Datasette plugin for authenticating access using API tokens
Install this plugin in the same environment as Datasette.
datasette install datasette-auth-tokens
Read about Datasette's authentication and permissions system.
This plugin lets you configure secret API tokens which can be used to make authenticated requests to Datasette.
First, create a random API token. A useful recipe for doing that is the following:
python -c 'import secrets; print(secrets.token_hex(32))'
5f9a486dd807de632200b17508c75002bb66ca6fde1993db1de6cbd446362589
Decide on the actor that this token should represent, for example:
{
"bot_id": "my-bot"
}
You can then use "allow"
blocks to provide that token with permission to access specific actions. To enable access to a configured writable SQL query you could use this in your config.json
(for Datasette 1.0) or metadata.json
:
{
"plugins": {
"datasette-auth-tokens": {
"tokens": [
{
"token": {
"$env": "BOT_TOKEN"
},
"actor": {
"bot_id": "my-bot"
}
}
]
}
},
"databases": {
":memory:": {
"queries": {
"show_version": {
"sql": "select sqlite_version()",
"allow": {
"bot_id": "my-bot"
}
}
}
}
}
}
This uses Datasette's secret configuration values mechanism to allow the secret token to be passed as an environment variable.
Run Datasette like this:
BOT_TOKEN="this-is-the-secret-token" \
datasette -c config.json
You can now run authenticated API queries like this:
curl -H 'Authorization: Bearer this-is-the-secret-token' \
'http://127.0.0.1:8001/:memory:/show_version.json?_shape=array'
[{"sqlite_version()": "3.31.1"}]
Additionally you can allow passing the token as a query string parameter, although that's disabled by default given the security implications of URLs with secret tokens included. This may be useful to easily allow embedding data between different services.
Enable it using the param
config value:
{
"plugins": {
"datasette-auth-tokens": {
"tokens": [
{
"token": {
"$env": "BOT_TOKEN"
},
"actor": {
"bot_id": "my-bot"
},
}
],
"param": "_auth_token"
}
},
"databases": {
":memory:": {
"queries": {
"show_version": {
"sql": "select sqlite_version()",
"allow": {
"bot_id": "my-bot"
}
}
}
}
}
}
You can now run authenticated API queries like this:
curl http://127.0.0.1:8001/:memory:/show_version.json?_shape=array&_auth_token=this-is-the-secret-token
[{"sqlite_version()": "3.31.1"}]
datasette-auth-tokens
provides a managed tokens mode, where tokens are stored in a SQLite database table and the plugin provides an interface for creating and revoking tokens.
To turn this mode on, add "manage_tokens": true
to your plugin configuration:
{
"plugins": {
"datasette-auth-tokens": {
"manage_tokens": true
}
}
}
This will add a "Create API token" option to the Datasette menu.
Tokens that are created will be kept in a new _datasette_auth_tokens
table.
Users need the auth-tokens-create
permission to create tokens. One way to grant that is to add this "permissions"
block to your configuration:
{
"permissions": {
"auth-tokens-create": {
"id": "*"
}
}
}
Use the "Create API token" option in the Datasette menu or navigate to /-/api/tokens
to create tokens and manage tokens.
When you create a new token a signed token string will be presented to you. You need to store this, as it is not stored directly in the database table and can only be retrieved once.
If you have multiple databases attached to Datasette you will need to specify which database should be used for the _datasette_auth_tokens
table. You can do this with the manage_tokens_database
setting:
{
"plugins": {
"datasette-auth-tokens": {
"manage_tokens": true,
"manage_tokens_database": "tokens"
}
}
}
Now start Datasette like this:
datasette -c config.json mydb.db tokens.db --create
The --create
option can be used to tell Datasette to create the tokens.db
database file if it does not already exist.
In Datasette 1.0 you can instead use the -s
option like this:
datasette \
-s plugins.datasette-auth-tokens.manage_tokens true \
-s plugins.datasette-auth-tokens.manage_tokens_database tokens \
-s permissions.auth-tokens-create.id '*' # to enable token creation
By default, users can only view tokens that they themselves have created on the /-/api/tokens
page.
Grant the auth-tokens-view-all
permission to allow a user to view all tokens, even those created by other users.
A token can be revoked by the user that created it by clicking the "Revoke this token" button at the bottom of the token page that is linked to from /-/api/tokens
.
A user with the auth-tokens-revoke-all
permission can revoke any token.
If you decide not to use managed tokens mode, you can instead configure datasette-auth-tokens
to use tokens that are stored in your own custom database tables.
You can do this by configuring a custom SQL query that will execute to test if an incoming token is valid.
Your query needs to take a :token_id
parameter and return at least two columns: one called token_secret
and one called actor_*
- usually actor_id
. Further actor_
prefixed columns can be returned to provide more details for the authenticated actor.
Here's a simple example of a configuration query:
select actor_id, actor_name, token_secret from tokens where token_id = :token_id
This can run against a table like this one:
token_id | token_secret | actor_id | actor_name |
---|---|---|---|
1 | bd3c94f51fcd | 78 | Cleopaws |
2 | 86681b4d6f66 | 32 | Pancakes |
The tokens are formed as the token ID, then a hyphen, then the token secret. For example:
1-bd3c94f51fcd
2-86681b4d6f66
The SQL query will be executed with the portion before the hyphen as the :token_id
parameter.
The token_secret
value returned by the query will be compared to the portion of the token after the hyphen to check if the token is valid.
Columns with a prefix of actor_
will be used to populate the actor dictionary. In the above example, a token of 2-86681b4d6f66
will become an actor dictionary of {"id": 32, "name": "Pancakes"}
.
To configure this, use a "query"
block in your plugin configuration like this:
{
"plugins": {
"datasette-auth-tokens": {
"query": {
"sql": "select actor_id, actor_name, token_secret from tokens where token_id = :token_id",
"database": "tokens"
}
}
},
"databases": {
"tokens": {
"allow": false
}
}
}
The "sql"
key here contains the SQL query. The "database"
key has the name of the attached database file that the query should be executed against - in this case it would execute against tokens.db
.
If you implement the custom pattern above which reads token_secret
from your own tokens
table, you need to be aware that anyone with read access to your Datasette instance could read those tokens from your table. This probably isn't what you want!
To avoid this, you should lock down access to that table. The configuration example above shows how to do this using an "allow": false
block to deny all access to that tokens
database.
Consult Datasette's Permissions documentation for more information about how to lock down this kind of access.