Can anyone explain how http://user:pass@host.com authentication works? Does the browser send the Authorization
header with user:pass
being base-64 encoded?
I opened the Net console in Chrome developer tools and when I do request such as http://user:pass@stackoverflow.com
I do not see Authorization
header being added.
I am really curious to how the browser sends the password in case I use user:pass@
in front of a URL.
To inspect headers, you need to test against a server that requires authentication. The client will not send any Authorization
header until the server asks for it since the client won't know what authentication method the server requires (basic or digest).
HTTP authentication is done in two requests:
First, a request without any Authorization
header is sent.
The server then responds with a WWW-Authenticate
that tells the client how to authenticate. This includes a realm name and an authentication method (again, this is either basic or digest)
The client then sends a new request with an additional Authorization
header. In the case of basic authentication, this header is just user:pass
base64 encoded, just as you are saying:
Authorization: Basic dXNlcjpwYXNz
Now the password is visible in transit, unless you are using https. A better option is digest authentication, where the contents of both WWW-Authenticate
and Authorization
are best explained by the wikipedia article. :)