After looking into this further, and taking a hint from @ricka's answer, I have decided to implement an authentication check for my cloud functions with a JWT token passed in in the form of an Authorization header access token.
Here's the implementation in Node:
const client = jwksClient({
cache: true,
rateLimit: true,
jwksRequestsPerMinute: 5,
jwksUri: "https://<auth0-account>.auth0.com/.well-known/jwks.json"
});
function verifyToken(token, cb) {
let decodedToken;
try {
decodedToken = jwt.decode(token, {complete: true});
} catch (e) {
console.error(e);
cb(e);
return;
}
client.getSigningKey(decodedToken.header.kid, function (err, key) {
if (err) {
console.error(err);
cb(err);
return;
}
const signingKey = key.publicKey || key.rsaPublicKey;
jwt.verify(token, signingKey, function (err, decoded) {
if (err) {
console.error(err);
cb(err);
return
}
console.log(decoded);
cb(null, decoded);
});
});
}
function checkAuth (fn) {
return function (req, res) {
if (!req.headers || !req.headers.authorization) {
res.status(401).send('No authorization token found.');
return;
}
const parts = req.headers.authorization.split(' ');
if (parts.length != 2) {
res.status(401).send('Bad credential format.');
return;
}
const scheme = parts[0];
const credentials = parts[1];
if (!/^Bearer$/i.test(scheme)) {
res.status(401).send('Bad credential format.');
return;
}
verifyToken(credentials, function (err) {
if (err) {
res.status(401).send('Invalid token');
return;
}
fn(req, res);
});
};
}
I use jsonwebtoken
to verify the JWT token, and jwks-rsa
to retrieve the public key. I use Auth0, so jwks-rsa
reaches out to the list of public keys to retrieve them.
The checkAuth
function can then be used to safeguard the cloud function as:
exports.get = checkAuth(function (req, res) {
// do things safely here
});
You can see this change on my github repo at https://github.com/tnguyen14/functions-datastore/commit/a6b32704f0b0a50cd719df8c1239f993ef74dab6
The JWT / access token can be retrieved in a number of way. For Auth0, the API doc can be found at https://auth0.com/docs/api/authentication#authorize-client
Once this is in place, you can trigger the cloud function (if you have yours enabled with http trigger) with something like
curl -X POST -H "Content-Type: application/json" \
-H "Authorization: Bearer access-token" \
-d '{"foo": "bar"}' \
"https://<cloud-function-endpoint>.cloudfunctions.net/get"