Security - First Steps

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Let’s imagine that you have your backend API in some domain.

And you have a frontend in another domain or in a different path of the same domain (or in a mobile application).

And you want to have a way for the frontend to authenticate with the backend, using a username and password.

We can use OAuth2 to build that with FastAPI.

But let’s save you the time of reading the full long specification just to find those little pieces of information you need.

Let’s use the tools provided by FastAPI to handle security.

How it looks

Let’s first just use the code and see how it works, and then we’ll come back to understand what’s happening.

Create main.py

Copy the example in a file main.py:

  1. from fastapi import Depends, FastAPI
  2. from fastapi.security import OAuth2PasswordBearer
  3. app = FastAPI()
  4. oauth2_scheme = OAuth2PasswordBearer(tokenUrl="token")
  5. @app.get("/items/")
  6. async def read_items(token: str = Depends(oauth2_scheme)):
  7. return {"token": token}

Run it

Info

First install python-multipart.

E.g. pip install python-multipart.

This is because OAuth2 uses “form data” for sending the username and password.

Run the example with:

  1. $ uvicorn main:app --reload
  2. <span style="color: green;">INFO</span>: Uvicorn running on http://127.0.0.1:8000 (Press CTRL+C to quit)

Check it

Go to the interactive docs at: http://127.0.0.1:8000/docs.

You will see something like this:

Security - First Steps - 图1

Authorize button!

You already have a shiny new “Authorize” button.

And your path operation has a little lock in the top-right corner that you can click.

And if you click it, you have a little authorization form to type a username and password (and other optional fields):

Security - First Steps - 图2

Note

It doesn’t matter what you type in the form, it won’t work yet. But we’ll get there.

This is of course not the frontend for the final users, but it’s a great automatic tool to document interactively all your API.

It can be used by the frontend team (that can also be yourself).

It can be used by third party applications and systems.

And it can also be used by yourself, to debug, check and test the same application.

The password flow

Now let’s go back a bit and understand what is all that.

The password “flow” is one of the ways (“flows”) defined in OAuth2, to handle security and authentication.

OAuth2 was designed so that the backend or API could be independent of the server that authenticates the user.

But in this case, the same FastAPI application will handle the API and the authentication.

So, let’s review it from that simplified point of view:

  • The user types the username and password in the frontend, and hits Enter.
  • The frontend (running in the user’s browser) sends that username and password to a specific URL in our API (declared with tokenUrl="token").
  • The API checks that username and password, and responds with a “token” (we haven’t implemented any of this yet).
    • A “token” is just a string with some content that we can use later to verify this user.
    • Normally, a token is set to expire after some time.
      • So, the user will have to log in again at some point later.
      • And if the token is stolen, the risk is less. It is not like a permanent key that will work forever (in most of the cases).
  • The frontend stores that token temporarily somewhere.
  • The user clicks in the frontend to go to another section of the frontend web app.
  • The frontend needs to fetch some more data from the API.
    • But it needs authentication for that specific endpoint.
    • So, to authenticate with our API, it sends a header Authorization with a value of Bearer plus the token.
    • If the token contains foobar, the content of the Authorization header would be: Bearer foobar.

FastAPI‘s OAuth2PasswordBearer

FastAPI provides several tools, at different levels of abstraction, to implement these security features.

In this example we are going to use OAuth2, with the Password flow, using a Bearer token. We do that using the OAuth2PasswordBearer class.

Info

A “bearer” token is not the only option.

But it’s the best one for our use case.

And it might be the best for most use cases, unless you are an OAuth2 expert and know exactly why there’s another option that suits better your needs.

In that case, FastAPI also provides you with the tools to build it.

When we create an instance of the OAuth2PasswordBearer class we pass in the tokenUrl parameter. This parameter contains the URL that the client (the frontend running in the user’s browser) will use to send the username and password in order to get a token.

  1. from fastapi import Depends, FastAPI
  2. from fastapi.security import OAuth2PasswordBearer
  3. app = FastAPI()
  4. oauth2_scheme = OAuth2PasswordBearer(tokenUrl="token")
  5. @app.get("/items/")
  6. async def read_items(token: str = Depends(oauth2_scheme)):
  7. return {"token": token}

Tip

here tokenUrl="token" refers to a relative URL token that we haven’t created yet. As it’s a relative URL, it’s equivalent to ./token.

Because we are using a relative URL, if your API was located at https://example.com/, then it would refer to https://example.com/token. But if your API was located at https://example.com/api/v1/, then it would refer to https://example.com/api/v1/token.

Using a relative URL is important to make sure your application keeps working even in an advanced use case like Behind a Proxy.

This parameter doesn’t create that endpoint / path operation, but declares that the URL /token will be the one that the client should use to get the token. That information is used in OpenAPI, and then in the interactive API documentation systems.

We will soon also create the actual path operation.

Info

If you are a very strict “Pythonista” you might dislike the style of the parameter name tokenUrl instead of token_url.

That’s because it is using the same name as in the OpenAPI spec. So that if you need to investigate more about any of these security schemes you can just copy and paste it to find more information about it.

The oauth2_scheme variable is an instance of OAuth2PasswordBearer, but it is also a “callable”.

It could be called as:

  1. oauth2_scheme(some, parameters)

So, it can be used with Depends.

Use it

Now you can pass that oauth2_scheme in a dependency with Depends.

  1. from fastapi import Depends, FastAPI
  2. from fastapi.security import OAuth2PasswordBearer
  3. app = FastAPI()
  4. oauth2_scheme = OAuth2PasswordBearer(tokenUrl="token")
  5. @app.get("/items/")
  6. async def read_items(token: str = Depends(oauth2_scheme)):
  7. return {"token": token}

This dependency will provide a str that is assigned to the parameter token of the path operation function.

FastAPI will know that it can use this dependency to define a “security scheme” in the OpenAPI schema (and the automatic API docs).

Technical Details

FastAPI will know that it can use the class OAuth2PasswordBearer (declared in a dependency) to define the security scheme in OpenAPI because it inherits from fastapi.security.oauth2.OAuth2, which in turn inherits from fastapi.security.base.SecurityBase.

All the security utilities that integrate with OpenAPI (and the automatic API docs) inherit from SecurityBase, that’s how FastAPI can know how to integrate them in OpenAPI.

What it does

It will go and look in the request for that Authorization header, check if the value is Bearer plus some token, and will return the token as a str.

If it doesn’t see an Authorization header, or the value doesn’t have a Bearer token, it will respond with a 401 status code error (UNAUTHORIZED) directly.

You don’t even have to check if the token exists to return an error. You can be sure that if your function is executed, it will have a str in that token.

You can try it already in the interactive docs:

Security - First Steps - 图3

We are not verifying the validity of the token yet, but that’s a start already.

Recap

So, in just 3 or 4 extra lines, you already have some primitive form of security.