I have an angular app that uses Restangular
and ui.router.state
.
This is what I am currently doing
I have an Endpoint /Token that accepts a username/pass and gives back a bearer token and some user info.
On successful login I save off the userinfo and token into a global var, user.current and I also set Restangular's default headers to include the bearer token:
Restangular.setDefaultHeaders({Authorization: "Bearer " + data.access_token});
When a user wants to access a route that has requiredAuth = true (set in the routeprovider as custom data like Access routeProvider's route properties) I check the user.current to see if its set.
a. If user.current is set, take them to the route.
b. If user.current is null or if the token would be expired (based on time) send them to /login
Problems/Concerns
If I
Ctrl+R
I lose my user info and the user has to log in again.a. Should I be saving off the bearer token or credentials into a cookie or something and have a user service try to grab that in the event that
user.current == null
?Am I even approaching this right? Seems like something that literally 100% of people using AngularJS would want to do, yet, I can't find an example that aligns with my situation. Seems like Angular would have mechanisms built in to handle some of this auth routing business...
When do I need to be getting a new token/verifying the current one? Do I just let anyone with devtools set something like
isAuthorized = true
so they can get to /admin/importantThings but then let the calls to /api/important things fail because they don't have a valid bearer token or should I be verifying that they have a valid token before I even let them get to that route?