Starlette offers a simple but powerful interface for handling authentication and permissions. Once you've installed `AuthenticationMiddleware` with an appropriate authentication backend the `request.user` and `request.auth` interfaces will be available in your endpoints. ```python from starlette.applications import Starlette from starlette.authentication import ( AuthCredentials, AuthenticationBackend, AuthenticationError, SimpleUser ) from starlette.middleware import Middleware from starlette.middleware.authentication import AuthenticationMiddleware from starlette.responses import PlainTextResponse from starlette.routing import Route import base64 import binascii class BasicAuthBackend(AuthenticationBackend): async def authenticate(self, conn): if "Authorization" not in conn.headers: return auth = conn.headers["Authorization"] try: scheme, credentials = auth.split() if scheme.lower() != 'basic': return decoded = base64.b64decode(credentials).decode("ascii") except (ValueError, UnicodeDecodeError, binascii.Error) as exc: raise AuthenticationError('Invalid basic auth credentials') username, _, password = decoded.partition(":") # TODO: You'd want to verify the username and password here. return AuthCredentials(["authenticated"]), SimpleUser(username) async def homepage(request): if request.user.is_authenticated: return PlainTextResponse('Hello, ' + request.user.display_name) return PlainTextResponse('Hello, you') routes = [ Route("/", endpoint=homepage) ] middleware = [ Middleware(AuthenticationMiddleware, backend=BasicAuthBackend()) ] app = Starlette(routes=routes, middleware=middleware) ``` ## Users Once `AuthenticationMiddleware` is installed the `request.user` interface will be available to endpoints or other middleware. This interface should subclass `BaseUser`, which provides two properties, as well as whatever other information your user model includes. * `.is_authenticated` * `.display_name` Starlette provides two built-in user implementations: `UnauthenticatedUser()`, and `SimpleUser(username)`. ## AuthCredentials It is important that authentication credentials are treated as separate concept from users. An authentication scheme should be able to restrict or grant particular privileges independently of the user identity. The `AuthCredentials` class provides the basic interface that `request.auth` exposes: * `.scopes` ## Permissions Permissions are implemented as an endpoint decorator, that enforces that the incoming request includes the required authentication scopes. ```python from starlette.authentication import requires @requires('authenticated') async def dashboard(request): ... ``` You can include either one or multiple required scopes: ```python from starlette.authentication import requires @requires(['authenticated', 'admin']) async def dashboard(request): ... ``` By default 403 responses will be returned when permissions are not granted. In some cases you might want to customize this, for example to hide information about the URL layout from unauthenticated users. ```python from starlette.authentication import requires @requires(['authenticated', 'admin'], status_code=404) async def dashboard(request): ... ``` !!! note The `status_code` parameter is not supported with WebSockets. The 403 (Forbidden) status code will always be used for those. Alternatively you might want to redirect unauthenticated users to a different page. ```python from starlette.authentication import requires async def homepage(request): ... @requires('authenticated', redirect='homepage') async def dashboard(request): ... ``` When redirecting users, the page you redirect them to will include URL they originally requested at the `next` query param: ```python from starlette.authentication import requires from starlette.responses import RedirectResponse @requires('authenticated', redirect='login') async def admin(request): ... async def login(request): if request.method == "POST": # Now that the user is authenticated, # we can send them to their original request destination if request.user.is_authenticated: next_url = request.query_params.get("next") if next_url: return RedirectResponse(next_url) return RedirectResponse("/") ``` For class-based endpoints, you should wrap the decorator around a method on the class. ```python from starlette.authentication import requires from starlette.endpoints import HTTPEndpoint class Dashboard(HTTPEndpoint): @requires("authenticated") async def get(self, request): ... ``` ## Custom authentication error responses You can customise the error response sent when a `AuthenticationError` is raised by an auth backend: ```python from starlette.applications import Starlette from starlette.middleware import Middleware from starlette.middleware.authentication import AuthenticationMiddleware from starlette.requests import Request from starlette.responses import JSONResponse def on_auth_error(request: Request, exc: Exception): return JSONResponse({"error": str(exc)}, status_code=401) app = Starlette( middleware=[ Middleware(AuthenticationMiddleware, backend=BasicAuthBackend(), on_error=on_auth_error), ], ) ```