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Version: 0.11.8

Overview

Social login options (e.g., Log in with Google) are a great (maybe even the best) solution for handling user accounts. A famous old developer joke tells us "The best auth system is the one you never have to make."

Wasp wants to make adding social login options to your app as painless as possible.

Using different social providers gives users a chance to sign into your app via their existing accounts on other platforms (Google, GitHub, etc.).

This page goes through the common behaviors between all supported social login providers and shows you how to customize them. It also gives an overview of Wasp's UI helpers - the quickest possible way to get started with social auth.

Available Providersโ€‹

Wasp currently supports the following social login providers:

Social Login Entityโ€‹

Wasp requires you to declare a userEntity for all auth methods (social or otherwise). This field tells Wasp which Entity represents the user.

Additionally, when using auth methods that rely on external providers(e.g., Google), you must also declare an externalAuthEntity. This tells Wasp which Entity represents the user's link with the social provider.

Both fields fall under app.auth. Here's what the full setup looks like:

main.wasp
app myApp {
wasp: {
version: "^0.11.0"
},
title: "My App",
auth: {
userEntity: User,
externalAuthEntity: SocialLogin,
methods: {
google: {}
},
onAuthFailedRedirectTo: "/login"
},
}

entity User {=psl
id Int @id @default(autoincrement())
//...
externalAuthAssociations SocialLogin[]
psl=}

entity SocialLogin {=psl
id Int @id @default(autoincrement())
provider String
providerId String
user User @relation(fields: [userId], references: [id], onDelete: Cascade)
userId Int
createdAt DateTime @default(now())
@@unique([provider, providerId, userId])
psl=}

To learn more about what the fields on these entities represent, look at the API Reference.

note

Wasp uses the same externalAuthEntity for all social login providers (e.g. both GitHub and Google use the same entity).

Default Behaviorโ€‹

When a user signs in for the first time, Wasp creates a new user account and links it to the chosen auth provider account for future logins.

Also, if the userEntity has:

  • A username field: Wasp sets it to a random username (e.g. nice-blue-horse-14357).
  • A password field: Wasp sets it to a random string.

This is a historical coupling between auth methods we plan to remove in the future.

Overridesโ€‹

Wasp lets you override the default behavior. You can create custom setups, such as allowing users to define a custom username rather instead of getting a randomly generated one.

Allowing User to Set Their Usernameโ€‹

If you want to modify the signup flow (e.g., let users choose their own usernames), you will need to go through three steps:

  1. The first step is adding a isSignupComplete property to your User Entity. This field will signals whether the user has completed the signup process.
  2. The second step is overriding the default signup behavior.
  3. The third step is implementing the rest of your signup flow and redirecting users where appropriate.

Let's go through both steps in more detail.

1. Adding the isSignupComplete Field to the User Entityโ€‹

main.wasp
entity User {=psl
id Int @id @default(autoincrement())
username String? @unique
isSignupComplete Boolean @default(false)
externalAuthAssociations SocialLogin[]
psl=}

2. Overriding the Default Behaviorโ€‹

Declare an import under app.auth.methods.google.getUserFieldsFn (the example assumes you're using Google):

main.wasp
app myApp {
wasp: {
version: "^0.11.0"
},
title: "My App",
auth: {
userEntity: User,
externalAuthEntity: SocialLogin,
methods: {
google: {
getUserFieldsFn: import { getUserFields } from "@server/auth/google.js"
}
},
onAuthFailedRedirectTo: "/login"
},
}

// ...

And implement the imported function.

src/server/auth/google.js
export const getUserFields = async (_context, _args) => {
return {
isSignupComplete: false,
}
}

3. Showing the Correct State on the Clientโ€‹

You can query the user's isSignupComplete flag on the client with the useAuth() hook. Depending on the flag's value, you can redirect users to the appropriate signup step.

For example:

  1. When the user lands on the homepage, check the value of user.isSignupComplete.
  2. If it's false, it means the user has started the signup process but hasn't yet chosen their username. Therefore, you can redirect them to EditUserDetailsPage where they can edit the username property.
client/HomePage.jsx
import useAuth from '@wasp/auth/useAuth'
import { Redirect } from 'react-router-dom'

export function HomePage() {
const { data: user } = useAuth()

if (user.isSignupComplete === false) {
return <Redirect to="/edit-user-details" />
}

// ...
}

Using the User's Provider Account Detailsโ€‹

Account details are provider-specific. Each provider has their own rules for defining the getUserFieldsFn and configFn functions:

UI Helpersโ€‹

Use Auth UI

Auth UI is a common name for all high-level auth forms that come with Wasp.

These include fully functional auto-generated login and signup forms with working social login buttons. If you're looking for the fastest way to get your auth up and running, that's where you should look.

The UI helpers described below are lower-level and are useful for creating your custom forms.

Wasp provides sign-in buttons and URLs for each of the supported social login providers.

client/LoginPage.jsx
import {
SignInButton as GoogleSignInButton,
signInUrl as googleSignInUrl,
} from '@wasp/auth/helpers/Google'
import {
SignInButton as GitHubSignInButton,
signInUrl as gitHubSignInUrl,
} from '@wasp/auth/helpers/GitHub'

export const LoginPage = () => {
return (
<>
<GoogleSignInButton />
<GitHubSignInButton />
{/* or */}
<a href={googleSignInUrl}>Sign in with Google</a>
<a href={gitHubSignInUrl}>Sign in with GitHub</a>
</>
)
}

If you need even more customization, you can create your custom components using signInUrls.

API Referenceโ€‹

Fields in the app.auth Dictionary and Overridesโ€‹

For more information on:

  • Allowed fields in app.auth
  • getUserFields and configFn functions

Check the provider-specific API References:

The externalAuthEntity and Its Fieldsโ€‹

Using social login providers requires you to define an External Auth Entity and declare it with the app.auth.externalAuthEntity field. This Entity holds the data relevant to the social provider. All social providers share the same Entity.

main.wasp
// ...

entity SocialLogin {=psl
id Int @id @default(autoincrement())
provider String
providerId String
user User @relation(fields: [userId], references: [id], onDelete: Cascade)
userId Int
createdAt DateTime @default(now())
@@unique([provider, providerId, userId])
psl=}

// ...
info

You don't need to know these details, you can just copy and paste the entity definition above and you are good to go.

The Entity acting as app.auth.externalAuthEntity must include the following fields:

  • provider - The provider's name (e.g. google, github, etc.).
  • providerId - The user's ID on the provider's platform.
  • userId - The user's ID on your platform (this references the id field from the Entity acting as app.auth.userEntity).
  • user - A relation to the userEntity (see the userEntity section) for more details.
  • createdAt - A timestamp of when the association was created.
  • @@unique([provider, providerId, userId]) - A unique constraint on the combination of provider, providerId and userId.

Expected Fields on the userEntityโ€‹

Using Social login providers requires you to add one extra field to the Entity acting as app.auth.userEntity:

main.wasp
// ...

entity User {=psl
id Int @id @default(autoincrement())
//...
externalAuthAssociations SocialLogin[]
psl=}

// ...