@auth/core
Experimental @auth/core
is under active development.
This is the main entry point to the Auth.js library.
Based on the Request and Response Web standard APIs. Primarily used to implement framework-specific packages, but it can also be used directly.
Installation
npm install @auth/core
Usage
import { Auth } from "@auth/core"
const request = new Request("https://example.com")
const response = await Auth(request, {...})
console.log(response instanceof Response) // true
Resources
AuthConfig
Configure the Auth method.
Example
import Auth, { type AuthConfig } from "@auth/core"
export const authConfig: AuthConfig = {...}
const request = new Request("https://example.com")
const response = await AuthHandler(request, authConfig)
See
Extended by
Properties
adapter?
optional adapter: Adapter;
You can use the adapter option to pass in your database adapter.
basePath?
optional basePath: string;
The base path of the Auth.js API endpoints.
Default
"/api/auth" in "next-auth"; "/auth" with all other frameworks
callbacks?
optional callbacks: {
jwt: (params) => Awaitable<null | JWT>;
redirect: (params) => Awaitable<string>;
session: (params) => Awaitable<Session | DefaultSession>;
signIn: (params) => Awaitable<string | boolean>;
};
Callbacks are asynchronous functions you can use to control what happens when an action is performed. Callbacks are extremely powerful, especially in scenarios involving JSON Web Tokens as they allow you to implement access controls without a database and to integrate with external databases or APIs.
jwt()?
optional jwt: (params) => Awaitable<null | JWT>;
This callback is called whenever a JSON Web Token is created (i.e. at sign in) or updated (i.e whenever a session is accessed in the client). Anything you return here will be saved in the JWT and forwarded to the session callback. There you can control what should be returned to the client. Anything else will be kept from your frontend. The JWT is encrypted by default via your AUTH_SECRET environment variable.
Parameters
Parameter | Type | Description |
---|---|---|
params | Object | - |
params.account ? | null | Account | Contains information about the provider that was used to sign in. Also includes TokenSet Note available when trigger is "signIn" or "signUp" |
params.isNewUser ? | boolean | Deprecated use trigger === "signUp" instead |
params.profile ? | Profile | The OAuth profile returned from your provider. (In case of OIDC it will be the decoded ID Token or /userinfo response) Note available when trigger is "signIn" . |
params.session ? | any | When using AuthConfig.session strategy: "jwt" , this is the datasent from the client via the useSession().update method.⚠ Note, you should validate this data before using it. |
params.token | JWT | When trigger is "signIn" or "signUp" , it will be a subset of JWT,name , email and image will be included.Otherwise, it will be the full JWT for subsequent calls. |
params.trigger ? | "signIn" | "signUp" | "update" | Check why was the jwt callback invoked. Possible reasons are: - user sign-in: First time the callback is invoked, user , profile and account will be present.- user sign-up: a user is created for the first time in the database (when AuthConfig.session.strategy is set to "database" )- update event: Triggered by the useSession().update method.In case of the latter, trigger will be undefined . |
params.user | User | AdapterUser | Either the result of the OAuthConfig.profile or the CredentialsConfig.authorize callback. Note available when trigger is "signIn" or "signUp" .Resources: - Credentials Provider - User database model |
Returns
redirect()?
optional redirect: (params) => Awaitable<string>;
This callback is called anytime the user is redirected to a callback URL (i.e. on signin or signout). By default only URLs on the same host as the origin are allowed. You can use this callback to customise that behaviour.
Example
callbacks: {
async redirect({ url, baseUrl }) {
// Allows relative callback URLs
if (url.startsWith("/")) return `${baseUrl}${url}`
// Allows callback URLs on the same origin
if (new URL(url).origin === baseUrl) return url
return baseUrl
}
}
Parameters
Parameter | Type | Description |
---|---|---|
params | Object | - |
params.baseUrl | string | Default base URL of site (can be used as fallback) |
params.url | string | URL provided as callback URL by the client |
Returns
Awaitable
<string
>
session()?
optional session: (params) => Awaitable<Session | DefaultSession>;
This callback is called whenever a session is checked.
(i.e. when invoking the /api/session
endpoint, using useSession
or getSession
).
The return value will be exposed to the client, so be careful what you return here!
If you want to make anything available to the client which you’ve added to the token
through the JWT callback, you have to explicitly return it here as well.
⚠ By default, only a subset (email, name, image) of the token is returned for increased security.
The token argument is only available when using the jwt session strategy, and the user argument is only available when using the database session strategy.
Example
callbacks: {
async session({ session, token, user }) {
// Send properties to the client, like an access_token from a provider.
session.accessToken = token.accessToken
return session
}
}
Parameters
Parameter | Type |
---|---|
params | { session : { user : AdapterUser ; } & AdapterSession ; user : AdapterUser ; } & { session : Session ; token : JWT ; } & { newSession : any ; trigger : "update" ; } |
Returns
Awaitable
<Session
| DefaultSession
>
signIn()?
optional signIn: (params) => Awaitable<string | boolean>;
Controls whether a user is allowed to sign in or not.
Returning true
continues the sign-in flow.
Returning false
or throwing an error will stop the sign-in flow and redirect the user to the error page.
Returning a string will redirect the user to the specified URL.
Unhandled errors will throw an AccessDenied
with the message set to the original error.
Example
callbacks: {
async signIn({ profile }) {
// Only allow sign in for users with email addresses ending with "yourdomain.com"
return profile?.email?.endsWith("@yourdomain.com")
}
}
Parameters
Parameter | Type | Description |
---|---|---|
params | Object | - |
params.account ? | null | Account | - |
params.credentials ? | Record <string , CredentialInput > | If Credentials provider is used, it contains the user credentials |
params.email ? | Object | If Email provider is used, on the first call, it contains averificationRequest: true property to indicate it is being triggered in the verification request flow.When the callback is invoked after a user has clicked on a sign in link, this property will not be present. You can check for the verificationRequest propertyto avoid sending emails to addresses or domains on a blocklist or to only explicitly generate them for email address in an allow list. |
params.email.verificationRequest ? | boolean | - |
params.profile ? | Profile | If OAuth provider is used, it contains the full OAuth profile returned by your provider. |
params.user | User | AdapterUser | - |
Returns
Awaitable
<string
| boolean
>
cookies?
optional cookies: Partial<CookiesOptions>;
You can override the default cookie names and options for any of the cookies used by Auth.js. You can specify one or more cookies with custom properties and missing options will use the default values defined by Auth.js. If you use this feature, you will likely want to create conditional behavior to support setting different cookies policies in development and production builds, as you will be opting out of the built-in dynamic policy.
- ⚠ This is an advanced option. Advanced options are passed the same way as basic options, but may have complex implications or side effects. You should try to avoid using advanced options unless you are very comfortable using them.
Default
{}
debug?
optional debug: boolean;
Set debug to true to enable debug messages for authentication and database operations.
- ⚠ If you added a custom AuthConfig.logger, this setting is ignored.
Default
false
events?
optional events: {
createUser: (message) => Awaitable<void>;
linkAccount: (message) => Awaitable<void>;
session: (message) => Awaitable<void>;
signIn: (message) => Awaitable<void>;
signOut: (message) => Awaitable<void>;
updateUser: (message) => Awaitable<void>;
};
Events are asynchronous functions that do not return a response, they are useful for audit logging. You can specify a handler for any of these events below - e.g. for debugging or to create an audit log. The content of the message object varies depending on the flow (e.g. OAuth or Email authentication flow, JWT or database sessions, etc), but typically contains a user object and/or contents of the JSON Web Token and other information relevant to the event.
Default
{}
createUser()?
optional createUser: (message) => Awaitable<void>;
Parameters
Parameter | Type |
---|---|
message | Object |
message.user | User |
Returns
Awaitable
<void
>
linkAccount()?
optional linkAccount: (message) => Awaitable<void>;
Parameters
Parameter | Type |
---|---|
message | Object |
message.account | Account |
message.profile | User | AdapterUser |
message.user | User | AdapterUser |
Returns
Awaitable
<void
>
session()?
optional session: (message) => Awaitable<void>;
The message object will contain one of these depending on if you use JWT or database persisted sessions:
token
: The JWT for this session.session
: The session object from your adapter.
Parameters
Parameter | Type |
---|---|
message | Object |
message.session | Session |
message.token | JWT |
Returns
Awaitable
<void
>
signIn()?
optional signIn: (message) => Awaitable<void>;
If using a credentials
type auth, the user is the raw response from your
credential provider.
For other providers, you’ll get the User object from your adapter, the account,
and an indicator if the user was new to your Adapter.
Parameters
Parameter | Type |
---|---|
message | Object |
message.account ? | null | Account |
message.isNewUser ? | boolean |
message.profile ? | Profile |
message.user | User |
Returns
Awaitable
<void
>
signOut()?
optional signOut: (message) => Awaitable<void>;
The message object will contain one of these depending on if you use JWT or database persisted sessions:
token
: The JWT for this session.session
: The session object from your adapter that is being ended.
Parameters
Parameter | Type |
---|---|
message | { session : undefined | null | void | AdapterSession ; } | { token : null | JWT ; } |
Returns
Awaitable
<void
>
updateUser()?
optional updateUser: (message) => Awaitable<void>;
Parameters
Parameter | Type |
---|---|
message | Object |
message.user | User |
Returns
Awaitable
<void
>
experimental?
optional experimental: {
enableWebAuthn: boolean;
};
Use this option to enable experimental features. When enabled, it will print a warning message to the console.
Note
Experimental features are not guaranteed to be stable and may change or be removed without notice. Please use with caution.
Default
{}
enableWebAuthn?
optional enableWebAuthn: boolean;
Enable WebAuthn support.
Default
false
jwt?
optional jwt: Partial<JWTOptions>;
JSON Web Tokens are enabled by default if you have not specified an AuthConfig.adapter. JSON Web Tokens are encrypted (JWE) by default. We recommend you keep this behaviour.
logger?
optional logger: Partial<LoggerInstance>;
Override any of the logger levels (undefined
levels will use the built-in logger),
and intercept logs in NextAuth. You can use this option to send NextAuth logs to a third-party logging service.
Example
// /auth.ts
import log from "logging-service"
export const { handlers, auth, signIn, signOut } = NextAuth({
logger: {
error(code, ...message) {
log.error(code, message)
},
warn(code, ...message) {
log.warn(code, message)
},
debug(code, ...message) {
log.debug(code, message)
}
}
})
- ⚠ When set, the AuthConfig.debug option is ignored
Default
console
pages?
optional pages: Partial<PagesOptions>;
Specify URLs to be used if you want to create custom sign in, sign out and error pages. Pages specified will override the corresponding built-in page.
Default
{}
Example
pages: {
signIn: '/auth/signin',
signOut: '/auth/signout',
error: '/auth/error',
verifyRequest: '/auth/verify-request',
newUser: '/auth/new-user'
}
providers
providers: Provider[];
List of authentication providers for signing in (e.g. Google, Facebook, Twitter, GitHub, Email, etc) in any order. This can be one of the built-in providers or an object with a custom provider.
Default
[]
raw?
optional raw: typeof raw;
redirectProxyUrl?
optional redirectProxyUrl: string;
When set, during an OAuth sign-in flow,
the redirect_uri
of the authorization request
will be set based on this value.
This is useful if your OAuth Provider only supports a single redirect_uri
or you want to use OAuth on preview URLs (like Vercel), where you don’t know the final deployment URL beforehand.
The url needs to include the full path up to where Auth.js is initialized.
Note
This will auto-enable the state
OAuth2Config.checks on the provider.
Example
"https://authjs.example.com/api/auth"
You can also override this individually for each provider.
Example
GitHub({
...
redirectProxyUrl: "https://github.example.com/api/auth"
})
Default
AUTH_REDIRECT_PROXY_URL
environment variable
See also: Guide: Securing a Preview Deployment
secret?
optional secret: string | string[];
A random string used to hash tokens, sign cookies and generate cryptographic keys.
To generate a random string, you can use the Auth.js CLI: npx auth secret
Note
You can also pass an array of secrets, in which case the first secret that successfully decrypts the JWT will be used. This is useful for rotating secrets without invalidating existing sessions. The newer secret should be added to the start of the array, which will be used for all new sessions.
session?
optional session: {
generateSessionToken: () => string;
maxAge: number;
strategy: "jwt" | "database";
updateAge: number;
};
Configure your session like if you want to use JWT or a database, how long until an idle session expires, or to throttle write operations in case you are using a database.
generateSessionToken()?
optional generateSessionToken: () => string;
Generate a custom session token for database-based sessions. By default, a random UUID or string is generated depending on the Node.js version. However, you can specify your own custom string (such as CUID) to be used.
Default
randomUUID
or randomBytes.toHex
depending on the Node.js version
Returns
string
maxAge?
optional maxAge: number;
Relative time from now in seconds when to expire the session
Default
2592000 // 30 days
strategy?
optional strategy: "jwt" | "database";
Choose how you want to save the user session.
The default is "jwt"
, an encrypted JWT (JWE) in the session cookie.
If you use an adapter
however, we default it to "database"
instead.
You can still force a JWT session by explicitly defining "jwt"
.
When using "database"
, the session cookie will only contain a sessionToken
value,
which is used to look up the session in the database.
Documentation | Adapter | About JSON Web Tokens
updateAge?
optional updateAge: number;
How often the session should be updated in seconds.
If set to 0
, session is updated every time.
Default
86400 // 1 day
skipCSRFCheck?
optional skipCSRFCheck: typeof skipCSRFCheck;
theme?
optional theme: Theme;
Changes the theme of built-in AuthConfig.pages.
trustHost?
optional trustHost: boolean;
Auth.js relies on the incoming request’s host
header to function correctly. For this reason this property needs to be set to true
.
Make sure that your deployment platform sets the host
header safely.
Official Auth.js-based libraries will attempt to set this value automatically for some deployment platforms (eg.: Vercel) that are known to set the host
header safely.
useSecureCookies?
optional useSecureCookies: boolean;
When set to true
then all cookies set by NextAuth.js will only be accessible from HTTPS URLs.
This option defaults to false
on URLs that start with http://
(e.g. http://localhost:3000) for developer convenience.
You can manually set this option to false
to disable this security feature and allow cookies
to be accessible from non-secured URLs (this is not recommended).
- ⚠ This is an advanced option. Advanced options are passed the same way as basic options, but may have complex implications or side effects. You should try to avoid using advanced options unless you are very comfortable using them.
The default is false
HTTP and true
for HTTPS sites.
customFetch
const customFetch: typeof customFetch;
This option allows you to override the default fetch
function used by the provider
to make requests to the provider’s OAuth endpoints directly.
Used incorrectly, it can have security implications.
It can be used to support corporate proxies, custom fetch libraries, cache discovery endpoints, add mocks for testing, logging, set custom headers/params for non-spec compliant providers, etc.
Example
import { Auth, customFetch } from "@auth/core"
import GitHub from "@auth/core/providers/github"
const dispatcher = new ProxyAgent("my.proxy.server")
function proxy(...args: Parameters<typeof fetch>): ReturnType<typeof fetch> {
return undici(args[0], { ...(args[1] ?? {}), dispatcher })
}
const response = await Auth(request, {
providers: [GitHub({ [customFetch]: proxy })]
})
See
- https://undici.nodejs.org/#/docs/api/ProxyAgent?id=example-basic-proxy-request-with-local-agent-dispatcher
- https://authjs.dev/guides/corporate-proxy
raw
const raw: typeof raw;
This option is intended for framework authors.
Auth.js returns a web standard Response by default, but if you are implementing a framework you might want to get access to the raw internal response by passing this value to AuthConfig.raw.
skipCSRFCheck
const skipCSRFCheck: typeof skipCSRFCheck;
This option is intended for framework authors.
Auth.js comes with built-in CSRF protection, but if you are implementing a framework that is already protected against CSRF attacks, you can skip this check by passing this value to AuthConfig.skipCSRFCheck.
Auth()
Auth(request, config)
Auth(request, config): Promise<ResponseInternal>
Core functionality provided by Auth.js.
Receives a standard Request and returns a Response.
Parameters
Parameter | Type |
---|---|
request | Request |
config | AuthConfig & { raw : typeof raw ; } |
Returns
Example
import { Auth } from "@auth/core"
const request = new Request("https://example.com")
const response = await Auth(request, {
providers: [Google],
secret: "...",
trustHost: true,
})
See
Auth(request, config)
Auth(request, config): Promise<Response>
Core functionality provided by Auth.js.
Receives a standard Request and returns a Response.
Parameters
Parameter | Type |
---|---|
request | Request |
config | Omit <AuthConfig , "raw" > |
Returns
Example
import { Auth } from "@auth/core"
const request = new Request("https://example.com")
const response = await Auth(request, {
providers: [Google],
secret: "...",
trustHost: true,
})
See
createActionURL()
createActionURL(
action,
protocol,
headers,
envObject,
config): URL
Parameters
Parameter | Type |
---|---|
action | AuthAction |
protocol | string |
headers | Headers |
envObject | any |
config | Pick <AuthConfig , "logger" | "basePath" > |
Returns
isAuthAction()
isAuthAction(action): action is AuthAction
Parameters
Parameter | Type |
---|---|
action | string |
Returns
action is AuthAction
setEnvDefaults()
setEnvDefaults(
envObject,
config,
suppressBasePathWarning): void
Set default env variables on the config object
Parameters
Parameter | Type | Default value |
---|---|---|
envObject | any | undefined |
config | AuthConfig | undefined |
suppressBasePathWarning | boolean | false |
Returns
void