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Build Status Gem Version Reviewed by Hound

ActiveModel::Otp

ActiveModel::Otp makes adding Two Factor Authentication (TFA) to a model simple. Let's see what's required to get AMo::Otp working in our Application, using Rails 5.0 (AMo::Otp is also compatible with Rails 4.x versions). We're going to use a User model and try to add options provided by ActiveModel::Otp. Inspired by AM::SecurePassword

Dependencies

  • ROTP 5.0 or higher
  • Ruby 2.3 or greater

Installation

Add this line to your application's Gemfile:

gem 'active_model_otp'

And then execute:

$ bundle

Or install it yourself as follows:

$ gem install active_model_otp

Setting your Model

We're going to add a field to our User Model, so each user can have an otp secret key. The next step is to run the migration generator in order to add the secret key field.

rails g migration AddOtpSecretKeyToUsers otp_secret_key:string
=>
      invoke  active_record
      create    db/migrate/20130707010931_add_otp_secret_key_to_users.rb

We’ll then need to run rake db:migrate to update the users table in the database. The next step is to update the model code. We need to use has_one_time_password to make it use TFA.

class User < ApplicationRecord
  has_one_time_password
end

Note: If you're adding this to an existing user model you'll need to generate otp_secret_key with a migration like:

User.find_each { |user| user.update_attribute(:otp_secret_key, User.otp_random_secret) }

To use a custom column to store the secret key field you can use the column_name option. It is also possible to generate codes with a specified length.

class User < ApplicationRecord
  has_one_time_password column_name: :my_otp_secret_column, length: 4
end

Usage

The has_one_time_password statement provides to the model some useful methods in order to implement our TFA system. AMo:Otp generates one time passwords according to TOTP RFC 6238 and the HOTP RFC 4226. This is compatible with Google Authenticator apps available for Android and iPhone, and now in use on GMail.

The otp_secret_key is saved automatically when an object is created,

user = User.create(email: "[email protected]")
user.otp_secret_key
 => "jt3gdd2qm6su5iqh"

Note: You can fork the applications for iPhone & Android and customize them

Getting current code (e.g. to send via SMS)

user.otp_code # => '186522'
sleep 30
user.otp_code # => '850738'

# Override current time
user.otp_code(time: Time.now + 3600) # => '317438'

Authenticating using a code

user.authenticate_otp('186522') # => true
sleep 30 # let's wait 30 secs
user.authenticate_otp('186522') # => false

Authenticating using a slightly old code

user.authenticate_otp('186522') # => true
sleep 30 # lets wait again
user.authenticate_otp('186522', drift: 60) # => true

Counter based OTP

An additonal counter field is required in our User Model

rails g migration AddCounterForOtpToUsers otp_counter:integer
=>
      invoke  active_record
      create    db/migrate/20130707010931_add_counter_for_otp_to_users.rb

Set default value for otp_counter to 0.

change_column :users, :otp_counter, :integer, default: 0

In addition set the counter flag option to true

class User < ApplicationRecord
  has_one_time_password counter_based: true
end

And for a custom counter column

class User < ApplicationRecord
  has_one_time_password counter_based: true, counter_column_name: :my_otp_secret_counter_column
end

Authentication is done the same. You can manually adjust the counter for your usage or set auto_increment on success to true.

user.authenticate_otp('186522') # => true
user.authenticate_otp('186522', auto_increment: true) # => true
user.authenticate_otp('186522') # => false
user.otp_counter -= 1
user.authenticate_otp('186522') # => true

When retrieving an otp_code you can also pass the auto_increment option.

user.otp_code # => '186522'
user.otp_code # => '186522'
user.otp_code(auto_increment: true) # => '768273'
user.otp_code(auto_increment: true) # => '002811'
user.otp_code # => '002811'

Google Authenticator Compatible

The library works with the Google Authenticator iPhone and Android app, and also includes the ability to generate provisioning URI's to use with the QR Code scanner built into the app.

# Use your user's email address to generate the provisioning_url
user.provisioning_uri # => 'otpauth://totp/[email protected]?secret=2z6hxkdwi3uvrnpn'

# Use a custom field to generate the provisioning_url
user.provisioning_uri("hello") # => 'otpauth://totp/hello?secret=2z6hxkdwi3uvrnpn'

# You can customize the generated url, by passing a hash of Options
# `:issuer` lets you set the Issuer name in Google Authenticator, so it doesn't show as a blank entry.
user.provisioning_uri(nil, issuer: 'MYAPP') #=> 'otpauth://totp/[email protected]?secret=2z6hxkdwi3uvrnpn&issuer=MYAPP'

This can then be rendered as a QR Code which can be scanned and added to the users list of OTP credentials.

Working example

Scan the following barcode with your phone, using Google Authenticator

QRCODE

Now run the following and compare the output

require "active_model_otp"

class User
  extend ActiveModel::Callbacks
  include ActiveModel::Validations
  include ActiveModel::OneTimePassword

  define_model_callbacks :create
  attr_accessor :otp_secret_key, :email

  has_one_time_password
end

user = User.new
user.email = '[email protected]'
user.otp_secret_key = "2z6hxkdwi3uvrnpn"
puts "Current code #{user.otp_code}"

Note: otp_secret_key must be generated using RFC 3548 base32 key strings (for compatilibity with google authenticator)

Useful Examples

Contributing

  1. Fork it
  2. Create your feature branch (git checkout -b my-new-feature)
  3. Commit your changes (git commit -am 'Add some feature')
  4. Push to the branch (git push origin my-new-feature)
  5. Create new Pull Request

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