TLDR: JWTs should not be used for keeping your user logged in. They are not designed for this purpose, they are not secure, and there is a much better tool which is designed for it: regular cookie sessions.
If you've got a bit of time to watch a presentation on it, I highly recommend this talk: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=pYeekwv3vC4 (Note that other topics are largely skimmed over, such as CSRF protection. You should learn about other topics from other sources. Also note that "valid" usecases for JWTs at the end of the video can also be easily handled by other, better, and more secure tools. Specifically, PASETO.)
A related topic: Don't use localStorage (or sessionStorage) for authentication credentials, including JWT tokens: https://www.rdegges.com/2018/please-stop-using-local-storage/
The reason to avoid JWTs comes down to a couple different points:
- The JWT specification is specifically designed only for very short-live tokens (~5 minute or less). Sessions need to have longer lifespans than that.
- "stateless" authentication simply is not feasible in a secure way. You must have some state to handle tokens securely, and if you must have a data store, it's better to just store all the data. Most of this article and the followup it links to describes the specific issues: http://cryto.net/~joepie91/blog/2016/06/13/stop-using-jwt-for-sessions/
- (Yes, people are doing it, and yes, their applications are flawed, and you should not repeat that mistake.)
- JWTs which just store a simple session token are inefficient and less flexible than a regular session cookie, and don't gain you any advantage.
- The JWT specification itself is not trusted by security experts. This should preclude all usage of them for anything related to security and authentication. The original spec specifically made it possible to create fake tokens, and is likely to contain other mistakes. This article delves deeper into the problems with the JWT (family) specification.
But Google uses JWTs! Google does not use JWTs for user sessions in the browser. They use regular cookie sessions. JWTs are used purely as Single Sign On transports so that your login session on one server or host can be transferred to a session on another server or host. This is within the reasonable usecases for JWTs, and Google has the resources (security experts) to create and maintain a more secure JWT implementation. Their JWTs are effectively not the same as anyone else's.
But stateless is better! You can't securely have truly stateless authentication without having massive resources, see the cryto.net link above. Also, Stateless is a lie.
I don't know how to setup sessions! You don't regularly see articles explaining sessions because the technology isn't particularly new. You also shouldn't need third party information for setup. A session implementation's documentation should take you through the setup process by itself. Almost any web server framework will contain an implementation for sessions, and usually it's very easy to enable if it isn't enabled by default. Express and other Node.js frameworks are somewhat exceptions to this rule, primarily because they are highly modular and single purpose. For Express, you simply use the express-session
middleware and a store connector which works with your store (I recommend connect-session-knex
, to be used with Postgres, MySQL, or possibly SQLite).
If you do need a short-lived, signed token for something, there is a better spec called PASETO which is designed to be secure. Just make sure you aren't using them for sessions.
I recommend checking out this gist by joepie91 to learn more how sessions work.
"Why does everyone recommend JWTs then?" or "Why are JWTs so popular?"
You probably didn't catch the YouTube link above, which explains how it got started near the end. The short version is that a certain subset of engineers got excited and started writing posts about JWTs when the spec was written. These articles were misunderstood, and the idea to use JWTs for sessions propagated largely through more blog posts. Primarily these articles were written by users who simply didn't understand the technology, but because the existing tools for sessions weren't "exciting" or new enough to be written about, the topic effectively flooded the Google results for how to do authentication with new and hip technologies (Angular, Node, React, etc).
After building up like this for a few years, the coding bootcamps started including JWTs in their lessons, furthering the myth that they are good for authentication by acting as an authority who should know. This happens because sadly bootcamps teach things that are popular, not real best practices and the best tools.
Cookies are an "old" tech. But being old doesn't make something better or worse, and often when it comes to security, something being older and unbroken is much better than something newer and less proven.