I'm an node.js and express.js noob. This question may seems silly but I'm really in confusion.
I'm trying to configure Local Strategry authentication by using passport. As shown in the official documentation, we can figure this Local Strategy by the following code,
passport.use(new LocalStrategy( function(username, password, done) { User.findOne({ username: username }, function (err, user) { if (err) { return done(err); } if (!user) { return done(null, false); } if (!user.verifyPassword(password)) { return done(null, false); } return done(null, user); }); } ));
My confusion is about the done
callback function. When the official docs show this local strategy using as a middleware in the route handler, there is no need to pass the function parameter for this done
callback.
app.post('/login', passport.authenticate('local'), function(req, res) { res.redirect('/'); });
So, isn't this done
callback function will be null if we don't provide the function parameter? If not, what is that done
callback function and what processes will be happening in this done
callback function?
When success is called, it can attach the user to the request or do other things, depending on your needs (it looks for the options you pass to passport. authenticate ). If you want to determine when next will be called, you should use custom callback which gives you more flexibility.
use() : var passport = require('passport'); passport. use(strategy); All strategies have a name which, by convention, corresponds to the package name according to the pattern passport-{name} . For instance, the LocalStrategy configured above is named local as it is distributed in the passport-local package.
What is Callback? Callback is an asynchronous equivalent for a function. A callback function is called at the completion of a given task. Node makes heavy use of callbacks. All the APIs of Node are written in such a way that they support callbacks.
done
is a method called internally by the strategy implementation.
Then it navigates you, as you can see, to one of the success
/ error
/ fail
methods (again, by the implementation. there are more options). Each of these options may calls to the next
, where in your snippet code is the following:
function(req, res) { res.redirect('/'); });
When success
is called, it can attach the user to the request or do other things, depending on your needs (it looks for the options
you pass to passport.authenticate
). If you want to determine when next
will be called, you should use custom callback
which gives you more flexibility.
I strongly recommend that you read the source.
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