A package that makes using the OAuth2 PKCE flow easier.
This package is implemented according to the specification: rfc7636.
Since version 1.3.0 this package is available to be used from a CDN:
https://cdn.jsdelivr.net/npm/js-pkce/dist/browser.js
Explicit version example:
https://cdn.jsdelivr.net/npm/js-pkce@1.5/dist/browser.js
npm i js-pkce
Create a new instance of js-pkce with all of the details needed.
import PKCE from 'js-pkce';
const pkce = new PKCE({
client_id: 'myclientid',
redirect_uri: 'http://localhost:8080/auth',
authorization_endpoint: 'https://authserver.com/oauth/authorize',
token_endpoint: 'https://authserver.com/oauth/token',
revoke_endpoint: 'https://authserver.com/oauth/revoke', // optional
requested_scopes: '*',
storage: sessionStorage // optional
});
Typically you just need to go to the authorization url to start the process. This example is something that might work in a SPA.
window.location.replace(pkce.authorizeUrl());
You may add additional query parameters to the authorize url by using an optional second parameter:
const additionalParams = {test_param: 'testing'};
window.location.replace(pkce.authorizeUrl(additionalParams));
After logging in with the authorization server, you will be redirected to the value in
the redirect_uri
parameter you set when creating the instance.
Again, this is an example that might work for a SPA.
When you get back here, you need to exchange the code for a token.
const url = window.location.href;
pkce.exchangeForAccessToken(url).then((resp) => {
const token = resp.access_token;
// Do stuff with the access token.
});
As with the authorizeUrl method, an optional second parameter may be passed to
the exchangeForAccessToken
method to send additional parameters to the request:
const url = window.location.href;
const additionalParams = {test_param: 'testing'};
pkce.exchangeForAccessToken(url, additionalParams).then((resp) => {
const token = resp.access_token;
// Do stuff with the access token.
});
Get a new access token using a refresh token
pkce.refreshAccessToken(refreshToken).then((resp) => {
const accessToken = resp.access_token;
const refreshToken = resp.refresh_token;
// Do stuff with the access & refresh token.
});
Revoke a token. Note that the specification for this functionality in the context of PKCE is not very well defined. This may not work for all authorization servers.
You may optionally pass a token_type_hint
as the second parameter.
pkce.revokeToken(tokenToExpire, 'access_token')
When using httpOnly cookies, there is some additional configuration required. The method
enableCorsCredentials
can be called to allow sending credentials.
pkce.enableCorsCredentials(true);
By default, this package will use sessionStorage
to persist the pkce_state
. On (mostly) mobile
devices there's a higher chance users are returning in a different browser tab. E.g. they kick off
in a WebView & get redirected to a new tab. The sessionStorage
will be empty there.
In this case it you can opt in to use localStorage
instead of sessionStorage
:
import PKCE from 'js-pkce';
const pkce = new PKCE({
// ...
storage: localStorage, // any Storage object, sessionStorage (default) or localStorage
});