mod_auth_form
Form authentication
Base
mod_auth_form.c
auth_form_module
Available in Apache 2.3 and later
Warning
Form authentication depends on the mod_session
modules, and these modules make use of HTTP cookies, and as such can fall
victim to Cross Site Scripting attacks, or expose potentially private
information to clients. Please ensure that the relevant risks have
been taken into account before enabling the session functionality on
your server.
This module allows the use of an HTML login form to restrict access
by looking up users in the given providers. HTML forms require
significantly more configuration than the alternatives, however an
HTML login form can provide a much friendlier experience for end users.
HTTP basic authentication is provided by
mod_auth_basic, and HTTP digest authentication is
provided by mod_auth_digest. This module should
be combined with at least one authentication module
such as mod_authn_file and one authorization
module such as mod_authz_user.
Once the user has been successfully authenticated, the user's login
details will be stored in a session provided by mod_session.
mod_session
AuthName
AuthType
Require
Authentication howto
Basic Configuration
To protect a particular URL with mod_auth_form, you need to
decide where you will store your session, and you will need to
decide what method you will use to authenticate. In this simple example, the
login details will be stored in a session based on
mod_session_cookie, and authentication will be attempted against
a file using mod_authn_file. If authentication is unsuccessful,
the user will be redirected to the form login page.
Basic example
AuthFormProvider file
AuthUserFile "conf/passwd"
AuthType form
AuthName realm
AuthFormLoginRequiredLocation "http://example.com/login.html"
Session On
SessionCookieName session path=/
SessionCryptoPassphrase secret
The directive AuthType will enable
the mod_auth_form authentication when set to the value form.
The directives AuthFormProvider and
AuthUserFile specify that usernames
and passwords should be checked against the chosen file.
The directives Session,
SessionCookieName and
SessionCryptoPassphrase create an
encrypted session stored within an HTTP cookie on the browser. For more information
on the different options for configuring a session, read the documentation for
mod_session.
In the simple example above, a URL has been protected by
mod_auth_form, but the user has yet to be given an opportunity to
enter their username and password. Options for doing so include providing a
dedicated standalone login page for this purpose, or for providing the login
page inline.
Standalone Login
The login form can be hosted as a standalone page, or can be provided inline on
the same page.
When configuring the login as a standalone page, unsuccessful authentication
attempts should be redirected to a login form created by the website for this purpose,
using the AuthFormLoginRequiredLocation
directive. Typically this login page will contain an HTML form, asking the user to
provide their usename and password.
Example login form
<form method="POST" action="/dologin.html">
Username: <input type="text" name="httpd_username" value="" />
Password: <input type="password" name="httpd_password" value="" />
<input type="submit" name="login" value="Login" />
</form>
The part that does the actual login is handled by the form-login-handler.
The action of the form should point at this handler, which is configured within
Apache httpd as follows:
Form login handler example
<Location "/dologin.html">
SetHandler form-login-handler
AuthFormLoginRequiredLocation "http://example.com/login.html"
AuthFormLoginSuccessLocation "http://example.com/success.html"
AuthFormProvider file
AuthUserFile "conf/passwd"
AuthType form
AuthName realm
Session On
SessionCookieName session path=/
SessionCryptoPassphrase secret
</Location>
The URLs specified by the
AuthFormLoginRequiredLocation directive will typically
point to a page explaining to the user that their login attempt was unsuccessful, and they
should try again. The AuthFormLoginSuccessLocation
directive specifies the URL the user should be redirected to upon successful login.
Alternatively, the URL to redirect the user to on success can be embedded within the login
form, as in the example below. As a result, the same form-login-handler can be
reused for different areas of a website.
Example login form with location
<form method="POST" action="/dologin.html">
Username: <input type="text" name="httpd_username" value="" />
Password: <input type="password" name="httpd_password" value="" />
<input type="submit" name="login" value="Login" />
<input type="hidden" name="httpd_location" value="http://example.com/success.html" />
</form>
Inline Login
Warning
A risk exists that under certain circumstances, the login form configured
using inline login may be submitted more than once, revealing login credentials to
the application running underneath. The administrator must ensure that the underlying
application is properly secured to prevent abuse. If in doubt, use the
standalone login configuration.
As an alternative to having a dedicated login page for a website, it is possible to
configure mod_auth_form to authenticate users inline, without being
redirected to another page. This allows the state of the current page to be preserved
during the login attempt. This can be useful in a situation where a time limited
session is in force, and the session times out in the middle of the user request. The
user can be re-authenticated in place, and they can continue where they left off.
If a non-authenticated user attempts to access a page protected by
mod_auth_form that isn't configured with a
AuthFormLoginRequiredLocation directive,
a HTTP_UNAUTHORIZED status code is returned to the browser indicating to the user
that they are not authorized to view the page.
To configure inline authentication, the administrator overrides the error document
returned by the HTTP_UNAUTHORIZED status code with a custom error document
containing the login form, as follows:
Basic inline example
AuthFormProvider file
ErrorDocument 401 "/login.shtml"
AuthUserFile "conf/passwd"
AuthType form
AuthName realm
AuthFormLoginRequiredLocation "http://example.com/login.html"
Session On
SessionCookieName session path=/
SessionCryptoPassphrase secret
The error document page should contain a login form with an empty action property,
as per the example below. This has the effect of submitting the form to
the original protected URL, without the page having to know what that
URL is.
Example inline login form
<form method="POST" action="">
Username: <input type="text" name="httpd_username" value="" />
Password: <input type="password" name="httpd_password" value="" />
<input type="submit" name="login" value="Login" />
</form>
When the end user has filled in their login details, the form will make
an HTTP POST request to the original password protected URL.
mod_auth_form will intercept this POST request, and if
HTML fields are found present for the username and password, the user
will be logged in, and the original password protected URL will be returned
to the user as a GET request.
Inline Login with Body Preservation
A limitation of the inline login technique described above is that should an
HTML form POST have resulted in the request to authenticate or
reauthenticate, the
contents of the original form posted by the browser will be lost. Depending on
the function of the website, this could present significant inconvenience for the
end user.
mod_auth_form addresses this by allowing the method and body
of the original request to be embedded in the login form. If authentication
is successful, the original method and body will be retried by Apache httpd, preserving
the state of the original request.
To enable body preservation, add three additional fields to the login form as
per the example below.
Example with body preservation
<form method="POST" action="">
Username: <input type="text" name="httpd_username" value="" />
Password: <input type="password" name="httpd_password" value="" />
<input type="submit" name="login" value="Login" />
<input type="hidden" name="httpd_method" value="POST" />
<input type="hidden" name="httpd_mimetype" value="application/x-www-form-urlencoded" />
<input type="hidden" name="httpd_body" value="name1=value1&name2=value2" />
</form>
How the method, mimetype and body of the original request are embedded within the
login form will depend on the platform and technology being used within the website.
One option is to use the mod_include module along with the
KeptBodySize directive, along with a suitable
CGI script to embed the variables in the form.
Another option is to render the login form using a CGI script or other dynamic
technology.
CGI example
AuthFormProvider file
ErrorDocument 401 "/cgi-bin/login.cgi"
...
Logging Out
To enable a user to log out of a particular session, configure a page to
be handled by the form-logout-handler. Any attempt to access this
URL will cause the username and password to be removed from the current
session, effectively logging the user out.
By setting the
AuthFormLogoutLocation directive,
a URL can be specified that the browser will be redirected to on successful
logout. This URL might explain to the user that they have been logged out, and
give the user the option to log in again.
Basic logout example
SetHandler form-logout-handler
AuthName realm
AuthFormLogoutLocation "http://example.com/loggedout.html"
Session On
SessionCookieName session path=/
SessionCryptoPassphrase secret
Note that logging a user out does not delete the session; it merely removes
the username and password from the session. If this results in an empty session,
the net effect will be the removal of that session, but this is not
guaranteed. If you want to guarantee the removal of a session, set the
SessionMaxAge directive to a small
value, like 1 (setting the directive to zero would mean no session age limit).
Basic session expiry example
SetHandler form-logout-handler
AuthFormLogoutLocation "http://example.com/loggedout.html"
Session On
SessionMaxAge 1
SessionCookieName session path=/
SessionCryptoPassphrase secret
Usernames and Passwords
Note that form submission involves URLEncoding the form data:
in this case the username and password. You should therefore
pick usernames and passwords that avoid characters that are
URLencoded in form submission, or you may get unexpected results.
AuthFormProvider
Sets the authentication provider(s) for this location
AuthFormProvider provider-name
[provider-name] ...
AuthFormProvider file
directory.htaccess
AuthConfig
The AuthFormProvider directive sets
which provider is used to authenticate the users for this location.
The default file
provider is implemented
by the mod_authn_file module. Make sure
that the chosen provider module is present in the server.
Example
<Location "/secure">
AuthType form
AuthName "private area"
AuthFormProvider dbm
AuthDBMType SDBM
AuthDBMUserFile "/www/etc/dbmpasswd"
Require valid-user
#...
</Location>
Providers are implemented by mod_authn_dbm,
mod_authn_file, mod_authn_dbd,
mod_authnz_ldap and mod_authn_socache.
AuthFormAuthoritative
Sets whether authorization and authentication are passed to
lower level modules
AuthFormAuthoritative On|Off
AuthFormAuthoritative On
directory.htaccess
AuthConfig
Normally, each authorization module listed in AuthFormProvider will attempt
to verify the user, and if the user is not found in any provider,
access will be denied. Setting the
AuthFormAuthoritative directive explicitly
to Off
allows for both authentication and
authorization to be passed on to other non-provider-based modules
if there is no userID or rule
matching the supplied userID. This should only be necessary when
combining mod_auth_form with third-party modules
that are not configured with the AuthFormProvider
directive. When using such modules, the order of processing
is determined in the modules' source code and is not configurable.
AuthFormUsername
The name of a form field carrying the login username
AuthFormUsername fieldname
httpd_username
directory
Available in Apache HTTP Server 2.3.0 and later
The AuthFormUsername directive specifies
the name of an HTML field which, if present, will contain the username to be used to log
in.
AuthFormPassword
The name of a form field carrying the login password
AuthFormPassword fieldname
httpd_password
directory
Available in Apache HTTP Server 2.3.0 and later
The AuthFormPassword directive specifies
the name of an HTML field which, if present, will contain the password to be used to log
in.
AuthFormLocation
The name of a form field carrying a URL to redirect to on successful login
AuthFormLocation fieldname
httpd_location
directory
Available in Apache HTTP Server 2.3.0 and later
The AuthFormLocation directive specifies
the name of an HTML field which, if present, will contain a URL to redirect the browser to
should login be successful.
AuthFormMethod
The name of a form field carrying the method of the request to attempt on successful login
AuthFormMethod fieldname
httpd_method
directory
Available in Apache HTTP Server 2.3.0 and later
The AuthFormMethod directive specifies
the name of an HTML field which, if present, will contain the method of the request to
to submit should login be successful.
By populating the form with fields described by
AuthFormMethod,
AuthFormMimetype and
AuthFormBody, a website can retry
a request that may have been interrupted by the login screen, or by a session
timeout.
AuthFormMimetype
The name of a form field carrying the mimetype of the body of the request to attempt on successful login
AuthFormMimetype fieldname
httpd_mimetype
directory
Available in Apache HTTP Server 2.3.0 and later
The AuthFormMethod directive specifies
the name of an HTML field which, if present, will contain the
mimetype of the request to submit should login be successful.
By populating the form with fields described by
AuthFormMethod,
AuthFormMimetype and
AuthFormBody, a website can retry
a request that may have been interrupted by the login screen, or by a session
timeout.
AuthFormBody
The name of a form field carrying the body of the request to attempt on successful login
AuthFormBody fieldname
httpd_body
directory
Available in Apache HTTP Server 2.3.0 and later
The AuthFormMethod directive specifies
the name of an HTML field which, if present, will contain the method of the request to
to submit should login be successful.
By populating the form with fields described by
AuthFormMethod,
AuthFormMimetype and
AuthFormBody, a website can retry
a request that may have been interrupted by the login screen, or by a session
timeout.
AuthFormSize
The largest size of the form in bytes that will be parsed for the login details
AuthFormSize size
8192
directory
Available in Apache HTTP Server 2.3.0 and later
The AuthFormSize directive specifies
the maximum size of the body of the request that will be parsed to find the login form.
If a login request arrives that exceeds this size, the whole request will be aborted
with the HTTP response code HTTP_REQUEST_TOO_LARGE
.
If you have populated the form with fields described by
AuthFormMethod,
AuthFormMimetype and
AuthFormBody, you probably want to set this
field to a similar size as the KeptBodySize
directive.
AuthFormLoginRequiredLocation
The URL of the page to be redirected to should login be required
AuthFormLoginRequiredLocation url
none
directory
Available in Apache HTTP Server 2.3.0 and later. The use of the expression
parser has been added in 2.4.4.
The AuthFormLoginRequiredLocation directive
specifies the URL to redirect to should the user not be authorised to view a page. The value
is parsed using the ap_expr parser before being sent to the client.
By default, if a user is not authorised to view a page, the HTTP response code
HTTP_UNAUTHORIZED
will be returned with the page specified by the
ErrorDocument directive. This directive overrides this
default.
Use this directive if you have a dedicated login page to redirect users to.
AuthFormLoginSuccessLocation
The URL of the page to be redirected to should login be successful
AuthFormLoginSuccessLocation url
none
directory
Available in Apache HTTP Server 2.3.0 and later. The use of the expression
parser has been added in 2.4.4.
The AuthFormLoginSuccessLocation directive
specifies the URL to redirect to should the user have logged in successfully. The value is
parsed using the ap_expr parser before being sent to the client.
This directive can be overridden if a form field has been defined containing another URL
using the AuthFormLocation directive.
Use this directive if you have a dedicated login URL, and you have not embedded the
destination page in the login form.
AuthFormFakeBasicAuth
Fake a Basic Authentication header
AuthFormFakeBasicAuth On|Off
AuthFormFakeBasicAuth Off
directory
Available in Apache HTTP Server 2.3.0 and later
The AuthFormFakeBasicAuth flag
determines whether a Basic Authentication
header will be added to
the request headers. This can be used to expose the username and password to
an underlying application, without the underlying application having to be aware
of how the login was achieved.
AuthFormLogoutLocation
The URL to redirect to after a user has logged out
AuthFormLogoutLocation uri
none
directory
Available in Apache HTTP Server 2.3.0 and later. The use of the expression
parser has been added in 2.4.4.
The AuthFormLogoutLocation directive
specifies the URL of a page on the server to redirect to should the user attempt to log
out. The value is parsed using the ap_expr parser before
being sent to the client.
When a URI is accessed that is served by the handler form-logout-handler
,
the page specified by this directive will be shown to the end user. For example:
Example
<Location "/logout">
SetHandler form-logout-handler
AuthFormLogoutLocation "http://example.com/loggedout.html"
Session on
#...
</Location>
An attempt to access the URI /logout/ will result in the user being logged
out, and the page /loggedout.html will be displayed. Make sure that the page
loggedout.html is not password protected, otherwise the page will not be
displayed.
AuthFormDisableNoStore
Disable the CacheControl no-store header on the login page
AuthFormDisableNoStore On|Off
AuthFormDisableNoStore Off
directory
Available in Apache HTTP Server 2.3.0 and later
The AuthFormDisableNoStore flag
disables the sending of a Cache-Control no-store
header with the
error 401 page returned when the user is not yet logged in. The purpose of the header
is to make it difficult for an ecmascript
application to attempt to resubmit the
login form, and reveal the username and password to the backend application. Disable
at your own risk.
AuthFormSitePassphrase
Bypass authentication checks for high traffic sites
AuthFormSitePassphrase secret
none
directory
Available in Apache HTTP Server 2.3.0 and later
The AuthFormSitePassphrase directive
specifies a passphrase which, if present in the user session, causes Apache httpd to
bypass authentication checks for the given URL. It can be used on high traffic websites
to reduce the load induced on authentication infrastructure.
The passphrase can be inserted into a user session by adding this directive to the
configuration for the form-login-handler. The form-login-handler
itself will always run the authentication checks, regardless of whether a passphrase
is specified or not.
Warning
If the session is exposed to the user through the use of
mod_session_cookie, and the session is not protected with
mod_session_crypto, the passphrase is open to potential exposure
through a dictionary attack. Regardless of how the session is configured,
ensure that this directive is not used within URL spaces where private user data
could be exposed, or sensitive transactions can be conducted. Use at own risk.