The Auth0 Next.js SDK is a library for implementing user authentication in Next.js applications.
📚 Documentation - 🚀 Getting Started- 💻 API Reference - 💬 Feedback
- QuickStart- our guide for adding Auth0 to your Next.js app.
- FAQs - Frequently asked questions about nextjs-auth0.
- Examples - lots of examples for your different use cases.
- Security - Some important security notices that you should check.
- Architecture - Architectural overview of the SDK.
- Testing - Some help with testing your nextjs-auth0 application.
- Deploying - How we deploy our example app to Vercel.
- Docs Site - explore our docs site and learn more about Auth0.
Using npm:
npm install @auth0/nextjs-auth0
This library requires Node.js 16 LTS and newer LTS versions.
Create a Regular Web Application in the Auth0 Dashboard.
If you're using an existing application, verify that you have configured the following settings in your Regular Web Application:
- Click on the "Settings" tab of your application's page.
- Scroll down and click on the "Show Advanced Settings" link.
- Under "Advanced Settings", click on the "OAuth" tab.
- Ensure that "JsonWebToken Signature Algorithm" is set to
RS256
and that "OIDC Conformant" is enabled.
Next, configure the following URLs for your application under the "Application URIs" section of the "Settings" page:
- Allowed Callback URLs:
http://localhost:3000/api/auth/callback
- Allowed Logout URLs:
http://localhost:3000/
Take note of the Client ID, Client Secret, and Domain values under the "Basic Information" section. You'll need these values in the next step.
You need to allow your Next.js application to communicate properly with Auth0. You can do so by creating a .env.local
file under your root project directory that defines the necessary Auth0 configuration values as follows:
# A long, secret value used to encrypt the session cookie
AUTH0_SECRET='LONG_RANDOM_VALUE'
# The base url of your application
AUTH0_BASE_URL='http://localhost:3000'
# The url of your Auth0 tenant domain
AUTH0_ISSUER_BASE_URL='https://YOUR_AUTH0_DOMAIN.auth0.com'
# Your Auth0 application's Client ID
AUTH0_CLIENT_ID='YOUR_AUTH0_CLIENT_ID'
# Your Auth0 application's Client Secret
AUTH0_CLIENT_SECRET='YOUR_AUTH0_CLIENT_SECRET'
You can execute the following command to generate a suitable string for the AUTH0_SECRET
value:
node -e "console.log(crypto.randomBytes(32).toString('hex'))"
You can see a full list of Auth0 configuration options in the "Configuration properties" section of the "Module config" document.
For more details about loading environment variables in Next.js, visit the "Environment Variables" document.
Add handleAuth()
to your app, which creates the following route handlers under the hood that perform different parts of the authentication flow:
/api/auth/login
: Your Next.js application redirects users to your identity provider for them to log in (you can optionally pass areturnTo
parameter to return to a custom relative URL after login, for example/api/auth/login?returnTo=/profile
)./api/auth/callback
: Your identity provider redirects users to this route after they successfully log in./api/auth/logout
: Your Next.js application logs out the user./api/auth/me
: You can fetch user profile information in JSON format.
Continue setup depending on your router:
Create a catch-all, dynamic API route handler under the /pages/api
directory:
- Create an
auth
directory under the/pages/api/
directory. - Create a
[auth0].js
file under the newly createdauth
directory.
The path to your dynamic API route file would be /pages/api/auth/[auth0].js
. Populate that file as follows:
import { handleAuth } from '@auth0/nextjs-auth0';
export default handleAuth();
Wrap your pages/_app.js
component with the UserProvider
component:
// pages/_app.js
import React from 'react';
import { UserProvider } from '@auth0/nextjs-auth0/client';
export default function App({ Component, pageProps }) {
return (
<UserProvider>
<Component {...pageProps} />
</UserProvider>
);
}
You can now determine if a user is authenticated by checking that the user
object returned by the useUser()
hook is defined. You can also log in or log out your users from the frontend layer of your Next.js application by redirecting them to the appropriate automatically-generated route:
// pages/index.js
import { useUser } from '@auth0/nextjs-auth0/client';
export default function Index() {
const { user, error, isLoading } = useUser();
if (isLoading) return <div>Loading...</div>;
if (error) return <div>{error.message}</div>;
if (user) {
return (
<div>
Welcome {user.name}! <a href="/api/auth/logout">Logout</a>
</div>
);
}
return <a href="/api/auth/login">Login</a>;
}
Next linting rules might suggest using the
Link
component instead of an anchor tag. TheLink
component is meant to perform client-side transitions between pages. As the links point to an API route and not to a page, you should keep them as anchor tags.
Check out Using this SDK with React Server Components before proceeding.
Create a catch-all, dynamic API route handler under the /app/api
directory (strictly speaking you do not need to put API routes under /api
but we maintain the convention for simplicity):
- Create an
api
directory under the/app/
directory. - Create an
auth
directory under the newly created/app/api/
directory. - Create a
[auth0]
directory under the newly createdauth
directory. - Create a
route.js
file under the newly created[auth0]
directory.
The path to your dynamic API route file will be /app/api/auth/[auth0]/route.js
. Populate that file as follows:
import { handleAuth } from '@auth0/nextjs-auth0';
export const GET = handleAuth();
Wrap your app/layout.js
component with the UserProvider
component:
// app/layout.js
import React from 'react';
import { UserProvider } from '@auth0/nextjs-auth0/client';
export default function App({ children }) {
return (
<UserProvider>
<body>{children}</body>
</UserProvider>
);
}
You can now determine if a user is authenticated by checking that the user
object returned by the useUser()
hook is defined. You can also log in or log out your users from the frontend layer of your Next.js application by redirecting them to the appropriate automatically-generated route:
// pages/index.js
'use client';
import { useUser } from '@auth0/nextjs-auth0/client';
export default function Index() {
const { user, error, isLoading } = useUser();
if (isLoading) return <div>Loading...</div>;
if (error) return <div>{error.message}</div>;
if (user) {
return (
<div>
Welcome {user.name}! <a href="/api/auth/logout">Logout</a>
</div>
);
}
return <a href="/api/auth/login">Login</a>;
}
Next linting rules might suggest using the
Link
component instead of an anchor tag. TheLink
component is meant to perform client-side transitions between pages. As the links point to an API route and not to a page, you should keep them as anchor tags.
Server Components in the App Directory (including Pages and Layouts) cannot write to a cookie.
If you rely solely on Server Components to read and update your session you should be aware of the following:
- If you have a rolling session (the default for this SDK), the expiry will not be updated when the user visits your site. So the session may expire sooner than you would expect (you can use
withMiddlewareAuthRequired
to mitigate this). - If you refresh the access token, the new access token will not be persisted in the session. So subsequent attempts to get an access token will always result in refreshing the expired access token in the session.
- If you make any other updates to the session, they will not be persisted between requests.
The cookie can be written from middleware, route handlers and server actions.
For other comprehensive examples, see the EXAMPLES.md document.
import * from @auth0/nextjs-auth0
import * from @auth0/nextjs-auth0/edge
- Configuration Options and Environment variables
- initAuth0
- handleAuth
- handleLogin
- handleCallback
- handleLogout
- handleProfile
- withApiAuthRequired
- withPageAuthRequired
- getSession
- updateSession
- getAccessToken
- withMiddlewareAuthRequired (Edge only)
import * from @auth0/nextjs-auth0/client
import * from @auth0/nextjs-auth0/testing
Visit the auto-generated API Docs for more details
All cookies will be set to HttpOnly, SameSite=Lax
and will be set to Secure
if the application's AUTH0_BASE_URL
is https
.
The HttpOnly
setting will make sure that client-side JavaScript is unable to access the cookie to reduce the attack surface of XSS attacks.
The SameSite=Lax
setting will help mitigate CSRF attacks. Learn more about SameSite by reading the "Upcoming Browser Behavior Changes: What Developers Need to Know" blog post.
Many hosting providers will offer to cache your content at the edge in order to serve data to your users as fast as possible. For example Vercel will cache your content on the Vercel Edge Network for all static content and Serverless Functions if you provide the necessary caching headers on your response.
It's generally a bad idea to cache any response that requires authentication, even if the response's content appears safe to cache there may be other data in the response that isn't.
This SDK offers a rolling session by default, which means that any response that reads the session will have a Set-Cookie
header to update the cookie's expiry. Vercel and potentially other hosting providers include the Set-Cookie
header in the cached response, so even if you think the response's content can be cached publicly, the responses Set-Cookie
header cannot.
Check your hosting provider's caching rules, but in general you should never cache responses that either require authentication or even touch the session to check authentication (eg when using withApiAuthRequired
, withPageAuthRequired
or even just getSession
or getAccessToken
).
Errors that come from Auth0 in the redirect_uri
callback may contain reflected user input via the OpenID Connect error
and error_description
query parameter. Because of this, we do some basic escaping on the message
, error
and error_description
properties of the IdentityProviderError
.
But, if you write your own error handler, you should not render the error message
, or error
and error_description
properties without using a templating engine that will properly escape them for other HTML contexts first.
With Next.js you can deploy a Next.js application under a sub-path of a domain using Base Path and serve internationalized (i18n) routes using Internationalized Routing.
If you use these features the urls of your application will change and so the urls to the nextjs-auth0 routes will change. To accommodate this there are various places in the SDK that you can customise the url.
For example, if basePath: '/foo'
you should prepend this to the loginUrl
and profileUrl
specified in your Auth0Provider
:
// _app.jsx
function App({ Component, pageProps }) {
return (
<UserProvider loginUrl="/foo/api/auth/login" profileUrl="/foo/api/auth/me">
<Component {...pageProps} />
</UserProvider>
);
}
Also, any links to login or logout should include the basePath
:
<a href="/foo/api/auth/login">Login</a><br />
<a href="/foo/api/auth/logout">Logout</a>
You should configure the baseUrl (or the AUTH0_BASE_URL
environment variable). For example:
# .env.local
AUTH0_BASE_URL=http://localhost:3000/foo
For any pages that are protected with the Server Side withPageAuthRequired you should update the returnTo
parameter depending on the basePath
and locale
if necessary.
// ./pages/my-ssr-page.jsx
export default MySsrPage = () => <></>;
const getFullReturnTo = (ctx) => {
// TODO: implement getFullReturnTo based on the ctx.resolvedUrl, ctx.locale
// and your next.config.js's basePath and i18n settings.
return '/foo/en-US/my-ssr-page';
};
export const getServerSideProps = (ctx) => {
const returnTo = getFullReturnTo(ctx.req);
return withPageAuthRequired({ returnTo })(ctx);
};
We also provide an Auth0 React SDK, auth0-react, which may be suitable for your Next.js application.
The SPA security model used by auth0-react
is different from the Web Application security model used by this SDK. In short, this SDK protects pages and API routes with a cookie session (see "Cookies and Security"). A SPA library like auth0-react
will store the user's ID token and access token directly in the browser and use them to access external APIs directly.
You should be aware of the security implications of both models. However, auth0-react may be more suitable for your needs if you meet any of the following scenarios:
- You are using Static HTML Export with Next.js.
- You do not need to access user data during server-side rendering.
- You want to get the access token and call external API's directly from the frontend layer rather than using Next.js API routes as a proxy to call external APIs.
By default, the SDK creates and manages a singleton instance to run for the lifetime of the application. When testing your application, you may need to reset this instance, so its state does not leak between tests.
If you're using Jest, we recommend using jest.resetModules()
after each test. Alternatively, you can look at creating your own instance of the SDK, so it can be recreated between tests.
For end to end tests, have a look at how we use a mock OIDC Provider.
For deploying, have a look at how we deploy our example app to Vercel.
We appreciate feedback and contribution to this repo! Before you get started, please read the following:
- Auth0's general contribution guidelines
- Auth0's code of conduct guidelines
- This repo's contribution guide
Please do not report security vulnerabilities on the public GitHub issue tracker. The Responsible Disclosure Program details the procedure for disclosing security issues.
Auth0 is an easy to implement, adaptable authentication and authorization platform. To learn more checkout Why Auth0?
This project is licensed under the MIT license. See the LICENSE file for more info.