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A Blueprint for Production-Ready Web Applications

You're reading from   A Blueprint for Production-Ready Web Applications Leverage industry best practices to create complete web apps with Python, TypeScript, and AWS

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Product type Paperback
Published in Sep 2022
Publisher Packt
ISBN-13 9781803248509
Length 284 pages
Edition 1st Edition
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Author (1):
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Philip Jones Philip Jones
Author Profile Icon Philip Jones
Philip Jones
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Toc

Table of Contents (13) Chapters Close

Preface 1. Part 1 Setting Up Our System
2. Chapter 1: Setting Up Our System for Development FREE CHAPTER 3. Part 2 Building a To-Do App
4. Chapter 2: Creating a Reusable Backend with Quart 5. Chapter 3: Building the API 6. Chapter 4: Creating a Reusable Frontend with React 7. Chapter 5: Building the Single-Page App 8. Part 3 Releasing a Production-Ready App
9. Chapter 6: Deploying and Monitoring Your Application 10. Chapter 7: Securing and Packaging the App 11. Index 12. Other Books You May Enjoy

Adding multifactor authentication

Our app allows users to log in by providing an email and a password. This means we allow them to authenticate with something they know (i.e., the password). We could also allow them to use other factors of authentication such as using their fingerprint (i.e., something they are), or a specific mobile device (i.e., something they have). Requiring a user to authenticate using multiple factors makes it much harder for an attacker to gain access to their account, however, it also makes it harder for the user to authenticate themselves. Therefore, it is best to allow users to opt into multifactor authentication.

Users are most familiar with using their phones as an additional factor, which we will implement using time-based one-time passcode (TOTP) tokens based on a shared secret. The shared secret, on the user’s phone, is an additional factor. It is also common to use SMS messages sent to the user’s phone; however, this method is increasingly...

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