EDIT:
Read the discussion about the bug at: https://github.com/tymondesigns/jwt-auth/issues/83
MY ORIGINAL QUESTION:
I'm implement with jwt-auth my protected resources that require an authenticated user with bellow code:
Route::group(['middleware' => ['before' => 'jwt.auth', 'after' => 'jwt.refresh']], function() {
// Protected routes
});
When user 'sign in' on API an Authorization token is created, and sent on response Authorization header to client application that call the resource. So, client applications when intercept a Authorization token on header of any response, set a variable/session/whatever with this token value, to send again to API on next request.
The first request for a protected resource after 'login' works fine, but the next client application request to API with a refreshed token, gives the following error (API mount all responses in json format):
{
"error": "token_invalid"
}
What can be happen with refreshed tokens? My refresh token implementation (set as a after middleware) is wrong? Or isn't necessary to manually refresh all Authorization token that come with client apps requests?
UPDATE:
I update the jwt-auth RefreshToken middleware as propose here, but the token_invalid
persist.
BUG:
I guess that I found what happens. Note that in the refresh method, old token is added to blacklist cache case enabled:
// Tymon\JWTAuth\JWTManager
public function refresh(Token $token)
{
$payload = $this->decode($token);
if ($this->blacklistEnabled) {
// invalidate old token
$this->blacklist->add($payload);
}
// return the new token
return $this->encode(
$this->payloadFactory->setRefreshFlow()->make([
'sub' => $payload['sub'],
'iat' => $payload['iat']
])
);
}
And note that in add to blacklist method the key is the jti param from old token payload:
// Tymon\JWTAuth\Blacklist
public function add(Payload $payload)
{
$exp = Utils::timestamp($payload['exp']);
// there is no need to add the token to the blacklist
// if the token has already expired
if ($exp->isPast()) {
return false;
}
// add a minute to abate potential overlap
$minutes = $exp->diffInMinutes(Utils::now()->subMinute());
$this->storage->add($payload['jti'], [], $minutes);
return true;
}
Thus, when has on blacklist method is called, the old token jti param is the same that the new, so the new token is in blacklist:
// Tymon\JWTAuth\Blacklist
public function has(Payload $payload)
{
return $this->storage->has($payload['jti']);
}
If you don't need the blacklist functionality just set to false on jwt.php configuration file. But I can't say if it expose to some security vulnerability.
Read the discussion about the bug at: https://github.com/tymondesigns/jwt-auth/issues/83