WordPress JWT (JSON Web Token) Authentication allows you to do REST API authentication via token. It's a simple, non-complex, and easy to use.
This plugin probably is the most convenient way to do JWT Authentication in WordPress. Download it from WordPress plugin page.
- Support & question: WordPress support forum
- Reporting plugin's bug: GitHub issues tracker
- Discord channel also available.
Minimum PHP version: 7.2
Most shared hosts have disabled the HTTP Authorization Header by default.
To enable this option you'll need to edit your .htaccess file by adding the following:
RewriteEngine on
RewriteCond %{HTTP:Authorization} ^(.*)
RewriteRule ^(.*) - [E=HTTP_AUTHORIZATION:%1]
To enable this option you'll need to edit your .htaccess file by adding the following (see this issue):
SetEnvIf Authorization "(.*)" HTTP_AUTHORIZATION=$1
- From WordPress administrative area, go to Plugins -> Add New
- Search for JWT Auth
- Install it
- Easily configure it (see Configuration below)
- and then activate it
- Download the plugin from WordPress plugins page
- Upload to your wp-content directory
- Easily configure it (see Configuration below)
- Activate it from Plugins menu in admin area
The JWT needs a secret key to sign the token. It must be unique and never be revealed.
To add the secret key, edit your wp-config.php file and add a new constant called JWT_AUTH_SECRET_KEY.
define('JWT_AUTH_SECRET_KEY', 'your-top-secret-key');
You can use a string from here https://api.wordpress.org/secret-key/1.1/salt/
This plugin has the option to enable CORs support.
To enable the CORs Support edit your wp-config.php file and add a new constant called JWT_AUTH_CORS_ENABLE
define('JWT_AUTH_CORS_ENABLE', true);
Finally activate the plugin within the plugin dashboard.
When the plugin is activated, a new namespace is added.
/jwt-auth/v1
Also, three new endpoints are added to this namespace.
Endpoint | HTTP Verb |
---|---|
/wp-json/jwt-auth/v1/token | POST |
/wp-json/jwt-auth/v1/token/validate | POST |
/wp-json/jwt-auth/v1/token/refresh | POST |
/wp-json/jwt-auth/v1/token
To generate token, submit a POST request to this endpoint. With username
and password
as the parameters.
It will validates the user credentials, and returns success response including a token if the authentication is correct or returns an error response if the authentication is failed.
You can use the optional parameter device
with the device identifier to let user manage the device access in your profile. If this parameter is empty, it is ignored.
{
"success": true,
"statusCode": 200,
"code": "jwt_auth_valid_credential",
"message": "Credential is valid",
"data": {
"token": "eyJ0eXAiOiJKV1QiLCJhbGciOiJIUzI1NiJ9.eyJpc3MiOiJodHRwczpcL1wvcG9pbnRzLmNvdXZlZS5jby5pZCIsImlhdCI6MTU4ODQ5OTE0OSwibmJmIjoxNTg4NDk5MTQ5LCJleHAiOjE1ODkxMDM5NDksImRhdGEiOnsidXNlciI6eyJpZCI6MX19fQ.w3pf5PslhviHohmiGF-JlPZV00XWE9c2MfvBK7Su9Fw",
"id": 1,
"email": "[email protected]",
"nicename": "contactjavas",
"firstName": "Bagus Javas",
"lastName": "Heruyanto",
"displayName": "contactjavas"
}
}
{
"success": false,
"statusCode": 403,
"code": "invalid_username",
"message": "Unknown username. Try again or check your email address.",
"data": []
}
Once you get the token, you must store it somewhere in your application. It can be:
- using cookie
- or using localstorage
- or using a wrapper like localForage or PouchDB
- or using local database like SQLite or Hive
- or your choice based on app you develop ;)
Then you should pass this token as Bearer Authentication header to every API call. The header format is:
Authorization: Bearer your-generated-token
and here's an example:
"Authorization: Bearer eyJ0eXAiOiJKV1QiLCJhbGciOiJIUzI1NiJ9.eyJpc3MiOiJodHRwczpcL1wvcG9pbnRzLmNvdXZlZS5jby5pZCIsImlhdCI6MTU4ODQ5OTE0OSwibmJmIjoxNTg4NDk5MTQ5LCJleHAiOjE1ODkxMDM5NDksImRhdGEiOnsidXNlciI6eyJpZCI6MX19fQ.w3pf5PslhviHohmiGF-JlPZV00XWE9c2MfvBK7Su9Fw";
The jwt-auth will intercept every call to the server and will look for the authorization header, if the authorization header is present, it will try to decode the token and will set the user according with the data stored in it.
If the token is valid, the API call flow will continue as always.
You likely don't need to validate the token your self. The plugin handle it for you like explained above.
But if you want to test or validate the token manually, then send a POST request to this endpoint (don't forget to set your Bearer Authorization header):
/wp-json/jwt-auth/v1/token/validate
{
"success": true,
"statusCode": 200,
"code": "jwt_auth_valid_token",
"message": "Token is valid",
"data": []
}
For security reasons, third-party applications that are integrating with your authentication server will not store the user's username and password. Instead they will store the refresh token in a user-specific storage that is only accessible for the user. The refresh token can be used to re-authenticate as the same user and generate a new access token.
When authenticating with username
and password
as the parameters to /wp-json/jwt-auth/v1/token
, a refresh token is sent as a cookie in the response.
/wp-json/jwt-auth/v1/token
To generate new access token using the refresh token, submit a POST request to the token endpoint together with the refresh_token
cookie.
Use the optional parameter device
with the device identifier to associate the token with that device.
If the refresh token is valid, then you receive a new access token in the response.
By default, each access token expires after 10 minutes.
/wp-json/jwt-auth/v1/token/refresh
To generate new refresh token using the refresh token, submit a POST request to the token refresh endpoint together with the refresh_token
cookie.
Use the optional parameter device
with the device identifier to associate the refresh token with that device.
If the refresh token is valid, then you receive a new refresh token as a cookie in the response.
By default, each refresh token expires after 30 days.
Whenever you are authenticating afresh or refreshing the refresh token, only the last issued refresh token remains valid. All previously issued refresh tokens can no longer be used.
This means that a refresh token cannot be shared. To allow multiple devices to authenticate in parallel without losing access after another device re-authenticated, use the parameter device
with the device identifier to associate the refresh token only with that device.
curl -F device="abc-def" -F username=myuser -F password=mypass /wp-json/jwt-auth/v1/token
curl -F device="abc-def" -b "refresh_token=123.abcdef..." /wp-json/jwt-auth/v1/token
curl -F device="abc-def" -b "refresh_token=123.abcdef..." /wp-json/jwt-auth/v1/token/refresh
If the token is invalid an error will be returned. Here are some samples of errors:
No Secret Key
{
"success": false,
"statusCode": 500,
"code": "jwt_auth_bad_config",
"message": "JWT is not configured properly.",
"data": []
}
No HTTP_AUTHORIZATION Header
{
"success": false,
"statusCode": 401,
"code": "jwt_auth_no_auth_header",
"message": "Authorization header not found.",
"data": []
}
Bad Iss
{
"success": false,
"statusCode": 401,
"code": "jwt_auth_bad_iss",
"message": "The iss do not match with this server.",
"data": []
}
Invalid Signature
{
"success": false,
"statusCode": 401,
"code": "jwt_auth_invalid_token",
"message": "Signature verification failed",
"data": []
}
Incomplete Payload
{
"success": false,
"statusCode": 401,
"code": "jwt_auth_bad_request",
"message": "User ID not found in the token.",
"data": []
}
User Not Found
{
"success": false,
"statusCode": 401,
"code": "jwt_auth_user_not_found",
"message": "User doesn't exist",
"data": []
}
Expired Token
{
"success": false,
"statusCode": 401,
"code": "jwt_auth_invalid_token",
"message": "Expired token",
"data": []
}
Obsolete Token
{
"success": false,
"statusCode": 401,
"code": "jwt_auth_obsolete_token",
"message": "Token is obsolete",
"data": []
}
JWT Auth is developer friendly and has some filters available to override the default settings.
The jwt_auth_cors_allow_headers
allows you to modify the available headers when the CORs support is enabled.
Default Value:
'X-Requested-With, Content-Type, Accept, Origin, Authorization'
Usage example:
/**
* Change the allowed CORS headers.
*
* @param string $headers The allowed headers.
* @return string The allowed headers.
*/
add_filter(
'jwt_auth_cors_allow_headers',
function ( $headers ) {
// Modify the headers here.
return $headers;
}
);
The jwt_auth_authorization_header allows you to modify the Authorization header key used to validating a token. Useful when the server already uses the 'Authorization' key for another auth method.
Default value:
'HTTP_AUTHORIZATION'
Usage example:
/**
* Modify the response of Authorization header key.
*
* @param string $header The Authorization header key.
* .
* @return string The Authorization header key.
*/
add_filter(
'jwt_auth_authorization_header',
function ( $header ) {
// Modify the response here.
return $header;
},
10,
1
);
The jwt_auth_iss allows you to change the iss value before the payload is encoded to be a token.
Default Value:
get_bloginfo( 'url' )
Usage example:
/**
* Change the token issuer.
*
* @param string $iss The token issuer.
* @return string The token issuer.
*/
add_filter(
'jwt_auth_iss',
function ( $iss ) {
// Modify the "iss" here.
return $iss;
}
);
The jwt_auth_not_before
allows you to change the nbf value before the payload is encoded to be a token
Default Value:
// Creation time.
time()
Usage example:
/**
* Change the token's nbf value.
*
* @param int $not_before The default "nbf" value in timestamp.
* @param int $issued_at The "iat" value in timestamp.
*
* @return int The "nbf" value.
*/
add_filter(
'jwt_auth_not_before',
function ( $not_before, $issued_at ) {
// Modify the "not_before" here.
return $not_before;
},
10,
2
);
The jwt_auth_expire
allows you to change the exp value before the payload is encoded to be a token
Default Value:
time() + (MINUTE_IN_SECONDS * 10)
Usage example:
/**
* Change the token's expire value.
*
* @param int $expire The default "exp" value in timestamp.
* @param int $issued_at The "iat" value in timestamp.
*
* @return int The "nbf" value.
*/
add_filter(
'jwt_auth_expire',
function ( $expire, $issued_at ) {
// Modify the "expire" here.
return $expire;
},
10,
2
);
The jwt_auth_refresh_expire
filter hook allows you to change the expiration date of the refresh token.
Default Value:
time() + (DAY_IN_SECONDS * 30)
Usage example:
/**
* Change the refresh token's expiration time.
*
* @param int $expire The default expiration timestamp.
* @param int $issued_at The current time.
*
* @return int The custom refresh token expiration timestamp.
*/
add_filter(
'jwt_auth_refresh_expire',
function ( $expire, $issued_at ) {
// Modify the "expire" here.
return $expire;
},
10,
2
);
The jwt_auth_alg
allows you to change the supported signing algorithm for your application.
Default Value:
'HS256'
Usage example:
/**
* Change the token's signing algorithm.
*
* @param string $alg The default supported signing algorithm.
* @return string The supported signing algorithm.
*/
add_filter(
'jwt_auth_alg',
function ( $alg ) {
// Change the signing algorithm here.
return $alg;
}
);
The jwt_auth_payload
allows you to modify all the payload / token data before being encoded and signed.
Default value:
<?php
$token = array(
'iss' => get_bloginfo('url'),
'iat' => $issued_at,
'nbf' => $not_before,
'exp' => $expire,
'data' => array(
'user' => array(
'id' => $user->ID,
)
)
);
Usage example:
/**
* Modify the payload/ token's data before being encoded & signed.
*
* @param array $payload The default payload
* @param WP_User $user The authenticated user.
* .
* @return array The payload/ token's data.
*/
add_filter(
'jwt_auth_payload',
function ( $payload, $user ) {
// Modify the payload here.
return $payload;
},
10,
2
);
The jwt_auth_valid_credential_response
allows you to modify the valid credential response when generating a token.
Default value:
<?php
$response = array(
'success' => true,
'statusCode' => 200,
'code' => 'jwt_auth_valid_credential',
'message' => __( 'Credential is valid', 'jwt-auth' ),
'data' => array(
'token' => $token,
'id' => $user->ID,
'email' => $user->user_email,
'nicename' => $user->user_nicename,
'firstName' => $user->first_name,
'lastName' => $user->last_name,
'displayName' => $user->display_name,
),
);
Usage example:
/**
* Modify the response of valid credential.
*
* @param array $response The default valid credential response.
* @param WP_User $user The authenticated user.
* .
* @return array The valid credential response.
*/
add_filter(
'jwt_auth_valid_credential_response',
function ( $response, $user ) {
// Modify the response here.
return $response;
},
10,
2
);
The jwt_auth_valid_token_response allows you to modify the valid token response when validating a token.
Default value:
<?php
$response = array(
'success' => true,
'statusCode' => 200,
'code' => 'jwt_auth_valid_token',
'message' => __( 'Token is valid', 'jwt-auth' ),
'data' => array(),
);
Usage example:
/**
* Modify the response of valid token.
*
* @param array $response The default valid token response.
* @param WP_User $user The authenticated user.
* @param string $token The raw token.
* @param array $payload The token data.
* .
* @return array The valid token response.
*/
add_filter(
'jwt_auth_valid_token_response',
function ( $response, $user, $token, $payload ) {
// Modify the response here.
return $response;
},
10,
4
);
The jwt_auth_extra_token_check allows you to add extra criterias to validate the token. If empty, has no problem to proceed. Use empty value to bypass the filter. Any other value will block the token access and returns response with code jwt_auth_obsolete_token
.
Default value:
''
Usage example:
/**
* Modify the validation of token. No-empty values block token validation.
*
* @param array $response An empty value ''.
* @param WP_User $user The authenticated user.
* @param string $token The raw token.
* @param array $payload The token data.
* .
* @return array The valid token response.
*/
add_filter(
'jwt_auth_extra_token_check',
function ( $response, $user, $token, $payload ) {
// Modify the response here.
return $response;
},
10,
4
);
There are end-to-end tests you can run to confirm that the API works correctly:
$ URL=https://example.local USERNAME=myuser PASSWORD=mypass composer run test
> ./vendor/bin/phpunit
PHPUnit 9.5.13 by Sebastian Bergmann and contributors.
............. 13 / 13 (100%)
Time: 00:12.377, Memory: 6.00 MB
OK (13 tests, 110 assertions)
- PHP-JWT from firebase
- JWT Authentication for WP REST API. This JWT-Auth plugin was a "copy-then-modify" of JWT Authentication for WP REST API plugin.
- Devices utility by pesseba
- The awesome maintainers and contributors
You can help us to keep this plugin alive and continue to maintain it by:
- Giving 5 Stars review here
- Answering GitHub issues or questions on Discord.
- Testing / participating to the submitted PRs
Thank You!