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PHP Microservices

You're reading from   PHP Microservices Transit from monolithic architectures to highly available, scalable, and fault-tolerant microservices

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Product type Paperback
Published in Mar 2017
Publisher Packt
ISBN-13 9781787125377
Length 392 pages
Edition 1st Edition
Languages
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Authors (2):
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Carlos Pérez Sánchez Carlos Pérez Sánchez
Author Profile Icon Carlos Pérez Sánchez
Carlos Pérez Sánchez
Pablo Solar Vilariño Pablo Solar Vilariño
Author Profile Icon Pablo Solar Vilariño
Pablo Solar Vilariño
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Toc

Table of Contents (13) Chapters Close

Preface 1. What are Microservices? FREE CHAPTER 2. Development Environment 3. Application Design 4. Testing and Quality Control 5. Microservices Development 6. Monitoring 7. Security 8. Deployment 9. From Monolithic to Microservices 10. Strategies for Scalability 11. Best Practices and Conventions 12. Cloud and DevOps

Authentication


The starting point of every project is the authentication system, in which it is possible to identify the users or customers who will use our application or API. There are many libraries to implement the different ways to authenticate users; in this book, we will see two of the most important ways: OAuth 2 and JWT.

As we already know, microservices are stateless, which means that they should communicate with each other and users using an access token instead of cookies and sessions. So, let's look at what the workflow of the authentication is like using it:

Authentication by token workflow

As you can see in the preceding image, this should be the process of getting a list of secrets required by a customer or user:

  1. USER asks FRONTEND LOGIN for a list of secrets.

  2. FRONTEND LOGIN asks BACKEND for the list of secrets.

  3. BACKEND asks FRONTEND LOGIN for the user access token.

  4. FRONTEND LOGIN asks GOOGLE (or any other provider) for the access token.

  5. GOOGLE asks USER for their credentials...

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