firebase authentication using email/password

Authenticate with Firebase Using Email Link in JavaScript


You can use Firebase Authentication to sign in a user by sending them an email containing a link, which they can click to sign in. In the process, the user's email address is also verified.
There are numerous benefits to signing in by email:
  • Low friction sign-up and sign-in.
  • Lower risk of password reuse across applications, which can undermine security of even well-selected passwords.
  • The ability to authenticate a user while also verifying that the user is the legitimate owner of an email address.
  • A user only needs an accessible email account to sign in. No ownership of a phone number or social media account is required.
  • A user can sign in securely without the need to provide (or remember) a password, which can be cumbersome on a mobile device.
  • An existing user who previously signed in with an email identifier (password or federated) can be upgraded to sign in with just the email. For example, a user who has forgotten their password can still sign in without needing to reset their password.

Before you begin

If you haven't already, copy the initialization snippet from the Firebase console to your project as described in Add Firebase to your JavaScript project.
To sign in users by email link, you must first enable the Email provider and Email link sign-in method for your Firebase project:
  1. In the Firebase console, open the Auth section.
  2. On the Sign in method tab, enable the Email/Password provider. Note that email/password sign-in must be enabled to use email link sign-in.
  3. In the same section, enable Email link (passwordless sign-in) sign-in method.
  4. Click Save.
To initiate the authentication flow, present the user with an interface that prompts the user to provide their email address and then call sendSignInLinkToEmail to request that Firebase send the authentication link to the user's email.
  1. Construct the ActionCodeSettings object, which provides Firebase with instructions on how to construct the email link. Set the following fields:
    • url: The deep link to embed and any additional state to be passed along. The link's domain has to be whitelisted in the Firebase Console list of authorized domains, which can be found by going to the Sign-in method tab (Authentication -> Sign-in method).
    • android and ios: The apps to use when the sign-in link is opened on an Android or iOS device. Learn more on how to configure Firebase Dynamic Links to open email action links via mobile apps.
    • handleCodeInApp: Set to true. The sign-in operation has to always be completed in the app unlike other out of band email actions (password reset and email verifications). This is because, at the end of the flow, the user is expected to be signed in and their Auth state persisted within the app.
    • dynamicLinkDomain: When multiple custom dynamic link domains are defined for a project, specify which one to use when the link is to be opened via a specified mobile app (for example, example.page.link). Otherwise the first domain is automatically selected.
    
    var actionCodeSettings = {
      // URL you want to redirect back to. The domain (www.example.com) for this
      // URL must be whitelisted in the Firebase Console.
      url: 'https://www.example.com/finishSignUp?cartId=1234',
      // This must be true.
      handleCodeInApp: true,
      iOS: {
        bundleId: 'com.example.ios'
      },
      android: {
        packageName: 'com.example.android',
        installApp: true,
        minimumVersion: '12'
      },
      dynamicLinkDomain: 'example.page.link'
    };
    
    To learn more on ActionCodeSettings, refer to the Passing State in Email Actions section.
  2. Ask the user for their email.
  3. Send the authentication link to the user's email, and save the user's email in case the user completes the email sign-in on the same device.
    
    firebase.auth().sendSignInLinkToEmail(email, actionCodeSettings)
      .then(function() {
        // The link was successfully sent. Inform the user.
        // Save the email locally so you don't need to ask the user for it again
        // if they open the link on the same device.
        window.localStorage.setItem('emailForSignIn', email);
      })
      .catch(function(error) {
        // Some error occurred, you can inspect the code: error.code
      });
    

Security concerns

To prevent a sign-in link from being used to sign in as an unintended user or on an unintended device, Firebase Auth requires the user's email address to be provided when completing the sign-in flow. For sign-in to succeed, this email address must match the address to which the sign-in link was originally sent.
You can streamline this flow for users who open the sign-in link on the same device they request the link, by storing their email address locally - for instance using localStorage or cookies - when you send the sign-in email. Then, use this address to complete the flow. Do not pass the user’s email in the redirect URL parameters and re-use it as this may enable session injections.
After sign-in completion, any previous unverified mechanism of sign-in will be removed from the user and any existing sessions will be invalidated. For example, if someone previously created an unverified account with the same email and password, the user’s password will be removed to prevent the impersonator who claimed ownership and created that unverified account from signing in again with the unverified email and password.
Also Make sure you use an HTTPS URL in production to avoid your link being potentially intercepted by intermediary servers.

Completing sign-in in a web page

The format of the email link deep link is the same as the format used for out of band email actions (email verification, password reset and email change revocation). Firebase Auth simplifies this check by providing the isSignInWithEmailLink API to check whether a link is a sign-in with email link.
To complete the sign in on landing page, call signInWithEmailLink with the user's email and the actual email link containing the one-time code.

// Confirm the link is a sign-in with email link.
if (firebase.auth().isSignInWithEmailLink(window.location.href)) {
  // Additional state parameters can also be passed via URL.
  // This can be used to continue the user's intended action before triggering
  // the sign-in operation.
  // Get the email if available. This should be available if the user completes
  // the flow on the same device where they started it.
  var email = window.localStorage.getItem('emailForSignIn');
  if (!email) {
    // User opened the link on a different device. To prevent session fixation
    // attacks, ask the user to provide the associated email again. For example:
    email = window.prompt('Please provide your email for confirmation');
  }
  // The client SDK will parse the code from the link for you.
  firebase.auth().signInWithEmailLink(email, window.location.href)
    .then(function(result) {
      // Clear email from storage.
      window.localStorage.removeItem('emailForSignIn');
      // You can access the new user via result.user
      // Additional user info profile not available via:
      // result.additionalUserInfo.profile == null
      // You can check if the user is new or existing:
      // result.additionalUserInfo.isNewUser
    })
    .catch(function(error) {
      // Some error occurred, you can inspect the code: error.code
      // Common errors could be invalid email and invalid or expired OTPs.
    });
}

Completing sign-in in a mobile app

Firebase Authentication uses Firebase Dynamic Links to send the email link to a mobile device. For sign-in completion via mobile application, the application has to be configured to detect the incoming application link, parse the underlying deep link and then complete the sign-in as is done via web flow.
To learn more on how to handle sign-in with email link in an Android application, refer to the Android guide.
To learn how to more on how to handle sign-in with email link in an iOS application, refer to the iOS guide.
You can also link this method of authentication to an existing user. For example a user previously authenticated with another provider, such as a phone number, can add this method of sign-in to their existing account.
The difference would be in the second half of the operation:

// Construct the email link credential from the current URL.
var credential = firebase.auth.EmailAuthProvider.credentialWithLink(
    email, window.location.href);
// Link the credential to the current user.
firebase.auth().currentUser.linkWithCredential(credential)
  .then(function(usercred) {
    // The provider is now successfully linked.
    // The phone user can now sign in with their phone number or email.
  })
  .catch(function(error) {
    // Some error occurred.
  });
This can also be used to re-authenticate an email link user before running a sensitive operation.

// Construct the email link credential from the current URL.
var credential = firebase.auth.EmailAuthProvider.credentialWithLink(
    email, window.location.href);
// Re-authenticate the user with this credential.
firebase.auth().currentUser.reauthenticateWithCredential(credential)
  .then(function(usercred) {
    // The user is now successfully re-authenticated and can execute sensitive
    // operations.
  })
  .catch(function(error) {
    // Some error occurred.
  });
However, as the flow could end up on a different device where the original user was not logged in, this flow might not be completed. In that case, an error can be shown to the user to force them to open the link on the same device. Some state can be passed in the link to provide information on the type of operation and the user uid.
In case you support both password and link-based sign-in with email, to differentiate the method of sign-in for a password/link user, use fetchSignInMethodsForEmail. This is useful for identifier-first flows where the user is first asked to provide their email and then presented with the method of sign-in:
// After asking the user for their email.
var email = window.prompt('Please provide your email');
firebase.auth().fetchSignInMethodsForEmail(email)
  .then(function(signInMethods) {
    // This returns the same array as fetchProvidersForEmail but for email
    // provider identified by 'password' string, signInMethods would contain 2
    // different strings:
    // 'emailLink' if the user previously signed in with an email/link
    // 'password' if the user has a password.
    // A user could have both.
    if (signInMethods.indexOf(
            firebase.auth.EmailAuthProvider.EMAIL_PASSWORD_SIGN_IN_METHOD) != -1) {
      // User can sign in with email/password.
    }
     if (signInMethods.indexOf(
             firebase.auth.EmailAuthProvider.EMAIL_LINK_SIGN_IN_METHOD) != -1) {
       // User can sign in with email/link.
    }
  })
  .catch(function(error) {
    // Some error occurred, you can inspect the code: error.code
  });
}
As described above email/password and email/link are considered the samefirebase.auth.EmailAuthProvider (same PROVIDER_ID) with different methods of sign-in.

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