Notice: I'm no longer too active with the Discord API, and only tinker around occasionally. So, if there is anybody who would like to be more active in maintaining, I'm happy to link to your fork as the new solution to use or give project permissions on this repo.
Passport strategy for authentication with Discord through the OAuth 2.0 API.
Before using this strategy, it is strongly recommended that you read through the official docs page here, especially about the scopes and understand how the auth works.
npm install passport-discord --save
The Discord authentication strategy authenticates users via a Discord user account and OAuth 2.0 token(s). A Discord API client ID, secret and redirect URL must be supplied when using this strategy. The strategy also requires a verify
callback, which receives the access token and an optional refresh token, as well as a profile
which contains the authenticated Discord user's profile. The verify
callback must also call cb
providing a user to complete the authentication.
var DiscordStrategy = require('passport-discord').Strategy;
var scopes = ['identify', 'email', 'guilds', 'guilds.join'];
passport.use(new DiscordStrategy({
clientID: 'id',
clientSecret: 'secret',
callbackURL: 'callbackURL',
scope: scopes
},
function(accessToken, refreshToken, profile, cb) {
User.findOrCreate({ discordId: profile.id }, function(err, user) {
return cb(err, user);
});
}));
Use passport.authenticate()
, and specify the 'discord'
strategy to authenticate requests.
For example, as a route middleware in an Express app:
app.get('/auth/discord', passport.authenticate('discord'));
app.get('/auth/discord/callback', passport.authenticate('discord', {
failureRedirect: '/'
}), function(req, res) {
res.redirect('/secretstuff') // Successful auth
});
If using the bot
scope, the permissions
option can be set to indicate
specific permissions your bot needs on the server (permission codes):
app.get("/auth/discord", passport.authenticate("discord", { permissions: 66321471 }));
In some use cases where the profile may be fetched more than once or you want to keep the user authenticated, refresh tokens may wish to be used. A package such as passport-oauth2-refresh
can assist in doing this.
Example:
npm install passport-oauth2-refresh --save
var DiscordStrategy = require('passport-discord').Strategy
, refresh = require('passport-oauth2-refresh');
var discordStrat = new DiscordStrategy({
clientID: 'id',
clientSecret: 'secret',
callbackURL: 'callbackURL'
},
function(accessToken, refreshToken, profile, cb) {
profile.refreshToken = refreshToken; // store this for later refreshes
User.findOrCreate({ discordId: profile.id }, function(err, user) {
if (err)
return done(err);
return cb(err, user);
});
});
passport.use(discordStrat);
refresh.use(discordStrat);
... then if we require refreshing when fetching an update or something ...
refresh.requestNewAccessToken('discord', profile.refreshToken, function(err, accessToken, refreshToken) {
if (err)
throw; // boys, we have an error here.
profile.accessToken = accessToken; // store this new one for our new requests!
});
An Express server example can be found in the /example
directory. Be sure to npm install
in that directory to get the dependencies.
- Jared Hanson - used passport-github to understand passport more and kind of as a base.
Licensed under the ISC license. The full license text can be found in the root of the project repository.