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Mastering Internet of Things

You're reading from   Mastering Internet of Things Design and create your own IoT applications using Raspberry Pi 3

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Product type Paperback
Published in Mar 2018
Publisher Packt
ISBN-13 9781788397483
Length 410 pages
Edition 1st Edition
Concepts
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Author (1):
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Peter Waher Peter Waher
Author Profile Icon Peter Waher
Peter Waher
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Toc

Table of Contents (18) Chapters Close

Preface 1. Preparing Our First Raspberry Pi Project 2. Creating a Sensor to Measure Ambient Light FREE CHAPTER 3. Creating an Actuator for Controlling Illumination 4. Publishing Information Using MQTT 5. Publishing Data Using HTTP 6. Creating Web Pages for Your Devices 7. Communicating More Efficiently Using CoAP 8. Interoperability 9. Social Interaction with Your Devices Using XMPP 10. The Controller 11. Product Life Cycle 12. Concentrators and Bridges 13. Using an Internet of Things Service Platform 14. IoT Harmonization 15. Security for the Internet of Things 16. Privacy 17. Other Books You May Enjoy

Protecting our web services

The login page described earlier only protects our Markdown content, not our dynamic web services. If you know the resource names of the web services, you can still extract all sensor data and control the actuator output, unauthenticated. To avoid this, we need to add an authentication layer on top of our web services. We can do this by using JWT (Java Web Tokens). These tokens are simple strings that are cryptographically signed by a server, and that can be easily transported in any type of machine-to-machine communication where you want to avoid sessions and login forms. The server can then validate the token by checking the signature. By adding the Waher.Security.JWT.UWP NuGet package to our SensorHttp and ActuatorHttp projects, we can use JWT to protect our web services.

For .NET standard, .NET Core, or traditional .NET Framework projects,...
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