User Differentiation

Knowing which user is logging into Apigility is not straight forward as you may guess. The Basic and Digest authorization mechanisms rely on an .htpasswd or .htdigest file to store user credentials. This is not how the majority of web sites work.

For this document, we will assume a User table inside a database that contains username and password fields. This is not a viable data store for Basic and Digest authentication, but is sufficient for a Password Grant Type using OAuth2. However, using the Password Grant Type is highly frowned upon because it gives the site which builds the login form access to the user credentials, which directly contradicts the purpose of OAuth2.

We need to authenticate a user before proceeding with an Implicit or Authorization Code grant type in order to assign the generated Access Token to that authenticated user for future API calls beyond OAuth2. Here is where traditional Authentication is useful. We need to secure the ZF\OAuth2 resource prefix to authenticate via an old-fashioned login page and this is where zfcampus/zf-mvc-auth comes in.

As mentioned in another chapter, zf-mvc-auth can force a configured Authorization adapter to a given API. The mechanism zf-mvc-auth uses to accomplish this is via a map of resource prefixes to Authentication Types. When you create a custom Authentication adapter, you define the authentication type it supports. Let's begin with the configuration:

return [
    'zf-mvc-auth' => [
        'authentication' => [
            'map' => [
                'DbApi\\V1'  => 'oauth2',
                'ZF\\OAuth2' => 'session',
            ],
            'adapters' => [
                'oauth2' => [
                    'adapter' => 'ZF\MvcAuth\Authentication\OAuth2Adapter',
                    'storage' => [
                        'adapter'  => 'pdo',
                        'dsn'      => 'mysql:host=localhost;dbname=oauth2',
                        'username' => 'username',
                        'password' => 'password',
                        'options'  => [
                            1002 => 'SET NAMES utf8', // PDO::MYSQL_ATTR_INIT_COMMAND
                        ],
                    ],
                ],
                'session' => [
                    'adapter' => 'Application\\Authentication\\Adapter\\SessionAdapter',
                ],
            ],
        ],
    ],
];

With this configuration, we now have two adapters, and each maps to the section of the application we want them to secure. The oauth2 adapter will be ignored since we're dedicated to finding a user to assign an Access Token to.

Creating an Authentication Adapter

Adapters must implement ZF\MvcAuth\Authentication\AdapterInterface This interface includes

  • public function provides() - This function will return the Authentication Type(s) this adapter supports. For our example it will be session.

  • public function matches($type) - Attempt to match a requested authentication type against what the adapter provides.

  • public function getTypeFromRequest(Request $request) - This method allows more generic matching of a request to a given type.

  • public function preAuth(Request $request, Response $response) - A helper function that runs prior to authenticate.

  • public function authenticate(Request $request, Response $response, MvcAuthEvent $mvcAuthEvent) - Perform an authentication attempt.

For our examples, we will use a route /login where any unauthenticated user who does not have their credentials stored in the session and is trying to access a resource under ZF\OAuth2 will be routed to. This route will show the login page, let the user post to it, and, if successful, push the userid into the session where our adapter will look for it. When a user successfully authenticates with this adapter, they will be assigned an Application\Identity\UserIdentity.

namespace Application\Authentication\Adapter;

use ZF\MvcAuth\Authentication\AdapterInterface;
use Zend\Http\Request;
use Zend\Http\Response;
use ZF\MvcAuth\Identity\IdentityInterface;
use ZF\MvcAuth\MvcAuthEvent;
use Zend\Session\Container;
use Application\Identity;

final class SessionAdapter implements AdapterInterface
{
    public function provides()
    {
        return [
            'session',
        ];
    }

    public function matches($type)
    {
        return $type == 'session';
    }

    public function getTypeFromRequest(Request $request)
    {
        return false;
    }

    public function preAuth(Request $request, Response $response)
    {
    }

    public function authenticate(Request $request, Response $response, MvcAuthEvent $mvcAuthEvent)
    {
        $session = new Container('webauth');

        if ($session->auth) {
            $userIdentity = new Identity\UserIdentity($session->auth);
            $userIdentity->setName('user');

            return $userIdentity;
        }

        // Force login for all other routes
        $mvcAuthEvent->stopPropagation();
        $session->redirect = $request->getUriString();
        $response->getHeaders()->addHeaderLine('Location', '/login');
        $response->setStatusCode(302);
        $response->sendHeaders();

        return $response;
    }
}

To use this authentication adapter, you must assign it to the DefaultAuthenticationListener:

namespace Application;

use ZF\MvcAuth\Authentication\DefaultAuthenticationListener;
use Zend\EventManager\EventInterface;

class Module
{
    public function onBootstrap(EventInterface $e)
    {
        $app       = $e->getApplication();
        $container = $app->getServiceManager();

        // Add Authentication Adapter for session
        $defaultAuthenticationListener = $container->get(DefaultAuthenticationListener::class);
        $defaultAuthenticationListener->attach(new Authentication\AuthenticationAdapter());
    }
}

The Application\Identity\UserIdentity requires a getId() function or public $id property to return the user identifier of the authenticated user. This will be used by zfcampus/zf-oauth2 to assign the user an AccessToken, AuthorizationCode, and RefreshToken using the ZF\OAuth2\Provider\UserId server manager alias.

The Basic and Digest authentication can assign the user because they read the .htpasswd file. For OAuth2, you must fetch the user using the ZF\OAuth2\Provider\UserId service alias. You may create your own provider for a custom method of fetching an id.

This is the default:

    'service_manager' => [
        'aliases' => [
            'ZF\OAuth2\Provider\UserId' => 'ZF\OAuth2\Provider\UserId\AuthenticationService',
        ],
    ],

With this alias in place, the OAuth2 server will store the user identifier and assign it to the Identity during future requests. The getId() or $id property of the provider of the identity will be used to assign to OAuth2. When an OAuth2 resource is requested with a Bearer token, the user will be retrieved from the database and assigned to the AuthenticatedIdentity.

Here is an example UserIdentity:

namespace Application\Identity;

use ZF\MvcAuth\Identity\IdentityInterface;
use Zend\Permissions\Rbac\AbstractRole as AbstractRbacRole;

final class UserIdentity extends AbstractRbacRole implements IdentityInterface
{
    private $user;
    private $name;

    public function __construct(array $user)
    {
        $this->user = $user;
    }

    public function getAuthenticationIdentity()
    {
        return $this->user;
    }

    public function getId()
    {
        return $this->user['id'];
    }

    public function getUser()
    {
        return $this->getAuthenticationIdentity();
    }

    public function getRoleId()
    {
        return $this->name;
    }

    // Alias for roleId
    public function setName($name)
    {
        $this->name = $name;
    }
}

Authorization

Even with our adapter in place, it still will not secure the ZF\OAuth2 routes because they are by default secured with the ZF\MvcAuth\Identity\GuestIdentitiy. So we need to add Authorization to the application:

First we'll extend the onBootstrap we just created:

    public function onBootstrap(EventInterface $e)
    {
        $app = $e->getApplication();
        $container = $app->getServiceManager();

        // Add Authentication Adapter for session
        $defaultAuthenticationListener = $container->get(DefaultAuthenticationListener::class);
        $defaultAuthenticationListener->attach(new Authentication\AuthenticationAdapter());

        // Add Authorization
        $eventManager = $app->getEventManager();
        $eventManager->attach(
            MvcAuthEvent::EVENT_AUTHORIZATION,
            new Authorization\AuthorizationListener(),
            100
        );
    }

And we need to create the AuthorizationListener we just configured:

namespace Application\Authorization;

use Application\Controller\IndexController;
use ZF\MvcAuth\MvcAuthEvent;
use ZF\OAuth2\Controller\Auth;

final class AuthorizationListener
{
    public function __invoke(MvcAuthEvent $mvcAuthEvent)
    {
        $authorization = $mvcAuthEvent->getAuthorizationService();

        // Deny from all
        $authorization->deny();

        $authorization->addResource(IndexController::class . '::index');
        $authorization->allow('guest', IndexController::class . '::index');

        $authorization->addResource(Auth::class . '::authorize');
        $authorization->allow('user', Auth::class . '::authorize');
    }
}

Now when a request is made for an implicit grant type through ZF\OAuth2, our new Authentication Adapter will see the user is not authenticated, store the user's requested url, and redirect them to /login where, after successfully logging in, they will be directed back to the oauth2 request. The user will be granted access to the ZF\OAuth2\Controller\Auth::authorize resource, and they will be assigned an Access Token.