blog.notmyidea.org/content/code/2014-07-31-hawk.md
Alexis Métaireau 9df3b183b6 Enhanced UI & UX; Added New ISBN Plugin.
- Added the ability to display book cover for the category "Lectures" if ISBN cover is available.
- Moved author's name into a small tag for better hierarchy and readability.
- Implemented a feature to indicate link sizes depending on the number of articles associated with a given tag.
- Implemented a mini footer element displaying an RSS feed icon.
- Improved category display using description dictionary.
- Added a new plugin "isbn_downloader" to fetch ISBN information when needed.
- Included the count of articles for each category.
- Implemented changes for better layout and readability of tags and categories.
- Adjusted the layout of the webpage, improving the overall look of the page.
- Included "requests" in the requirements.txt for supplanting dependencies required by the new plugin and/or features.
2023-09-29 18:30:09 +02:00

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# What's Hawk and how to use it?
At Mozilla, we recently had to implement [the Hawk authentication
scheme](https://github.com/hueniverse/hawk) for a number of projects,
and we came up creating two libraries to ease integration into pyramid
and node.js apps.
But maybe you don't know Hawk.
Hawk is a relatively new technology, crafted by one of the original
[OAuth](https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/OAuth) specification authors, that
intends to replace the 2-legged OAuth authentication scheme using a
simpler approach.
It is an authentication scheme for HTTP, built around [HMAC
digests](https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hmac) of requests and responses.
Every authenticated client request has an Authorization header
containing a MAC (Message Authentication Code) and some additional
metadata, then each server response to authenticated requests contains a
Server-Authorization header that authenticates the response, so the
client is sure it comes from the right server.
## Exchange of the hawk id and hawk key
To sign the requests, a client needs to retrieve a token id and a token
key from the server.
Hawk itself does not define how these credentials should be exchanged
between the server and the client. The excellent team behind [Firefox
Accounts](http://accounts.firefox.com) put together a scheme to do that,
which acts like the following:
<div class="note">
<div class="admonition-title">
Note
</div>
All this derivation crazyness might seem a bit complicated, but don't
worry, we put together some libraries that takes care of that for you
automatically.
If you are not interested into these details, you can directly jump to
the next section to see how to use the libraries.
</div>
When your server application needs to send you the credentials, it will
return it inside a specific Hawk-Session-Token header. This token can be
derived to split this string in two values (hawk id and hawk key) that
you will use to sign your next requests.
In order to get the hawk credentials, you'll need to:
First, do an [HKDF derivation](http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/HKDF) on the
given session token. You'll need to use the following
parameters:
key_material = HKDF(hawk_session, "", 'identity.mozilla.com/picl/v1/sessionToken', 32*2)
<div class="note">
<div class="admonition-title">
Note
</div>
The `identity.mozilla.com/picl/v1/sessionToken` is a reference to this
way of deriving the credentials, not an actual URL.
</div>
Then, the key material you'll get out of the HKDF need to be separated
into two parts, the first 32 hex caracters are the hawk id, and the next
32 ones are the hawk key.
Credentials:
```
javascript
credentials = {
'id': keyMaterial[0:32],
'key': keyMaterial[32:64],
'algorithm': 'sha256'
}
```
## Httpie
To showcase APIs in the documentation, I like to use
[httpie](https://github.com/jakubroztocil/httpie), a curl-replacement
with a nicer API, built around [the python requests
library](http://python-requests.org).
Luckily, HTTPie allows you to plug different authentication schemes for
it, so [I wrote a
wrapper](https://github.com/mozilla-services/requests-hawk) around
[mohawk](https://github.com/kumar303/mohawk) to add hawk support to the
requests lib.
Doing hawk requests in your terminal is now as simple as:
$ pip install requests-hawk httpie
$ http GET localhost:5000/registration --auth-type=hawk --auth='id:key'
In addition, it will help you to craft requests using the requests
library:
```python
import requests
from requests_hawk import HawkAuth
hawk_auth = HawkAuth(
credentials={'id': id, 'key': key, 'algorithm': 'sha256'})
requests.post("/url", auth=hawk_auth)
```
Alternatively, if you don't have the token id and key, you can pass the
hawk session token I talked about earlier and the lib will take care of
the derivation for you:
```python
hawk_auth = HawkAuth(
hawk_session=resp.headers['hawk-session-token'],
server_url=self.server_url
)
requests.post("/url", auth=hawk_auth)
```
## Integrate with python pyramid apps
If you're writing pyramid applications, you'll be happy to learn that
[Ryan Kelly](https://www.rfk.id.au/blog/) put together a library that
makes Hawk work as an Authentication provider for them. I'm chocked how
simple it is to use it.
Here is a demo of how we implemented it for Daybed:
```python
from pyramid_hawkauth import HawkAuthenticationPolicy
policy = HawkAuthenticationPolicy(decode_hawk_id=get_hawk_id)
config.set_authentication_policy(authn_policy)
```
The get\_hawk\_id function is a function that takes a request and a
tokenid and returns a tuple of (token\_id, token\_key).
How you want to store the tokens and retrieve them is up to you. The
default implementation (e.g. if you don't pass a decode\_hawk\_id
function) decodes the key from the token itself, using a master secret
on the server (so you don't need to store anything).
## Integrate with node.js Express apps
We had to implement Hawk authentication for two node.js projects and
finally came up factorizing everything in a library for express, named
[express-hawkauth](https://github.com/mozilla-services/express-hawkauth).
In order to plug it in your application, you'll need to use it as a
middleware:
```
javascript
var express = require("express");
var hawk = require("express-hawkauth");
app = express();
var hawkMiddleware = hawk.getMiddleware({
hawkOptions: {},
getSession: function(tokenId, cb) {
// A function which pass to the cb the key and algorithm for the
// given token id. First argument of the callback is a potential
// error.
cb(null, {key: "key", algorithm: "sha256"});
},
createSession: function(id, key, cb) {
// A function which stores a session for the given id and key.
// Argument returned is a potential error.
cb(null);
},
setUser: function(req, res, tokenId, cb) {
// A function that uses req and res, the hawkId when they're known so
// that it can tweak it. For instance, you can store the tokenId as the
// user.
req.user = tokenId;
}
});
app.get("/hawk-enabled-endpoint", hawkMiddleware);
```
If you pass the createSession parameter, all non-authenticated requests
will create a new hawk session and return it with the response, in the
Hawk-Session-Token header.
If you want to only check a valid hawk session exists (without creating
a new one), just create a middleware which doesn't have any
createSession parameter defined.
## Some reference implementations
As a reference, here is how we're using the libraries I'm talking about,
in case that helps you to integrate with your projects.
- The Mozilla Loop server [uses hawk as authentication once you're
logged in with a valid BrowserID
assertion](https://github.com/mozilla-services/loop-server/blob/master/loop/index.js#L70-L133);
request, to keep a session between client and server;
- [I recently added hawk support on the Daybed
project](https://github.com/spiral-project/daybed/commit/f178b4e43015fa077430798dcd3d0886c7611caf)
(that's a pyramid / cornice) app.
- It's also interesting to note that Kumar put together [hawkrest, for
the django rest
framework](http://hawkrest.readthedocs.org/en/latest/)