NOTE: Amazon Cognito launched native Passwordless support in November 2024 (see launch blog) and of course using native functionality should be preferred.
The solution here may still be of use to you for these reasons:
- It supports usernameless FIDO2 sign-in (using discoverable credentials)
- It gives you full control of the FIDO2 parameters that are used for the authentication. For example to turn on extensions (such as credProps), or to allow credentials that's don't require
userVerification
but only user presence.- This solution works in the lowest Cognito pricing tier.
- Magic links and SMS based Step-Up auth are not yet natively available and this solution shows how to do it.
- Lastly this solution can be used as a demonstration of how FIDO2 works; it may be helpful to be able to look under the hood.
AWS Solution to implement Passwordless authentication with Amazon Cognito
Passwordless authentication improves security, reduces friction and provides better user experience for end-users of customer facing applications. Amazon Cognito provides features to implement custom authentication flows, which can be used to expand authentication factors for your application. This solution demonstrates several patterns to support passwordless authentication and provides reference implementations for these methods:
- FIDO2: aka WebAuthn, i.e. sign in with Face, Touch, YubiKey, etc. This includes support for Passkeys (i.e. usernameless authentication). FIDO2 - architecture and details.
- Magic Link Sign In: sign in with a one-time-use secret link that's emailed to you (and works across browsers). Magic Links - architecture and details.
- SMS based Step-Up auth: let an already signed-in user verify their identity again with a SMS One-Time-Password (OTP) without requiring them to type in their password. SMS OTP Step up - architecture and details.
The reference implementation of each of these auth methods uses several AWS resources. This solution contains both CDK code (TypeScript) for the back-end, as well as front-end code (TypeScript) to use in Web, React and React Native to help developers understand the building blocks needed and expand/adjust the solution as necessary.
IMPORTANT: This AWS Solution is for demonstration purposes and uses several AWS resources, it is intended for developers with moderate to advanced AWS knowledge. If you plan to use these methods in production, you need to review, adjust and extend the sample code as necessary for your requirements.
Sign in with passkey, without needing to type in your username:
Sign in with non-discoverable FIDO2 credential, or Magic Link:
Here's a short (11m41s) video that explains and demonstrates the solution:
- Installation
- Getting Started
- Basic Usage
- Features
- Security
- Usage with AWS Amplify
- Usage in (plain) Web
- Usage in React
- Usage in React Native
- Customizing Auth
- FAQ - Frequently Asked Questions
- License
We've wrapped the sample code in an NPM package for convenient installation and use:
npm install amazon-cognito-passwordless-auth
The installation contains both the AWS CDK code as well as the front-end code to go with it.
Follow the self-paced workshop (duration: 60 minutes) to understand how to use this solution to implement sign-in with FIDO2 (WebAuthn) and Magic Links. The workshop will walk you through all the steps to set up and use this solution: Implement Passwordless authentication with Amazon Cognito and WebAuthn
Alternatively, you can deploy the end-to-end example into your own AWS account. You can run the accompanying front end locally, and sign-in with magic links and FIDO2 (WebAuthn), and try SMS OTP Step Up authentication.
Create a CDK stack, instantiate the Passwordless
CDK construct, and deploy. This will deploy all necessary AWS components, such as AWS Lambda triggers that implement custom authentication flows.
import * as cdk from "aws-cdk-lib";
import { Construct } from "constructs";
import { Passwordless } from "amazon-cognito-passwordless-auth/cdk";
class SampleTestStack extends cdk.Stack {
constructor(scope?: Construct, id?: string, props?: cdk.StackProps) {
super(scope, id, props);
const passwordless = new Passwordless(this, "Passwordless", {
userPool: yourUserPool, // optional, if not provided an Amazon Cognito User Pool will be created for you
allowedOrigins: [
"http://localhost:5173", // Mention all URLs you're exposing the web app on
],
magicLink: {
sesFromAddress: "[email protected]", // must be a verified domain or identity in Amazon SES
},
fido2: {
allowedRelyingPartyIds: [
"localhost", // Domain names that you wish to use as Relying Party ID
],
},
smsOtpStepUp: {}, // leave this out to disable SMS OTP Step Up Auth. Likewise for magicLink and fido2
});
new cdk.CfnOutput(this, "ClientId", {
value: passwordless.userPoolClients!.at(0)!.userPoolClientId,
});
new cdk.CfnOutput(this, "Fido2Url", {
value: passwordless.fido2Api!.url!,
});
}
}
Then, with your CDK stack deployed, you're ready to wire up the frontend, see below for React, React Native and (plain) Web.
This library includes:
- A CDK construct that deploys an Amazon Cognito User Pool with Custom Authorization configured to support the passwordless authentication flows (includes other AWS Services needed, notably DynamoDB and HTTP API).
- Web functions to use in your Web Apps, to help implement the corresponding front-end.
- React and React Native hooks, to make it even easier to use passwordless authentication in React and React Native.
- React prebuilt components that you can drop into your webapp to get started with something that works quickly, as a basis for further development.
Other noteworthy features:
- This library is built from the ground up in plain TypeScript and has very few dependencies besides
aws-sdk
andaws-cdk-lib
. Most batteries are included:- The Magic Link back-end implementation has no dependencies
- The FIDO2 back-end implementation only depends on
cbor
- The SMS Step-Up Auth back-end implementation only depends on
aws-jwt-verify
- The (plain) Web client implementation has no dependencies
- The React Web client implementation only has a peer dependency on
react
itself - The React Native client implementation only depends on
react-native-passkey
- This library is fully compatible with AWS Amplify (JS library,
aws-amplify
), however it does not require AWS Amplify. If you just need Auth, this library should be all you need, but you can use AWS Amplify at the same time for any other features (and even for Auth too, as they can co-operate). See Usage with AWS Amplify. - The custom authentication implementations are also exported as separate functions, so you can reuse the code, configure them and tailor them in your own Custom Auth Functions. For example, you can use a custom JavaScript function to generate the HTML and Text contents of the e-mail with the Magic Links.
See CONTRIBUTING for more information.
This sample solution defines several peer dependencies that you must install yourself (e.g. AWS CDK, React). You must make sure to keep these dependencies updated, to account for any security issues that may be found (and solved) for these dependencies.
By default, localStorage
is used to store tokens (JWTs). This is similar to how e.g. AmplifyJS does it, and is subject to the same concerns. You may want to store tokens elsewhere, perhaps in memory only. You can do so by configuring a custom storage class, e.g.:
import { Passwordless } from "amazon-cognito-passwordless-auth";
class MemoryStorage {
constructor() {
this.memory = new Map();
}
getItem(key) {
return this.memory.get(key);
}
setItem(key, value) {
this.memory.set(key, value);
}
removeItem(key) {
this.memory.delete(key);
}
}
Passwordless.configure({
..., // other config
storage: new MemoryStorage(),
});
This sample solution is secure by default. However, you should consider matching the security posture to your requirements, that might be stricter than the defaults:
- Enable KMS encryption on DynamoDB tables (default: uses DynamoDB default encryption)
- Set CloudWatch log retention in accordance to your requirements (default: logs never expire)
This library by default uses the same token storage as Amplify uses by default, and thus is able to co-exist and co-operate with Amplify. That means that you can use this library to manage authentication, and use Amplify for other operations (e.g. Storage, PubSub).
After the user signed-in with this library, Amplify will recognize that sign-in as if it had managed the sign-in itself.
If you're using Amplify and this library together, you can use the following convenience methods to configure this library from Amplify configuration:
import { Passwordless } from "amazon-cognito-passwordless-auth";
import { Amplify } from "aws-amplify";
// Configure Amplify:
Amplify.configure({
...
})
// Next, configure Passwordless from Amplify:
Passwordless.configureFromAmplify(Amplify.configure());
// Or, to be able able to provide additional Passwordless configuration, do:
Passwordless.configureFromAmplify(Amplify.configure()).with({
fido2: {
baseUrl: "...",
},
});
See README.md
See README-REACT.md
See README.md
If you want to do customization of this solution that goes beyond the parameters of the Passwordless
construct, e.g. to use your own e-mail content for magic links, see CUSTOMIZE-AUTH.md
The AWS Industries Prototyping team. We created this library initially to use in our own prototypes, that we build for customers. We thought it would benefit many customers, so we decided to spend the effort to open-source it.
Since we use this library ourselves, we'll probably keep it up-to-date and evolve it further. That being said, we consider this sample code: if you use it, be prepared to own your own fork of it.
Having this repository be on aws-samples
communicates most clearly that it is sample code. Users may run it as-is, but should be prepared to "own" it themselves.
We are considering to move it to awslabs
in the future (which is why we released this under Apache-2.0
license, instead of MIT-0
which is common on aws-samples
).
If you use this solution, YOU must review it and be your own judge of its security posture.
Having said that, you should know that this solution was written by Amazon Cognito experts from AWS. We have run it through multiple internal reviews. We've used it for several of our projects. Amazon's application security team has reviewed and pentested it.
This is currently out of scope, to keep maintenance effort manageable. However we'd like to track such requests: leave us a GitHub issue.
This is currently out of scope, to keep maintenance effort manageable. However we'd like to track such requests: leave us a GitHub issue.
This is currently out of scope, to keep maintenance effort manageable. However we'd like to track such requests: leave us a GitHub issue.
This project is licensed under the Apache-2.0 License.