true);
        }
        // if sending a password, attempt authorization and connect as a host
        else
        {
            client.query(
            'SELECT * FROM web_users WHERE username = "'+UserID+'" LIMIT 1',
              function selectCb(err, results, fields) {
                if (err) {
                  throw err;
                }
                // Found match, hash password and check against DB
                if (results.length != 0)
                {
                    // Passwords match, authenticate.
                    if (hex_md5(data.query['password']) == results[0]['password'])
                    {
                        data.query['ishost'] = true;
                        accept(null, true);
                    }
                    // Passwords don't match, do not authenticate
                    else
                    {
                        data.query['ishost'] = false;
                        return accept("Invalid Password", false);
                    }
                }
                // No match found, add to DB then authenticate
                else
                {
                    client.query(
                        'INSERT INTO web_users (username, password) VALUES ("'+UserID+'", "'+hex_md5(data.query['password'])+'")', null);

                    data.query['ishost'] = "1";
                    accept(null, true);
                }

                client.end();
              }
            );

            // Should never reach this
            return accept("Hacking Attempt", false);
        }

        // Definitely should never reach this
        return accept("Hacking Attempt", false);
    });
});

Writing to the data.query makes it accessible through handshakeData. But for some reason its not passing it through the app. Any help is appreciated, thank you.

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1 Answer

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by (71.8m points)

You're close, though I'd recommend setting a request header over setting a query string param. The data variable in your authorization function is handshake data that contains request header and cookie information you can use. Here's an example with setting a cookie:

On the server

io.configure(function() {
    io.set('authorization', function(handshake, callback) {
        var cookie, token, authPair, parts;

        // check for headers
        if (handshake.headers.cookie && 
            handshake.headers.cookie.split('=')[0]=='myapp') {

            // found request cookie, parse it
            cookie   = handshake.headers.cookie;
            token    = cookie.split(/s+/).pop() || '';
            authPair = new Buffer(token, 'base64').toString();
            parts    = authPair.split(/:/);

            if (parts.length>=1) {
                // assume username & pass provided, check against db
                // parts[0] is username, parts[1] is password
                // .... {db checks}, then if valid....
                callback(null, true);
            } else if(parts.length==1) {
                // assume only username was provided @ parts[0]
                callback(null,true);
            } else {
                // not what we were expecting
                callback(null, false);
            }
        }
        else {
            // auth failed
            callback(null, false);
        }
    });
});

On the client

Before you call socket.connect, set a cookie with your auth / user info:

function writeCookie(value, days) {
    var date, expires;

    // days indicates how long the user's session should last
    if (days) {
        date = new Date();
        date.setTime(date.getTime()+(days*24*60*60*1000));
        expires = "; expires="+date.toGMTString();
    } else {
        expires = "";
    }
    document.cookie = "myapp="+Base64.encode(value)+expires+"; path=/";
};

// for a 'viewer' user:
writeCookie('usernameHere', 1);

// for the 'host' user:
writeCookie('usernameHere:passwordHere', 1);

You'll need a Base64 library on the client side unless your browser supports btoa().

It's important to note that this isn't a good authentication structure. Passing user credentials straight in either query strings or header information is not secure. This method gets you closer to a more secure method, though. I'd recommend looking into an auth library like passport.js or everyauth. You can sub-in this code to utilize the session information those libraries store in running your checks.


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