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Mastering Node.js Web Development

You're reading from  Mastering Node.js Web Development

Product type Book
Published in Jun 2024
Publisher Packt
ISBN-13 9781804615072
Pages 778 pages
Edition 1st Edition
Languages
Author (1):
Adam Freeman Adam Freeman
Profile icon Adam Freeman
Toc

Table of Contents (26) Chapters close

1. Putting Node.js in Context
2. Getting Ready 3. Working with the Node.js Tools 4. JavaScript and TypeScript Primer 5. Understanding Node.js Concurrency 6. Handling HTTP Requests 7. Using Node.js Streams 8. Using Bundles and Content Security 9. Unit Testing and Debugging 10. Node.js in Detail
11. Creating the Example Project 12. Using HTML Templates 13. Handling Form Data 14. Using Databases 15. Using Sessions 16. Creating RESTful Web Services 17. Authenticating and Authorizing Requests 18. SportsStore
19. SportsStore: A Real Application 20. SportsStore: Navigation and Cart 21. SportsStore: Orders and Validation 22. SportsStore: Authentication 23. SportsStore: Administration 24. SportsStore: Deployment 25. Other Books You May Enjoy
26. Index

Authenticating web service requests

Applications can’t rely on forms to authenticate web services because clients may not be browsers and cannot be relied on to render HTML.

Web service clients can use cookies – because they are a standard part of HTTP – but session cookies can often cause problems because the session expiry is often set to suit round-trip clients, where every user interaction refreshes the cookie. Web service clients only send requests when they need data, and the frequency of requests can be so low that sessions expire too quickly to be useful.

Applications can address the lack of HTML support by providing an API to present credentials as JSON data. Instead of a cookie, the authentication API produces a bearer token, which is a string that can be included in requests, much like a cookie, but with its own lifecycle and without the dependency on sessions.

The most common form of bearer token is the JSON Web Token (JWT) standard,...

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