Cookies
Cookies is a node.js module for getting and setting HTTP(S) cookies. Cookies can be signed to prevent tampering, using Keygrip. It can be used with the built-in node.js HTTP library, or as Connect/Express middleware.
Requirements
- node.js, tested with 0.8 and 0.10
Install
$ npm install cookies
Features
-
Lazy: Since cookie verification against multiple keys could be expensive, cookies are only verified lazily when accessed, not eagerly on each request.
-
Secure: All cookies are
httponly
by default, and cookies sent over SSL aresecure
by default. An error will be thrown if you try to send secure cookies over an insecure socket. -
Unobtrusive: Signed cookies are stored the same way as unsigned cookies, instead of in an obfuscated signing format. An additional signature cookie is stored for each signed cookie, using a standard naming convention (cookie-name
.sig
). This allows other libraries to access the original cookies without having to know the signing mechanism. -
Agnostic: This library is optimized for use with Keygrip, but does not require it; you can implement your own signing scheme instead if you like and use this library only to read/write cookies. Factoring the signing into a separate library encourages code reuse and allows you to use the same signing library for other areas where signing is needed, such as in URLs.
API
cookies = new Cookies( request, response, [ options ] )
This creates a cookie jar corresponding to the current request and response, additionally passing an object options.
A Keygrip object or an array of keys can optionally be passed as options.keys to enable cryptographic signing based on SHA1 HMAC, using rotated credentials.
A Boolean can optionally be passed as options.secure to explicitally specify if the connection is secure, rather than this module examining request.
Note that since this only saves parameters without any other processing, it is very lightweight. Cookies are only parsed on demand when they are accessed.
express.createServer( Cookies.express( keys ) )
This adds cookie support as a Connect middleware layer for use in Express apps, allowing inbound cookies to be read using req.cookies.get
and outbound cookies to be set using res.cookies.set
.
cookies.get( name, [ options ] )
This extracts the cookie with the given name from the Cookie
header in the request. If such a cookie exists, its value is returned. Otherwise, nothing is returned.
{ signed: true }
can optionally be passed as the second parameter options. In this case, a signature cookie (a cookie of same name ending with the .sig
suffix appended) is fetched. If no such cookie exists, nothing is returned.
If the signature cookie does exist, the provided Keygrip object is used to check whether the hash of cookie-name=cookie-value matches that of any registered key:
- If the signature cookie hash matches the first key, the original cookie value is returned.
- If the signature cookie hash matches any other key, the original cookie value is returned AND an outbound header is set to update the signature cookie's value to the hash of the first key. This enables automatic freshening of signature cookies that have become stale due to key rotation.
- If the signature cookie hash does not match any key, nothing is returned, and an outbound header with an expired date is used to delete the cookie.
cookies.set( name, [ value ], [ options ] )
This sets the given cookie in the response and returns the current context to allow chaining.
If the value is omitted, an outbound header with an expired date is used to delete the cookie.
If the options object is provided, it will be used to generate the outbound cookie header as follows:
maxAge
: a number representing the milliseconds fromDate.now()
for expiryexpires
: aDate
object indicating the cookie's expiration date (expires at the end of session by default).path
: a string indicating the path of the cookie (/
by default).domain
: a string indicating the domain of the cookie (no default).secure
: a boolean indicating whether the cookie is only to be sent over HTTPS (false
by default for HTTP,true
by default for HTTPS).httpOnly
: a boolean indicating whether the cookie is only to be sent over HTTP(S), and not made available to client JavaScript (true
by default).signed
: a boolean indicating whether the cookie is to be signed (false
by default). If this is true, another cookie of the same name with the.sig
suffix appended will also be sent, with a 27-byte url-safe base64 SHA1 value representing the hash of cookie-name=cookie-value against the first Keygrip key. This signature key is used to detect tampering the next time a cookie is received.overwrite
: a boolean indicating whether to overwrite previously set cookies of the same name (false
by default). If this is true, all cookies set during the same request with the same name (regardless of path or domain) are filtered out of the Set-Cookie header when setting this cookie.
Example
var http = var Cookies = server = http
Copyright
Copyright (c) 2014 Jed Schmidt. See LICENSE.txt for details.
Send any questions or comments here.