Using BCrypt with Sequelize Model
Methods should be provided in the "options" argument of sequelize.define
const bcrypt = require("bcrypt");
module.exports = function(sequelize, DataTypes) {
const User = sequelize.define('users', {
annotation_id: {
type: DataTypes.INTEGER,
autoIncrement: true,
primaryKey: true
},
firstName: {
type: DataTypes.DATE,
field: 'first_name'
},
lastName: {
type: DataTypes.DATE,
field: 'last_name'
},
email: DataTypes.STRING,
password: DataTypes.STRING
}, {
freezeTableName: true,
instanceMethods: {
generateHash(password) {
return bcrypt.hash(password, bcrypt.genSaltSync(8));
},
validPassword(password) {
return bcrypt.compare(password, this.password);
}
}
});
return User;
}
Bcrypt Is no longer part of node, so I included example with new module of crypto
I am sharing this code from one of working project.
My config file
require('dotenv').config();
const { Sequelize,DataTypes ,Model} = require("sequelize");
module.exports.Model = Model;
module.exports.DataTypes = DataTypes;
module.exports.sequelize = new Sequelize(process.env.DB_NAME,process.env.DB_USER_NAME, process.env.DB_PASSWORD, {
host: process.env.DB_HOST,
dialect: process.env.DB_DISELECT,
pool: {
max: 1,
min: 0,
idle: 10000
},
//logging: true
});
My user model
const { sequelize, DataTypes, Model } = require('../config/db.config');
var crypto = require('crypto');
class USERS extends Model {
validPassword(password) {
var hash = crypto.pbkdf2Sync(password,
this.SALT, 1000, 64, `sha512`).toString(`hex`);
console.log(hash == this.PASSWORD)
return this.PASSWORD === hash;
}
}
USERS.init(
{
ID: {
autoIncrement: true,
type: DataTypes.BIGINT,
allowNull: false,
primaryKey: true
},
MOBILE_NO: {
type: DataTypes.BIGINT,
allowNull: false,
unique: true
},
PASSWORD: {
type: DataTypes.STRING(200),
allowNull: false
},
SALT: {
type: DataTypes.STRING(200),
allowNull: false
}
},
{
sequelize,
tableName: 'USERS',
timestamps: true,
hooks: {
beforeCreate: (user) => {
console.log(user);
user.SALT = crypto.randomBytes(16).toString('hex');
user.PASSWORD = crypto.pbkdf2Sync(user.PASSWORD, user.SALT,
1000, 64, `sha512`).toString(`hex`);
},
}
});
module.exports.USERS = USERS;
And Auth Controller
const { USERS } = require('../../../models/USERS');
module.exports = class authController {
static register(req, res) {
USERS.create({
MOBILE_NO: req.body.mobile,
PASSWORD: req.body.password,
SALT:""
}).then(function (data) {
res.json(data.toJSON());
}).catch((err) => {
res.json({
error: err.errors[0].message
})
})
}
static login(req, res) {
var message = [];
var success = false;
var status = 404;
USERS.findOne({
where:{
MOBILE_NO: req.body.mobile
}
}).then(function (user) {
if (user) {
message.push("user found");
if(user.validPassword(req.body.password)) {
status=200;
success = true
message.push("You are authorised");
}else{
message.push("Check Credentials");
}
}else{
message.push("Check Credentials");
}
res.json({status,success,message});
});
}
}
There's a tutorial out there on how to get a sequelize/postgreSQL auth system working with hooks and bcrypt.
The guy who wrote the tutorial did not use async hash/salt methods; in the user creation/instance method section he used the following code:
hooks: {
beforeCreate: (user) => {
const salt = bcrypt.genSaltSync();
user.password = bcrypt.hashSync(user.password, salt);
}
},
instanceMethods: {
validPassword: function(password) {
return bcrypt.compareSync(password, this.password);
}
}
Newer versions of Sequelize don't like instance methods being declared this way - and multiple people have explained how to remedy this (including someone who posted on the original tutorial):
The original comment still used the synchronous methods:
User.prototype.validPassword = function (password) {
return bcrypt.compareSync(password, this.password);
};
All you need to do to make these functions asyncronous is this:
Async beforeCreate bcrypt genSalt and genHash functions:
beforeCreate: async function(user) {
const salt = await bcrypt.genSalt(10); //whatever number you want
user.password = await bcrypt.hash(user.password, salt);
}
User.prototype.validPassword = async function(password) {
return await bcrypt.compare(password, this.password);
}
On the node.js app in the login route where you check the password, there's a findOne section:
User.findOne({ where: { username: username } }).then(function (user) {
if (!user) {
res.redirect('/login');
} else if (!user.validPassword(password)) {
res.redirect('/login');
} else {
req.session.user = user.dataValues;
res.redirect('/dashboard');
}
});
All you have to do here is add the words async
and await
as well:
User.findOne({ where: { username: username } }).then(async function (user) {
if (!user) {
res.redirect('/login');
} else if (!await user.validPassword(password)) {
res.redirect('/login');
} else {
req.session.user = user.dataValues;
res.redirect('/dashboard');
}
});
Other alternative: Use hook and bcrypt async mode
User.beforeCreate((user, options) => {
return bcrypt.hash(user.password, 10)
.then(hash => {
user.password = hash;
})
.catch(err => {
throw new Error();
});
});