Package com.yubico.webauthn
The main entry point is the RelyingParty
class. It provides
methods for generating inputs to the navigator.credentials.create()
and
navigator.credentials.get()
methods and for processing the return values from those same
methods. In order to do this, the RelyingParty
needs an instance of
the CredentialRepository
interface to use for looking up the
credential IDs and public keys registered to each user, among other things.
What this library does not do
This library has no concept of accounts, sessions, permissions or identity federation - it only deals with executing the Web Authentication authentication mechanism. Sessions, account management and other higher level concepts can make use of this authentication mechanism, but the authentication mechanism alone does not make a security system.
Usage overview
At its core, the library provides four operations:
- Initiate a registration operation given a user and some settings for the credential to be created
- Finish a registration operation given the initiation request and the authenticator response
- Initiate an authentication operation given a username
- Finish an authentication operation given the initiation request and the authenticator response
The "start" methods return request objects containing the parameters to be used in the call to
navigator.credentials.create()
or navigator.credentials.get()
, and the
"finish" methods expect a pair of such a request object and the response object returned from the
browser. The library itself is stateless; once constructed, a RelyingParty
instance never modifies its fields, and the "finish" methods
return plain object representations of the results. These methods perform all the verification
logic specified by Web Authentication, but it is your responsibility as the library user to store
pending requests and act upon the returned results - including enforcing policies and updating
databases.
Data classes and builders
Logic classes as well as data classes in this library are all immutable, and provide builders for their construction. Most
builders have required parameters, which is encoded in the type system - the build()
method will be made available only once all required parameters have been set. The data classes
also each have a toBuilder()
method which can be used to create a modified copy of
the instance.
Instantiating the library
The main entry point to the library is the RelyingParty
class,
which can be instantiated via its builder
.
Refer to the RelyingParty.RelyingPartyBuilder
documentation for
descriptions of the parameters. Of particular note is the credentialRepository
parameter, which takes an application-specific database adapter to use for
looking up users' credentials. You'll need to implement the CredentialRepository
interface with your own database access logic.
Like all other classes in the library, RelyingParty
is stateless
and therefore thread safe.
Registration
To initiate a registration operation, construct a StartRegistrationOptions
instance using its builder
and pass that into RelyingParty.startRegistration(StartRegistrationOptions)
. The only required
parameter is a UserIdentity
describing the user for which to
create a credential. One noteworthy part of UserIdentity
is the
id
field, containing the user handle for the
user. This should be a stable, unique identifier for the user - equivalent to a username, in most
cases. However, due to privacy
considerations it is recommended to set the user handle to a random byte array rather than,
say, the username encoded in UTF-8.
The startRegistration
method returns a PublicKeyCredentialCreationOptions
which can be serialized to JSON and
passed as the publicKey
argument to navigator.credentials.create()
. You
can use the toBuilder()
method to make any modifications you need. You should store this in temporary
storage so that it can later be passed as an argument to RelyingParty.finishRegistration(FinishRegistrationOptions)
.
After receiving the response from the client, construct a PublicKeyCredential
<AuthenticatorAttestationResponse
, ClientRegistrationExtensionOutputs
> from the response and wrap that
in a FinishRegistrationOptions
along with the PublicKeyCredentialCreationOptions
used to initiate the request. Pass
that as the argument to RelyingParty.finishRegistration(FinishRegistrationOptions)
, which will
return a RegistrationResult
if successful and throw an exception if
not. Regardless of whether it succeeds, you should remove the PublicKeyCredentialCreationOptions
from the pending requests storage to
prevent retries.
Finally, use the RegistrationResult
to update any database(s) and
take other actions depending on your application's needs. In particular:
- Store the
keyId
andpublicKeyCose
as a new credential for the user. TheCredentialRepository
will need to look these up for authentication. - If you care about authenticator attestation, check that the
attestationTrusted
field satisfies your attestation policy. For this you will likely need to configure theattestationTrustSource
setting on yourRelyingParty
instance. You may also want to consult some external data source to verify the authenticity of theattestation object
. - If you care about authenticator attestation, it is recommended to also store the raw
attestation object
as part of the credential. This enables you to retroactively inspect credential attestations in response to policy changes and/or compromised authenticators.
Authentication
Authentication works much like registration, except less complex because of the fewer parameters and the absence of authenticator attestation complications.
To initiate an authentication operation, call RelyingParty.startAssertion(StartAssertionOptions)
. The main parameter you
need to set here is the username
of the user to authenticate, but even this parameter is optional. If the username is
not set, then the allowCredentials
parameter will not be set. This which means the user must use a client-side-resident
credential to authenticate; also known as "first-factor authentication". This use case has
both advantages and disadvantages; see the Web Authentication specification for an extended
discussion of this.
The startAssertion
method returns an AssertionRequest
containing the
username, if any, and a PublicKeyCredentialRequestOptions
instance which can be serialized to JSON and passed as the publicKey
argument to
navigator.credentials.get()
. Again, store the AssertionRequest
in temporary storage so it can be passed as an argument to
RelyingParty.finishAssertion(com.yubico.webauthn.FinishAssertionOptions)
.
After receiving the response from the client, construct a PublicKeyCredential
<AuthenticatorAssertionResponse
, ClientAssertionExtensionOutputs
> from the response and wrap that in
a FinishAssertionOptions
along with the AssertionRequest
used to initiate the request. Pass that as the argument to
RelyingParty.finishAssertion(com.yubico.webauthn.FinishAssertionOptions)
,
which will return an AssertionResult
if successful and throw an
exception if not. Regardless of whether it succeeds, you should remove the AssertionRequest
from the pending requests storage to prevent retries.
Finally, use the AssertionResult
to update any database(s) and
take other actions depending on your application's needs. In particular:
- Use the
username
and/oruserHandle
results to initiate a user session. - Update the stored signature count for the credential (identified by the
credentialId
result) to equal the value returned in thesignatureCount
result.
-
Interface Summary Interface Description CredentialRepository An abstraction of the database lookups needed by this library.