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Node.js Web Development

You're reading from   Node.js Web Development Server-side web development made easy with Node 14 using practical examples

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Product type Paperback
Published in Jul 2020
Publisher Packt
ISBN-13 9781838987572
Length 760 pages
Edition 5th Edition
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Author (1):
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David Herron David Herron
Author Profile Icon David Herron
David Herron
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Table of Contents (19) Chapters Close

Preface 1. Section 1: Introduction to Node.js
2. About Node.js FREE CHAPTER 3. Setting Up Node.js 4. Exploring Node.js Modules 5. HTTP Servers and Clients 6. Section 2: Developing the Express Application
7. Your First Express Application 8. Implementing the Mobile-First Paradigm 9. Data Storage and Retrieval 10. Authenticating Users with a Microservice 11. Dynamic Client/Server Interaction with Socket.IO 12. Section 3: Deployment
13. Deploying Node.js Applications to Linux Servers 14. Deploying Node.js Microservices with Docker 15. Deploying a Docker Swarm to AWS EC2 with Terraform 16. Unit Testing and Functional Testing 17. Security in Node.js Applications 18. Other Books You May Enjoy
Authenticating Users with a Microservice

Now that our Notes application can save its data in a database, we can think about the next phase of making this a real application—namely, authenticating our users.

It's so natural to log in to a website to use its services. We do it every day, and we even trust banking and investment organizations to secure our financial information through login procedures on a website. The HyperText Transfer Protocol (HTTP) is a stateless protocol, and a web application cannot tell much about one HTTP request compared with another. Because HTTP is stateless, HTTP requests do not natively know the user's identity, whether the user driving the web browser is logged in, or even whether the HTTP request was initiated by a human being.

The typical method for user authentication is to send a cookie containing a token to the browser, to carry...

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