Simple, yet effective HTTP session management and identification package
- Effortless session management:
- Initialization.
- Request authentication.
- Retrieval of all sessions.
- Revokation of the current session.
- Revokation of all other sessions.
- Revokation of all sessions.
- Optionally identifiable sessions (IP address, OS, browser).
- Authentication via middleware.
- Fully customizable, but with sane defaults.
- Lightweight.
- Straightforward API.
- Allows custom session stores.
go get github.com/swithek/sessionup
The first thing you will need, in order to start creating and validating your sessions, is a Manager:
store := memstore.New(time.Minute * 5)
manager := sessionup.NewManager(store)
Out-of-the-box sessionup's Manager instance comes with recommended OWASP configuration options already set, but if you feel the need to customize the behaviour and the cookie values the Manager will use, you can easily provide your own options:
manager := sessionup.NewManager(store, sessionup.Secure(false), sessionup.ExpiresIn(time.Hour * 24))
During registration, login or whenever you want to create a fresh session, you have to call the Init
method and provide
a key by which the sessions will be grouped during revokation and retrieval. The key can be anything that defines the owner
of the session well: ID, email, username, etc.
func login(w http.ResponseWriter, r *http.Request) {
userID := ...
if err := manager.Init(w, r, userID); err != nil {
// handle error
}
// success
}
You can store additional information with your session as well.
func login(w http.ResponseWriter, r *http.Request) {
userID := ...
err := manager.Init(w, r, userID, sessionup.MetaEntry("permission", "write"), sessionup.MetaEntry("age", "111"))
if err != nil {
// handle error
}
// success
}
Public
/ Auth
middlewares check whether the request has a cookie with a valid session ID and add the session to the request's
context. Public
, contrary to Auth
, does not call the Manager's rejection function (also customizable), thus allowing the wrapped
handler to execute successfully.
http.Handle("/", manager.Public(publicHandler))
http.Handle("/private", manager.Auth(privateHandler))
There's a FetchAll
method, should you want to retrieve all sessions under the same key as the current context session:
func retrieveAll(w http.ResponseWriter, r *http.Request) {
sessions, err := manager.FetchAll(r.Context())
if err != nil {
// handle error
}
// success
}
When the time comes for session termination, use Revoke
method:
func logout(w http.ResponseWriter, r *http.Request) {
if err := manager.Revoke(r.Context(), w); err != nil {
// handle error
}
// success
}
What if you want to revoke all sessions under the same key as the current context session? Use RevokeAll
:
func revokeAll(w http.ResponseWriter, r *http.Request) {
if err := manager.RevokeAll(r.Context(), w); err != nil {
// handle error
}
// success
}
... and if you want to revoke all sessions under the same key as the current context session excluding the
current context session, use RevokeOther
:
func revokeOther(w http.ResponseWriter, r *http.Request) {
if err := manager.RevokeOther(r.Context()); err != nil {
// handle error
}
// success
}
On each Init
method call, a new random session ID will be generated. Since only the generated ID and no sensitive
data is being stored in the cookie, there is no need to encrypt anything. If you think that the generation functionality
lacks randomness or has other issues, pass your custom ID generation function as an option when creating a new Manager.
- ./memstore/ - in-memory store implementation, already included in this package.
- github.com/swithek/sessionup-redisstore - Redis store implementation.
- github.com/swithek/sessionup-pgstore - PostgreSQL store implementation.
- github.com/Hyzual/sessionup-sqlitestore - SQLite store implementation.
- github.com/davseby/sessionup-sqlitestore - SQLite store implementation.
- github.com/davseby/sessionup-boltstore - Bolt store implementation.
Custom stores need to implement the Store interface to be used by the Manager.
sessionup offers server-only session storing and management, since the functionality to revoke/retrieve session not in the incoming request is not possible with cookie stores.
You can see sessionup in action by trying out the demo in cmd/example/