Cognito authentication made easy to protect your website with CloudFront and Lambda@Edge.
This Node.js package helps you verify that users making requests to a CloudFront distribution are authenticated using a Cognito user pool. It achieves that by looking at the cookies included in the request and, if the requester is not authenticated, it will redirect then to the user pool's login page.
This package allows you to easily parse and verify Cognito cookies in a Lambda@Edge function. If you want full control over the configuration of AWS resources (CloudFront, Cognito, Lambda@Edge...), this is the solution for you.
If you want to try it out easily or to quickstart a new project, we recommend having a look at the cognito-at-edge-federated-ui-sample repository. It allows you to configure and deploy a sample application which uses Cognito@Edge in a few CLI commands.
If you need more configuration options (e.g. bring your own user pool or CloudFront distribution), you may want to use this Serverless Application Repository application (GitHub) which provides a complete Auth@Edge solution. It does not use Cognito@Edge, but provides similar functionality.
The preferred way to install the AWS cognito-at-edge for Node.js is to use the npm package manager for Node.js. Simply type the following into a terminal window:
npm install cognito-at-edge
To use the package, you must create a Lambda@Edge function and associate it with the CloudFront distribution's viewer request events.
Within your Lambda@Edge function, you can import and use the Authenticator
class as shown here:
const { Authenticator } = require('cognito-at-edge');
const authenticator = new Authenticator({
// Replace these parameter values with those of your own environment
region: 'us-east-1', // user pool region
userPoolId: 'us-east-1_tyo1a1FHH', // user pool ID
userPoolAppId: '63gcbm2jmskokurt5ku9fhejc6', // user pool app client ID
userPoolDomain: 'domain.auth.us-east-1.amazoncognito.com', // user pool domain
});
exports.handler = async (request) => authenticator.handle(request);
For an explanation of the interactions between CloudFront, Cognito and Lambda@Edge, we recommend reading this AWS blog article which describe the required architecture to authenticate requests in CloudFront with Cognito.
params
Object Authenticator parameters:region
string Cognito UserPool region (eg:us-east-1
)userPoolId
string Cognito UserPool ID (eg:us-east-1_tyo1a1FHH
)userPoolAppId
string Cognito UserPool Application ID (eg:63gcbm2jmskokurt5ku9fhejc6
)userPoolAppSecret
string (Optional) Cognito UserPool Application Secret (eg:oh470px2i0uvy4i2ha6sju0vxe4ata9ol3m63ufhs2t8yytwjn7p
)userPoolDomain
string Cognito UserPool domain (eg:your-domain.auth.us-east-1.amazoncognito.com
)cookieExpirationDays
number (Optional) Number of day to set cookies expiration date, default to 365 days (eg:365
)disableCookieDomain
boolean (Optional) Sets domain attribute in cookies, defaults to false (eg:false
)logLevel
string (Optional) Logging level. Default:'silent'
. One of'fatal'
,'error'
,'warn'
,'info'
,'debug'
,'trace'
or'silent'
.
This is the class constructor.
request
Object Lambda@Edge request object- See AWS doc for details: Lambda@Edge events
Use it as your Lambda Handler. It will authenticate each query.
const authenticator = new Authenticator( ... );
exports.handler = async (request) => authenticator.handle(request);
The best way to interact with our team is through GitHub. You can open an issue and choose from one of our templates for bug reports, feature requests or question.
We welcome community contributions and pull requests. See CONTRIBUTING.md for information on how to set up a development environment and submit code.
This project is licensed under the Apache License, Version 2.0, see LICENSE.txt and NOTICE.txt for more information.