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@gr2m
Last active May 7, 2022 08:22
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Imagine the typical backend tasks for user authentication would exist right in the browser. How would the code look like? This is what I came up with. Forks & comments much appreciated! #nobackend #dreamcode
// sign up
account.signUp('[email protected]', 'secret');
// sign in
account.signIn('[email protected]', 'secret');
// sign in via oauth
account.signInWith('twitter');
// sign out
account.signOut();
// change password
account.changePassword('currentpassword', 'newpassword');
// change username
account.changeUsername('currentpassword', 'newusername');
// reset password
account.resetPassword('[email protected]');
// destroy account and all its data
account.destroy('currentpassword');
// all methods could alternatively accept a parameter hash
// that would also allow for additional user info
account.signUp({
username: 'joe2000',
password: 'secret',
birthday: '1984-05-09',
email: '[email protected]'
});
// that would also allow for a general change method,
// that changeUsername or changePassword would simply
// be shortcuts for
account.change({
birthday: '1984-05-09',
});
account.change({
username: 'joe3000',
password: 'secret'
});
@2468ben
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2468ben commented May 2, 2013

Maybe if the "signIn" function handled signups too. Also, if you didn't have to worry about the performance costs of parsing a function name, I would love if things like 'changeUsername' called 'change' with 'username' as the first argument. I don't think it's better or worse, just offering another brainstorm.

//all the lines that are grouped together would act the same

account.signIn('currentusername', 'currentpassword')
account.signIn({username: 'currentusername', secret: 'currentpassword'})

account.signInUsing('twitter')
account.signIn({using: 'twitter'})

account.signOut()

account.changePassword('newpassword', 'currentpassword')
account.changePassword('newpassword', {secret: 'currentpassword'})
account.change('password', 'newpassword', {secret: 'currentpassword'})

account.changeUsername('newusername', 'currentpassword')
account.change('username', 'newusername', 'currentpassword')

account.resetPassword('currentusername')
account.resetPassword({username: 'currentusername'})

account.destroy()

account.signIn('currentusername', {name: 'Joe Doe', age: 30, secret: 'currentpassword'})

account.get()
account.get('name')
account.getName()

account.change({name: 'Jane Doe', age: 29})
account.change('name', 'Jane Doe')
account.changeName('Jane Doe')

@tapatio
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tapatio commented May 2, 2013

This is pretty awesome. Might incorporate this in my next project!

@matteocrippa
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@gr2m yep!

The idea of @2468ben is also interesting and allow the user to have a better readable code.
Also it allow you to have plugins or customization that can be used without any problem without having to re-rewrite a master function.

@CodeMaxter
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// To verify if a user is sign in
account.isSignIn('[email protected]');

@gr2m
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gr2m commented May 10, 2013

@2468ben

this is awesome, lots of great ideas! I also thought about passing an object with {username, password} instead of two separate parameters to signIn for example.

I'm not sure if I'd merge signIn and signUp into one function. One reason that comes to my mind immediately: what if I just typed the username wrong? Would it create a new account right away?

@CodeMaxter

that's a great idea, the parameter could be optional to check:

// user is signed in
account.isSignedIn()

// user is signed in as [email protected]
account.isSignedIn('[email protected]')

@ALL

is there any way to enable notifications on gists commets / forks?

@dmitriz
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dmitriz commented May 15, 2013

I've never understood the reason to use 'username' instead of just 'email' and 'password'.
Leaving out email is looking for trouble, as there is no way to recover forgotten password without it.
Surprisingly, many sites and apps out there still leave the email optional.
And if 'email' is asked, forcing the user to come up with 'username' is unnecessary burden.
It is painful to make up when many usernames are already taken.
Then it is painful to remember. And then it is impossible to recover without email.
So basically 'usernames' are useless.
Did I miss anything?

@gr2m
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gr2m commented May 15, 2013

Restrictions for usernames, e.g. only valid emails, is app specific. So in your case, signUp("joe", "secret") should fail with an error message, that "joe" is not a valid email address.

The actual API should not be affected by that.

@kybernetikos
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This stuff still seems to be thinking about the backend too much. In a nobackend system that I'm playing with in my spare time, I just delegate all of that to Mozilla persona. As a developer I don't want to care about signup. The developer code gets given the persona validated email address of the person signing in, and the hash of it (in case they want to send it to other users for displaying gravatars).

So the code I want to write is something like .login() / .logout() and .onLogin=.onLogout= . I really don't care about 'signup'.

@yazz
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yazz commented Oct 16, 2013

Actually Clojure on Coils already lets front end only developers write full backend code securely without having to code the backend:

https://github.com/zubairq/coils

: see here for an actaul source file to see the login functionality calling SQL statements:

https://github.com/zubairq/coils/blob/master/src/webapp/client/views/loginpanel.cljs

@Stwissel
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With all the security breaches around I'd rather not maintain another set of username/passwords. How would it work when I want to use Facebook/Twitter/OAuth/SAML for signup/login?

@gr2m
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gr2m commented Jun 12, 2014

@Stwissel

var provider = 'twitter' // can be what ever the backend supports, like 'google', 'facebook', etc
account.signInWith(provider);

It's already in the code above.

@g8d3
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g8d3 commented Jul 5, 2014

what about:

account.attr = 'something'

Instead of change method? Breaks the order? I.e because account is a namespace for account functions?

@evinw
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evinw commented Aug 13, 2014

Great ideas!

@jonohayon
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Hi!
I've created the signUp(email, password) function using Firebase.
You can see it in action here (and edit the code obviously): http://codepen.io/rezozo/pen/jEbQEL

-- Jonathan

@khanhtran
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How to add capcha support?

@iamtchelo
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WOW! This is amazing!

@daslicht
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var u = new User(); // the User Class (ValueObject) can be reused for anything else 
      u.username ="joe2000";
      u.password = "secret";
      u.birthday = "1984-05-09";
      u.email = "[email protected]"
Users.signUp(u);


And this all with full IntelliSense:
you just have to type u.
then hit ctrl+space
and the IDE shows you all possible values and you just have to choose them!
That way you can create your Objects and leave them alone.
You no longer have to remember any variable.

instead of a JSON Object where yopu have to remember or lookup possible object variables:

account.signUp({
  username: 'joe2000',
  password: 'secret',
  birthday: '1984-05-09',
  email: '[email protected]'
});

@sesam
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sesam commented Nov 27, 2017

something like u = User().email('[email protected]').password('').sudo() could give me a window.user and if pass is wrong, just send an email that allows to sign in once, or change password + autosignin in the other window. Omittting .password() would make the signin code attempt to use whatever browser or other APIs available and fallback to the email-as-login approach. If browser has multiple possibilities like Persona, Oauths, SQRL, then a stored cookie is used to record stats on how succesful the approaches have been, to avoid begging for Facebook Oauth from someone who never used it before, but show it immediately to one who exclusively prefers it.

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