JJWT aims to be the easiest to use and understand library for creating and verifying JSON Web Tokens (JWTs) on the JVM and Android.
JJWT is a pure Java implementation based exclusively on the JWT, JWS, JWE, JWK and JWA RFC specifications and open source under the terms of the Apache 2.0 License.
The library was created by Okta's Senior Architect, Les Hazlewood and is supported and maintained by a community of contributors.
Okta is a complete authentication and user management API for developers.
We've also added some convenience extensions that are not part of the specification, such as JWS compression and claim enforcement.
- Features
- Community
- What is a JSON Web Token?
- Installation
- Quickstart
- Signed JWTs
- Compression
- JSON Processor
- Base64 Support
-
Fully functional on all JDKs and Android
-
Automatic security best practices and assertions
-
Easy to learn and read API
-
Convenient and readable fluent interfaces, great for IDE auto-completion to write code quickly
-
Fully RFC specification compliant on all implemented functionality, tested against RFC-specified test vectors
-
Stable implementation with enforced 100% test code coverage. Literally every single method, statement and conditional branch variant in the entire codebase is tested and required to pass on every build.
-
Creating, parsing and verifying digitally signed compact JWTs (aka JWSs) with all standard JWS algorithms:
- HS256: HMAC using SHA-256
- HS384: HMAC using SHA-384
- HS512: HMAC using SHA-512
- ES256: ECDSA using P-256 and SHA-256
- ES384: ECDSA using P-384 and SHA-384
- ES512: ECDSA using P-521 and SHA-512
- RS256: RSASSA-PKCS-v1_5 using SHA-256
- RS384: RSASSA-PKCS-v1_5 using SHA-384
- RS512: RSASSA-PKCS-v1_5 using SHA-512
- PS256: RSASSA-PSS using SHA-256 and MGF1 with SHA-2561
- PS384: RSASSA-PSS using SHA-384 and MGF1 with SHA-3841
- PS512: RSASSA-PSS using SHA-512 and MGF1 with SHA-5121
1. Requires JDK 11 or a compatible JCA Provider (like BouncyCastle) in the runtime classpath.
-
Convenience enhancements beyond the specification such as
- Body compression for any large JWT, not just JWEs
- Claims assertions (requiring specific values)
- Claim POJO marshaling and unmarshaling when using a compatible JSON parser (e.g. Jackson)
- Secure Key generation based on desired JWA algorithms
- and more...
- Non-compact serialization and parsing.
- JWE (Encryption for JWT)
These features will be implemented in a future release. Community contributions are welcome!
If you have trouble using JJWT, please first read the documentation on this page before asking questions. We try very hard to ensure JJWT's documentation is robust, categorized with a table of contents, and up to date for each release.
If the documentation or the API JavaDoc isn't sufficient, and you either have usability questions or are confused about something, please ask your question here.
After asking your question, you may wish to join our Slack or Gittr chat rooms, but note that they may not always be attended. You will usually have a better chance of having your question answered by asking your question here.
If you believe you have found a bug or would like to suggest a feature enhancement, please create a new GitHub issue, however:
Please do not create a GitHub issue to ask a question.
We use GitHub Issues to track actionable work that requires changes to JJWT's design and/or codebase. If you have a usability question, instead please ask your question here, or try Slack or Gittr as described above.
If a GitHub Issue is created that does not represent actionable work for JJWT's codebase, it will be promptly closed.
If you do not have a usability question and believe you have a legitimate bug or feature request, please do create a new JJWT issue.
If you feel like you'd like to help fix a bug or implement the new feature yourself, please read the Contributing section next before starting any work.
Simple Pull Requests that fix anything other than JJWT core code (documentation, JavaDoc, typos, test cases, etc) are always appreciated and have a high likelihood of being merged quickly. Please send them!
However, if you want or feel the need to change JJWT's functionality or core code, please do not issue a pull request without creating a new JJWT issue and discussing your desired changes first, before you start working on it.
It would be a shame to reject your earnest and genuinely appreciated pull request if it might not not align with the project's goals, design expectations or planned functionality. We've sadly had to reject large PRs in the past because they were out of sync with project or design expectations - all because the PR author didn't first check in with the team first before working on a solution.
So, please create a new JJWT issue first to discuss, and then we can see if (or how) a PR is warranted. Thank you!
If you would like to help, but don't know where to start, please visit the Help Wanted Issues page and pick any of the ones there, and we'll be happy to discuss and answer questions in the issue comments.
If any of those don't appeal to you, no worries! Any help you would like to offer would be appreciated based on the above caveats concerning contributing pull reqeuests. Feel free to discuss or ask questions first if you're not sure. :)
Don't know what a JSON Web Token is? Read on. Otherwise, jump on down to the Installation section.
JWT is a means of transmitting information between two parties in a compact, verifiable form.
The bits of information encoded in the body of a JWT are called claims
. The expanded form of the JWT is in a JSON format, so each claim
is a key in the JSON object.
JWTs can be cryptographically signed (making it a JWS) or encrypted (making it a JWE).
This adds a powerful layer of verifiability to the user of JWTs. The receiver has a high degree of confidence that the JWT has not been tampered with by verifying the signature, for instance.
The compact representation of a signed JWT is a string that has three parts, each separated by a .
:
eyJhbGciOiJIUzI1NiJ9.eyJzdWIiOiJKb2UifQ.ipevRNuRP6HflG8cFKnmUPtypruRC4fb1DWtoLL62SY
Each part is Base64URL-encoded. The first part is the header, which at a minimum needs to specify the algorithm used to sign the JWT. The second part is the body. This part has all the claims of this JWT encoded in it. The final part is the signature. It's computed by passing a combination of the header and body through the algorithm specified in the header.
If you pass the first two parts through a base 64 url decoder, you'll get the following (formatting added for clarity):
header
{
"alg": "HS256"
}
body
{
"sub": "Joe"
}
In this case, the information we have is that the HMAC using SHA-256 algorithm was used to sign the JWT. And, the
body has a single claim, sub
with value Joe
.
There are a number of standard claims, called Registered Claims,
in the specification and sub
(for subject) is one of them.
To compute the signature, you need a secret key to sign it. We'll cover keys and algorithms later.
Use your favorite Maven-compatible build tool to pull the dependencies from Maven Central.
The dependencies could differ slightly if you are working with a JDK project or an Android project.
If you're building a (non-Android) JDK project, you will want to define the following dependencies:
<dependency>
<groupId>io.jsonwebtoken</groupId>
<artifactId>jjwt-api</artifactId>
<version>0.11.1</version>
</dependency>
<dependency>
<groupId>io.jsonwebtoken</groupId>
<artifactId>jjwt-impl</artifactId>
<version>0.11.1</version>
<scope>runtime</scope>
</dependency>
<dependency>
<groupId>io.jsonwebtoken</groupId>
<artifactId>jjwt-jackson</artifactId> <!-- or jjwt-gson if Gson is preferred -->
<version>0.11.1</version>
<scope>runtime</scope>
</dependency>
<!-- Uncomment this next dependency if you are using JDK 10 or earlier and you also want to use
RSASSA-PSS (PS256, PS384, PS512) algorithms. JDK 11 or later does not require it for those algorithms:
<dependency>
<groupId>org.bouncycastle</groupId>
<artifactId>bcprov-jdk15on</artifactId>
<version>1.60</version>
<scope>runtime</scope>
</dependency>
-->
dependencies {
compile 'io.jsonwebtoken:jjwt-api:0.11.1'
runtime 'io.jsonwebtoken:jjwt-impl:0.11.1',
// Uncomment the next line if you want to use RSASSA-PSS (PS256, PS384, PS512) algorithms:
//'org.bouncycastle:bcprov-jdk15on:1.60',
'io.jsonwebtoken:jjwt-jackson:0.11.1' // or 'io.jsonwebtoken:jjwt-gson:0.11.1' for gson
}
Android projects will want to define the following dependencies and Proguard exclusions:
Add the dependencies to your project:
dependencies {
api 'io.jsonwebtoken:jjwt-api:0.11.1'
runtimeOnly 'io.jsonwebtoken:jjwt-impl:0.11.1'
runtimeOnly('io.jsonwebtoken:jjwt-orgjson:0.11.1') {
exclude group: 'org.json', module: 'json' //provided by Android natively
}
// Uncomment the next line if you want to use RSASSA-PSS (PS256, PS384, PS512) algorithms:
//runtimeOnly 'org.bouncycastle:bcprov-jdk15on:1.60'
}
You can use the following Android Proguard exclusion rules:
-keepattributes InnerClasses
-keep class io.jsonwebtoken.** { *; }
-keepnames class io.jsonwebtoken.* { *; }
-keepnames interface io.jsonwebtoken.* { *; }
-keep class org.bouncycastle.** { *; }
-keepnames class org.bouncycastle.** { *; }
-dontwarn org.bouncycastle.**
Notice the above dependency declarations all have only one compile-time dependency and the rest are declared as runtime dependencies.
This is because JJWT is designed so you only depend on the APIs that are explicitly designed for you to use in your applications and all other internal implementation details - that can change without warning - are relegated to runtime-only dependencies. This is an extremely important point if you want to ensure stable JJWT usage and upgrades over time:
JJWT guarantees semantic versioning compatibility for all of its artifacts except the jjwt-impl
.jar. No such
guarantee is made for the jjwt-impl
.jar and internal changes in that .jar can happen at any time. Never add the
jjwt-impl
.jar to your project with compile
scope - always declare it with runtime
scope.
This is done to benefit you: great care goes into curating the jjwt-api
.jar and ensuring it contains what you need
and remains backwards compatible as much as is possible so you can depend on that safely with compile scope. The
runtime jjwt-impl
.jar strategy affords the JJWT developers the flexibility to change the internal packages and
implementations whenever and however necessary. This helps us implement features, fix bugs, and ship new releases to
you more quickly and efficiently.
Most complexity is hidden behind a convenient and readable builder-based fluent interface, great for relying on IDE auto-completion to write code quickly. Here's an example:
import io.jsonwebtoken.Jwts;
import io.jsonwebtoken.SignatureAlgorithm;
import io.jsonwebtoken.security.Keys;
import java.security.Key;
// We need a signing key, so we'll create one just for this example. Usually
// the key would be read from your application configuration instead.
Key key = Keys.secretKeyFor(SignatureAlgorithm.HS256);
String jws = Jwts.builder().setSubject("Joe").signWith(key).compact();
How easy was that!?
In this case, we are:
- building a JWT that will have the
registered claim
sub
(subject) set toJoe
. We are then - signing the JWT using a key suitable for the HMAC-SHA-256 algorithm. Finally, we are
- compacting it into its final
String
form. A signed JWT is called a 'JWS'.
The resultant jws
String looks like this:
eyJhbGciOiJIUzI1NiJ9.eyJzdWIiOiJKb2UifQ.1KP0SsvENi7Uz1oQc07aXTL7kpQG5jBNIybqr60AlD4
Now let's verify the JWT (you should always discard JWTs that don't match an expected signature):
assert Jwts.parserBuilder().setSigningKey(key).build().parseClaimsJws(jws).getBody().getSubject().equals("Joe");
NOTE: Ensure you call the parseClaimsJws
method (since there are many similar methods available). You will get an UnsupportedJwtException
if you parse your JWT with wrong method.
There are two things going on here. The key
from before is being used to validate the signature of the JWT. If it
fails to verify the JWT, a SignatureException
(which extends from JwtException
) is thrown. Assuming the JWT is
validated, we parse out the claims and assert that that subject is set to Joe
.
You have to love code one-liners that pack a punch!
But what if parsing or signature validation failed? You can catch JwtException
and react accordingly:
try {
Jwts.parserBuilder().setSigningKey(key).build().parseClaimsJws(compactJws);
//OK, we can trust this JWT
} catch (JwtException e) {
//don't trust the JWT!
}
The JWT specification provides for the ability to cryptographically sign a JWT. Signing a JWT:
- guarantees the JWT was created by someone we know (it is authentic) as well as
- guarantees that no-one has manipulated or changed the JWT after it was created (its integrity is maintained).
These two properties - authenticity and integrity - assure us that a JWT contains information we can trust. If a JWT fails authenticity or integrity checks, we should always reject that JWT because we can't trust it.
So how is a JWT signed? Let's walk through it with some easy-to-read pseudocode:
-
Assume we have a JWT with a JSON header and body (aka 'Claims') as follows:
header
{ "alg": "HS256" }
body
{ "sub": "Joe" }
-
Remove all unnecessary whitespace in the JSON:
String header = '{"alg":"HS256"}' String claims = '{"sub":"Joe"}'
-
Get the UTF-8 bytes and Base64URL-encode each:
String encodedHeader = base64URLEncode( header.getBytes("UTF-8") ) String encodedClaims = base64URLEncode( claims.getBytes("UTF-8") )
-
Concatenate the encoded header and claims with a period character between them:
String concatenated = encodedHeader + '.' + encodedClaims
-
Use a sufficiently-strong cryptographic secret or private key, along with a signing algorithm of your choice (we'll use HMAC-SHA-256 here), and sign the concatenated string:
Key key = getMySecretKey() byte[] signature = hmacSha256( concatenated, key )
-
Because signatures are always byte arrays, Base64URL-encode the signature and append a period character '.' and it to the concatenated string:
String jws = concatenated + '.' + base64URLEncode( signature )
And there you have it, the final jws
String looks like this:
eyJhbGciOiJIUzI1NiJ9.eyJzdWIiOiJKb2UifQ.1KP0SsvENi7Uz1oQc07aXTL7kpQG5jBNIybqr60AlD4
This is called a 'JWS' - short for signed JWT.
Of course, no one would want to do this manually in code, and worse, if you get anything wrong, you could cause security problems or weaknesses. As a result, JJWT was created to handle all of this for you: JJWT completely automates both the creation of JWSs as well as the parsing and verification of JWSs for you.
But before we dig in to showing you how to create a JWS using JJWT, let's briefly discuss Signature Algorithms and Keys, specifically as they relate to the JWT specifications. Understanding them is critical to being able to create a JWS properly.
The JWT specification identifies 12 standard signature algorithms - 3 secret key algorithms and 9 asymmetric key algorithms - identified by the following names:
HS256
: HMAC using SHA-256HS384
: HMAC using SHA-384HS512
: HMAC using SHA-512ES256
: ECDSA using P-256 and SHA-256ES384
: ECDSA using P-384 and SHA-384ES512
: ECDSA using P-521 and SHA-512RS256
: RSASSA-PKCS-v1_5 using SHA-256RS384
: RSASSA-PKCS-v1_5 using SHA-384RS512
: RSASSA-PKCS-v1_5 using SHA-512PS256
: RSASSA-PSS using SHA-256 and MGF1 with SHA-256PS384
: RSASSA-PSS using SHA-384 and MGF1 with SHA-384PS512
: RSASSA-PSS using SHA-512 and MGF1 with SHA-512
These are all represented in the io.jsonwebtoken.SignatureAlgorithm
enum.
What's really important about these algorithms - other than their security properties - is that the JWT specification RFC 7518, Sections 3.2 through 3.5 requires (mandates) that you MUST use keys that are sufficiently strong for a chosen algorithm.
This means that JJWT - a specification-compliant library - will also enforce that you use sufficiently strong keys for the algorithms you choose. If you provide a weak key for a given algorithm, JJWT will reject it and throw an exception.
This is not because we want to make your life difficult, we promise! The reason why the JWT specification, and consequently JJWT, mandates key lengths is that the security model of a particular algorithm can completely break down if you don't adhere to the mandatory key properties of the algorithm, effectively having no security at all. No one wants completely insecure JWTs, right? Neither would we.
So what are the requirements?
JWT HMAC-SHA signature algorithms HS256
, HS384
, and HS512
require a secret key that is at least as many bits as
the algorithm's signature (digest) length per RFC 7512 Section 3.2.
This means:
-
HS256
is HMAC-SHA-256, and that produces digests that are 256 bits (32 bytes) long, soHS256
requires that you use a secret key that is at least 32 bytes long. -
HS384
is HMAC-SHA-384, and that produces digests that are 384 bits (48 bytes) long, soHS384
requires that you use a secret key that is at least 48 bytes long. -
HS512
is HMAC-SHA-512, and that produces digests that are 512 bits (64 bytes) long, soHS512
requires that you use a secret key that is at least 64 bytes long.
JWT RSA signature algorithms RS256
, RS384
, RS512
, PS256
, PS384
and PS512
all require a minimum key length
(aka an RSA modulus bit length) of 2048
bits per RFC 7512 Sections
3.3 and 3.5.
Anything smaller than this (such as 1024 bits) will be rejected with an InvalidKeyException
.
That said, in keeping with best practices and increasing key lengths for security longevity, JJWT recoommends that you use:
- at least 2048 bit keys with
RS256
andPS256
- at least 3072 bit keys with
RS384
andPS384
- at least 4096 bit keys with
RS512
andPS512
These are only JJWT suggestions and not requirements. JJWT only enforces JWT specification requirements and for any RSA key, the requirement is the RSA key (modulus) length in bits MUST be >= 2048 bits.
JWT Elliptic Curve signature algorithms ES256
, ES384
, and ES512
all require a minimum key length
(aka an Elliptic Curve order bit length) that is at least as many bits as the algorithm signature's individual
R
and S
components per RFC 7512 Section 3.4. This means:
-
ES256
requires that you use a private key that is at least 256 bits (32 bytes) long. -
ES384
requires that you use a private key that is at least 384 bits (48 bytes) long. -
ES512
requires that you use a private key that is at least 512 bits (64 bytes) long.
If you don't want to think about bit length requirements or just want to make your life easier, JJWT has
provided the io.jsonwebtoken.security.Keys
utility class that can generate sufficiently secure keys for any given
JWT signature algorithm you might want to use.
If you want to generate a sufficiently strong SecretKey
for use with the JWT HMAC-SHA algorithms, use the
Keys.secretKeyFor(SignatureAlgorithm)
helper method:
SecretKey key = Keys.secretKeyFor(SignatureAlgorithm.HS256); //or HS384 or HS512
Under the hood, JJWT uses the JCA provider's KeyGenerator
to create a secure-random key with the correct minimum
length for the given algorithm.
If you need to save this new SecretKey
, you can Base64 (or Base64URL) encode it:
String secretString = Encoders.BASE64.encode(key.getEncoded());
Ensure you save the resulting secretString
somewhere safe -
Base64-encoding is not encryption, so it's still considered sensitive information. You can
further encrypt it, etc, before saving to disk (for example).
If you want to generate sufficiently strong Elliptic Curve or RSA asymmetric key pairs for use with JWT ECDSA or RSA
algorithms, use the Keys.keyPairFor(SignatureAlgorithm)
helper method:
KeyPair keyPair = Keys.keyPairFor(SignatureAlgorithm.RS256); //or RS384, RS512, PS256, PS384, PS512, ES256, ES384, ES512
You use the private key (keyPair.getPrivate()
) to create a JWS and the public key (keyPair.getPublic()
) to
parse/verify a JWS.
NOTE: The PS256
, PS384
, and PS512
algorithms require JDK 11 or a compatible JCA Provider
(like BouncyCastle) in the runtime classpath. If you are using JDK 10 or earlier and you want to use them, see
the Installation section to see how to enable BouncyCastle. All other algorithms are natively
supported by the JDK.
You create a JWS as follows:
- Use the
Jwts.builder()
method to create aJwtBuilder
instance. - Call
JwtBuilder
methods to add header parameters and claims as desired. - Specify the
SecretKey
or asymmetricPrivateKey
you want to use to sign the JWT. - Finally, call the
compact()
method to compact and sign, producing the final jws.
For example:
String jws = Jwts.builder() // (1)
.setSubject("Bob") // (2)
.signWith(key) // (3)
.compact(); // (4)
A JWT Header provides metadata about the contents, format and cryptographic operations relevant to the JWT's Claims.
If you need to set one or more JWT header parameters, such as the kid
(Key ID) header parameter, you can simply call
JwtBuilder
setHeaderParam
one or more times as needed:
String jws = Jwts.builder()
.setHeaderParam("kid", "myKeyId")
// ... etc ...
Each time setHeaderParam
is called, it simply appends the key-value pair to an internal Header
instance,
potentially overwriting any existing identically-named key/value pair.
NOTE: You do not need to set the alg
or zip
header parameters as JJWT will set them automatically
depending on the signature algorithm or compression algorithm used.
If you want to specify the entire header at once, you can use the Jwts.header()
method and build up the header
paramters with it:
Header header = Jwts.header();
populate(header); //implement me
String jws = Jwts.builder()
.setHeader(header)
// ... etc ...
NOTE: Calling setHeader
will overwrite any existing header name/value pairs with the same names that might have
already been set. In all cases however, JJWT will still set (and overwrite) any alg
and zip
headers regardless
if those are in the specified header
object or not.
If you want to specify the entire header at once and you don't want to use Jwts.header()
, you can use JwtBuilder
setHeader(Map)
method instead:
Map<String,Object> header = getMyHeaderMap(); //implement me
String jws = Jwts.builder()
.setHeader(header)
// ... etc ...
NOTE: Calling setHeader
will overwrite any existing header name/value pairs with the same names that might have
already been set. In all cases however, JJWT will still set (and overwrite) any alg
and zip
headers regardless
if those are in the specified header
object or not.
Claims are a JWT's 'body' and contain the information that the JWT creator wishes to present to the JWT recipient(s).
The JwtBuilder
provides convenient setter methods for standard registered Claim names defined in the JWT
specification. They are:
setIssuer
: sets theiss
(Issuer) ClaimsetSubject
: sets thesub
(Subject) ClaimsetAudience
: sets theaud
(Audience) ClaimsetExpiration
: sets theexp
(Expiration Time) ClaimsetNotBefore
: sets thenbf
(Not Before) ClaimsetIssuedAt
: sets theiat
(Issued At) ClaimsetId
: sets thejti
(JWT ID) Claim
For example:
String jws = Jwts.builder()
.setIssuer("me")
.setSubject("Bob")
.setAudience("you")
.setExpiration(expiration) //a java.util.Date
.setNotBefore(notBefore) //a java.util.Date
.setIssuedAt(new Date()) // for example, now
.setId(UUID.randomUUID()) //just an example id
/// ... etc ...
If you need to set one or more custom claims that don't match the standard setter method claims shown above, you
can simply call JwtBuilder
claim
one or more times as needed:
String jws = Jwts.builder()
.claim("hello", "world")
// ... etc ...
Each time claim
is called, it simply appends the key-value pair to an internal Claims
instance, potentially
overwriting any existing identically-named key/value pair.
Obviously, you do not need to call claim
for any standard claim name and it is
recommended instead to call the standard respective setter method as this enhances readability.
If you want to specify all claims at once, you can use the Jwts.claims()
method and build up the claims
with it:
Claims claims = Jwts.claims();
populate(claims); //implement me
String jws = Jwts.builder()
.setClaims(claims)
// ... etc ...
NOTE: Calling setClaims
will overwrite any existing claim name/value pairs with the same names that might have
already been set.
If you want to specify all claims at once and you don't want to use Jwts.claims()
, you can use JwtBuilder
setClaims(Map)
method instead:
Map<String,Object> claims = getMyClaimsMap(); //implement me
String jws = Jwts.builder()
.setClaims(claims)
// ... etc ...
NOTE: Calling setClaims
will overwrite any existing claim name/value pairs with the same names that might have
already been set.
It is recommended that you specify the signing key by calling call the JwtBuilder
's signWith
method and let JJWT
determine the most secure algorithm allowed for the specified key.:
String jws = Jwts.builder()
// ... etc ...
.signWith(key) // <---
.compact();
For example, if you call signWith
with a SecretKey
that is 256 bits (32 bytes) long, it is not strong enough for
HS384
or HS512
, so JJWT will automatically sign the JWT using HS256
.
When using signWith
JJWT will also automatically set the required alg
header with the associated algorithm
identifier.
Similarly, if you called signWith
with an RSA PrivateKey
that was 4096 bits long, JJWT will use the RS512
algorithm and automatically set the alg
header to RS512
.
The same selection logic applies for Elliptic Curve PrivateKey
s.
NOTE: You cannot sign JWTs with PublicKey
s as this is always insecure. JJWT will reject any specified
PublicKey
for signing with an InvalidKeyException
.
If you want to sign a JWS using HMAC-SHA algorithms and you have a secret key String
or
encoded byte array, you will need
to convert it into a SecretKey
instance to use as the signWith
method argument.
If your secret key is:
-
SecretKey key = Keys.hmacShaKeyFor(encodedKeyBytes);
-
A Base64-encoded string:
SecretKey key = Keys.hmacShaKeyFor(Decoders.BASE64.decode(secretString));
-
A Base64URL-encoded string:
SecretKey key = Keys.hmacShaKeyFor(Decoders.BASE64URL.decode(secretString));
-
A raw (non-encoded) string (e.g. a password String):
SecretKey key = Keys.hmacShaKeyFor(secretString.getBytes(StandardCharsets.UTF_8));
It is always incorrect to call
secretString.getBytes()
(without providing a charset).However, raw password strings like this, e.g.
correcthorsebatterystaple
should be avoided whenever possible because they can inevitably result in weak or susceptible keys. Secure-random keys are almost always stronger. If you are able, prefer creating a new secure-random secret key instead.
In some specific cases, you might want to override JJWT's default selected algorithm for a given key.
For example, if you have an RSA PrivateKey
that is 2048 bits, JJWT would automatically choose the RS256
algorithm.
If you wanted to use RS384
or RS512
instead, you could manually specify it with the overloaded signWith
method
that accepts the SignatureAlgorithm
as an additional parameter:
.signWith(privateKey, SignatureAlgorithm.RS512) // <---
.compact();
This is allowed because the JWT specification allows any RSA algorithm strength for any RSA key >= 2048 bits. JJWT just
prefers RS512
for keys >= 4096 bits, followed by RS384
for keys >= 3072 bits and finally RS256
for keys >= 2048
bits.
In all cases however, regardless of your chosen algorithms, JJWT will assert that the specified key is allowed to be used for that algorithm according to the JWT specification requirements.
If your JWT claims set is large (contains a lot of data), and you are certain that JJWT will also be the same library that reads/parses your JWS, you might want to compress the JWS to reduce its size. Note that this is not a standard feature for JWS and is not likely to be supported by other JWT libraries.
Please see the main Compression section to see how to compress and decompress JWTs.
You read (parse) a JWS as follows:
- Use the
Jwts.parserBuilder()
method to create aJwtParserBuilder
instance. - Specify the
SecretKey
or asymmetricPublicKey
you want to use to verify the JWS signature.1 - Call the
build()
method on theJwtParserBuilder
to return a thread-safeJwtParser
. - Finally, call the
parseClaimsJws(String)
method with your jwsString
, producing the original JWS. - The entire call is wrapped in a try/catch block in case parsing or signature validation fails. We'll cover exceptions and causes for failure later.
1. If you don't know which key to use at the time of parsing, you can look up the key using a SigningKeyResolver
which we'll cover later.
For example:
Jws<Claims> jws;
try {
jws = Jwts.parserBuilder() // (1)
.setSigningKey(key) // (2)
.build() // (3)
.parseClaimsJws(jwsString); // (4)
// we can safely trust the JWT
catch (JwtException ex) { // (5)
// we *cannot* use the JWT as intended by its creator
}
NOTE: If you expecting a JWS, always call JwtParser
's parseClaimsJws
method (and not one of the other similar methods
available) as this guarantees the correct security model for parsing signed JWTs.
The most important thing to do when reading a JWS is to specify the key to use to verify the JWS's cryptographic signature. If signature verification fails, the JWT cannot be safely trusted and should be discarded.
So which key do we use for verification?
-
If the jws was signed with a
SecretKey
, the sameSecretKey
should be specified on theJwtParserBuilder
. For example:Jwts.parserBuilder() .setSigningKey(secretKey) // <---- .build() .parseClaimsJws(jwsString);
-
If the jws was signed with a
PrivateKey
, that key's correspondingPublicKey
(not thePrivateKey
) should be specified on theJwtParserBuilder
. For example:Jwts.parserBuilder() .setSigningKey(publicKey) // <---- publicKey, not privateKey .build() .parseClaimsJws(jwsString);
But you might have noticed something - what if your application doesn't use just a single SecretKey or KeyPair? What
if JWSs can be created with different SecretKey
s or public/private keys, or a combination of both? How do you
know which key to specify if you can't inspect the JWT first?
In these cases, you can't call the JwtParserBuilder
's setSigningKey
method with a single key - instead, you'll need
to use a SigningKeyResolver
, covered next.
If your application expects JWSs that can be signed with different keys, you won't call the setSigningKey
method.
Instead, you'll need to implement the
SigningKeyResolver
interface and specify an instance on the JwtParserBuilder
via the setSigningKeyResolver
method.
For example:
SigningKeyResolver signingKeyResolver = getMySigningKeyResolver();
Jwts.parserBuilder()
.setSigningKeyResolver(signingKeyResolver) // <----
.build()
.parseClaimsJws(jwsString);
You can simplify things a little by extending from the SigningKeyResolverAdapter
and implementing the
resolveSigningKey(JwsHeader, Claims)
method. For example:
public class MySigningKeyResolver extends SigningKeyResolverAdapter {
@Override
public Key resolveSigningKey(JwsHeader jwsHeader, Claims claims) {
// implement me
}
}
The JwtParser
will invoke the resolveSigningKey
method after parsing the JWS JSON, but before verifying the
jws signature. This allows you to inspect the JwsHeader
and Claims
arguments for any information that can
help you look up the Key
to use for verifying that specific jws. This is very powerful for applications
with more complex security models that might use different keys at different times or for different users or customers.
Which data might you inspect?
The JWT specification's supported way to do this is to set a kid
(Key ID) field in the JWS header when the JWS is
being created, for example:
Key signingKey = getSigningKey();
String keyId = getKeyId(signingKey); //any mechanism you have to associate a key with an ID is fine
String jws = Jwts.builder()
.setHeaderParam(JwsHeader.KEY_ID, keyId) // 1
.signWith(signingKey) // 2
.compact();
Then during parsing, your SigningKeyResolver
can inspect the JwsHeader
to get the kid
and then use that value
to look up the key from somewhere, like a database. For example:
public class MySigningKeyResolver extends SigningKeyResolverAdapter {
@Override
public Key resolveSigningKey(JwsHeader jwsHeader, Claims claims) {
//inspect the header or claims, lookup and return the signing key
String keyId = jwsHeader.getKeyId(); //or any other field that you need to inspect
Key key = lookupVerificationKey(keyId); //implement me
return key;
}
}
Note that inspecting the jwsHeader.getKeyId()
is just the most common approach to look up a key - you could
inspect any number of header fields or claims to determine how to lookup the verification key. It is all based on
how the JWS was created.
Finally remember that for HMAC algorithms, the returned verification key should be a SecretKey
, and for asymmetric
algorithms, the key returned should be a PublicKey
(not a PrivateKey
).
You can enforce that the JWS you are parsing conforms to expectations that you require and are important for your application.
For example, let's say that you require that the JWS you are parsing has a specific sub
(subject) value,
otherwise you may not trust the token. You can do that by using one of the various require
* methods on the
JwtParserBuilder
:
try {
Jwts.parserBuilder().requireSubject("jsmith").setSigningKey(key).build().parseClaimsJws(s);
} catch(InvalidClaimException ice) {
// the sub field was missing or did not have a 'jsmith' value
}
If it is important to react to a missing vs an incorrect value, instead of catching InvalidClaimException
,
you can catch either MissingClaimException
or IncorrectClaimException
:
try {
Jwts.parserBuilder().requireSubject("jsmith").setSigningKey(key).build().parseClaimsJws(s);
} catch(MissingClaimException mce) {
// the parsed JWT did not have the sub field
} catch(IncorrectClaimException ice) {
// the parsed JWT had a sub field, but its value was not equal to 'jsmith'
}
You can also require custom fields by using the require(fieldName, requiredFieldValue)
method - for example:
try {
Jwts.parserBuilder().require("myfield", "myRequiredValue").setSigningKey(key).build().parseClaimsJws(s);
} catch(InvalidClaimException ice) {
// the 'myfield' field was missing or did not have a 'myRequiredValue' value
}
(or, again, you could catch either MissingClaimException
or IncorrectClaimException
instead).
Please see the JwtParserBuilder
class and/or JavaDoc for a full list of the various require
* methods you may use for claims
assertions.
When parsing a JWT, you might find that exp
or nbf
claim assertions fail (throw exceptions) because the clock on
the parsing machine is not perfectly in sync with the clock on the machine that created the JWT. This can cause
obvious problems since exp
and nbf
are time-based assertions, and clock times need to be reliably in sync for shared
assertions.
You can account for these differences (usually no more than a few minutes) when parsing using the JwtParserBuilder
's
setAllowedClockSkewSeconds
. For example:
long seconds = 3 * 60; //3 minutes
Jwts.parserBuilder()
.setAllowedClockSkewSeconds(seconds) // <----
// ... etc ...
.build()
.parseClaimsJws(jwt);
This ensures that clock differences between the machines can be ignored. Two or three minutes should be more than enough; it would be fairly strange if a production machine's clock was more than 5 minutes difference from most atomic clocks around the world.
If the above setAllowedClockSkewSeconds
isn't sufficient for your needs, the timestamps created
during parsing for timestamp comparisons can be obtained via a custom time source. Call the JwtParserBuilder
's setClock
method with an implementation of the io.jsonwebtoken.Clock
interface. For example:
Clock clock = new MyClock();
Jwts.parserBuilder().setClock(myClock) //... etc ...
The JwtParser
's default Clock
implementation simply returns new Date()
to reflect the time when parsing occurs,
as most would expect. However, supplying your own clock could be useful, especially when writing test cases to
guarantee deterministic behavior.
If you used JJWT to compress a JWS and you used a custom compression algorithm, you will need to tell the JwtParserBuilder
how to resolve your CompressionCodec
to decompress the JWT.
Please see the Compression section below to see how to decompress JWTs during parsing.
The JWT specification only standardizes this feature for JWEs (Encrypted JWTs) and not JWSs (Signed JWTs), however JJWT supports both. If you are positive that a JWS you create with JJWT will also be parsed with JJWT, you can use this feature with JWSs, otherwise it is best to only use it for JWEs.
If a JWT's Claims set is sufficiently large - that is, it contains a lot of name/value pairs, or individual values are very large or verbose - you can reduce the size of the created JWS by compressing the claims body.
This might be important to you if the resulting JWS is used in a URL for example, since URLs are best kept under 4096 characters due to browser, user mail agent, or HTTP gateway compatibility issues. Smaller JWTs also help reduce bandwidth utilization, which may or may not be important depending on your application's volume or needs.
If you want to compress your JWT, you can use the JwtBuilder
's compressWith(CompressionAlgorithm)
method. For
example:
Jwts.builder()
.compressWith(CompressionCodecs.DEFLATE) // or CompressionCodecs.GZIP
// .. etc ...
If you use the DEFLATE
or GZIP
Compression Codecs - that's it, you're done. You don't have to do anything during
parsing or configure the JwtParser
for compression - JJWT will automatically decompress the body as expected.
If however, you used your own custom compression codec when creating the JWT (via JwtBuilder
compressWith
), then
you need to supply the codec to the JwtParserBuilder
using the setCompressionCodecResolver
method. For example:
CompressionCodecResolver ccr = new MyCompressionCodecResolver();
Jwts.parserBuilder()
.setCompressionCodecResolver(ccr) // <----
// .. etc ...
Typically a CompressionCodecResolver
implementation will inspect the zip
header to find out what algorithm was
used and then return a codec instance that supports that algorithm. For example:
public class MyCompressionCodecResolver implements CompressionCodecResolver {
@Override
public CompressionCodec resolveCompressionCodec(Header header) throws CompressionException {
String alg = header.getCompressionAlgorithm();
CompressionCodec codec = getCompressionCodec(alg); //implement me
return codec;
}
}
A JwtBuilder
will serialize the Header
and Claims
maps (and potentially any Java objects they
contain) to JSON with a Serializer<Map<String, ?>>
instance. Similarly, a JwtParser
will
deserialize JSON into the Header
and Claims
using a Deserializer<Map<String, ?>>
instance.
If you don't explicitly configure a JwtBuilder
's Serializer
or a JwtParserBuilder
's Deserializer
, JJWT will
automatically attempt to discover and use the following JSON implementations if found in the runtime classpath.
They are checked in order, and the first one found is used:
-
Jackson: This will automatically be used if you specify
io.jsonwebtoken:jjwt-jackson
as a project runtime dependency. Jackson supports POJOs as claims with full marshaling/unmarshaling as necessary. -
Gson: This will automatically be used if you specify
io.jsonwebtoken:jjwt-gson
as a project runtime dependency. Gson also supports POJOs as claims with full marshaling/unmarshaling as necessary. -
JSON-Java (
org.json
): This will be used automatically if you specifyio.jsonwebtoken:jjwt-orgjson
as a project runtime dependency.NOTE:
org.json
APIs are natively enabled in Android environments so this is the recommended JSON processor for Android applications unless you want to use POJOs as claims. Theorg.json
library supports simple Object-to-JSON marshaling, but it does not support JSON-to-Object unmarshalling.
If you want to use POJOs as claim values, use either the io.jsonwebtoken:jjwt-jackson
or
io.jsonwebtoken:jjwt-gson
dependency (or implement your own Serializer and Deserializer if desired). But beware,
Jackson will force a sizable (> 1 MB) dependency to an Android application thus increasing the app download size for
mobile users.
If you don't want to use JJWT's runtime dependency approach, or just want to customize how JSON serialization and
deserialization works, you can implement the Serializer
and Deserializer
interfaces and specify instances of
them on the JwtBuilder
and JwtParserBuilder
respectively. For example:
When creating a JWT:
Serializer<Map<String,?>> serializer = getMySerializer(); //implement me
Jwts.builder()
.serializeToJsonWith(serializer)
// ... etc ...
When reading a JWT:
Deserializer<Map<String,?>> deserializer = getMyDeserializer(); //implement me
Jwts.parserBuilder()
.deserializeJsonWith(deserializer)
// ... etc ...
If you want to use Jackson for JSON processing, just including the io.jsonwebtoken:jjwt-jackson
dependency as a
runtime dependency is all that is necessary in most projects, since Gradle and Maven will automatically pull in
the necessary Jackson dependencies as well.
After including this dependency, JJWT will automatically find the Jackson implementation on the runtime classpath and use it internally for JSON parsing. There is nothing else you need to do - JJWT will automatically create a new Jackson ObjectMapper for its needs as required.
However, if you have an application-wide Jackson ObjectMapper
(as is typically recommended for most applications),
you can configure JJWT to use your own ObjectMapper
instead.
You do this by declaring the io.jsonwebtoken:jjwt-jackson
dependency with compile scope (not runtime
scope which is the typical JJWT default). That is:
Maven
<dependency>
<groupId>io.jsonwebtoken</groupId>
<artifactId>jjwt-jackson</artifactId>
<version>0.11.1</version>
<scope>compile</scope> <!-- Not runtime -->
</dependency>
Gradle or Android
dependencies {
compile 'io.jsonwebtoken:jjwt-jackson:0.11.1'
}
And then you can specify the JacksonSerializer
using your own ObjectMapper
on the JwtBuilder
:
ObjectMapper objectMapper = getMyObjectMapper(); //implement me
String jws = Jwts.builder()
.serializeToJsonWith(new JacksonSerializer(objectMapper))
// ... etc ...
and the JacksonDeserializer
using your ObjectMapper
on the JwtParserBuilder
:
ObjectMapper objectMapper = getMyObjectMapper(); //implement me
Jwts.parserBuilder()
.deserializeJsonWith(new JacksonDeserializer(objectMapper))
// ... etc ...
By default JJWT will only convert simple claim types: String, Date, Long, Integer, Short and Byte. If you need to deserialize other types you can configure the JacksonDeserializer
by passing a Map
of claim names to types in through a constructor. For example:
new JacksonDeserializer(Maps.of("user", User.class).build())
This would trigger the value in the user
claim to be deserialized into the custom type of User
. Given the claims body of:
{
"issuer": "https://example.com/issuer",
"user": {
"firstName": "Jill",
"lastName": "Coder"
}
}
The User
object could be retrieved from the user
claim with the following code:
Jwts.parserBuilder()
.deserializeJsonWith(new JacksonDeserializer(Maps.of("user", User.class).build())) // <-----
.build()
.parseClaimsJwt(aJwtString)
.getBody()
.get("user", User.class) // <-----
NOTE: Using this constructor is mutually exclusive with the JacksonDeserializer(ObjectMapper)
constructor
described above. This is because JJWT configures an ObjectMapper
directly and could have negative
consequences for a shared ObjectMapper
instance. This should work for most applications, if you need a more advanced
parsing options, configure the mapper directly.
If you want to use Gson for JSON processing, just including the io.jsonwebtoken:jjwt-gson
dependency as a
runtime dependency is all that is necessary in most projects, since Gradle and Maven will automatically pull in
the necessary Gson dependencies as well.
After including this dependency, JJWT will automatically find the Gson implementation on the runtime classpath and use it internally for JSON parsing. There is nothing else you need to do - just declaring the dependency is all that is required, no code or config is necessary.
If you're curious, JJWT will automatically create an internal default Gson instance for its own needs as follows:
new GsonBuilder().disableHtmlEscaping().create();
However, if you prefer to use a different Gson instance instead of JJWT's default, you can configure JJWT to use your own.
You do this by declaring the io.jsonwebtoken:jjwt-gson
dependency with compile scope (not runtime
scope which is the typical JJWT default). That is:
Maven
<dependency>
<groupId>io.jsonwebtoken</groupId>
<artifactId>jjwt-gson</artifactId>
<version>0.11.1</version>
<scope>compile</scope> <!-- Not runtime -->
</dependency>
Gradle or Android
dependencies {
compile 'io.jsonwebtoken:jjwt-gson:0.11.1'
}
And then you can specify the GsonSerializer
using your own Gson
instance on the JwtBuilder
:
Gson gson = getGson(); //implement me
String jws = Jwts.builder()
.serializeToJsonWith(new GsonSerializer(gson))
// ... etc ...
and the GsonDeserializer
using your Gson
instance on the JwtParser
:
Gson gson = getGson(); //implement me
Jwts.parser()
.deserializeJsonWith(new GsonDeserializer(gson))
// ... etc ...
JJWT uses a very fast pure-Java Base64 codec for Base64 and Base64Url encoding and decoding that is guaranteed to work deterministically in all JDK and Android environments.
You can access JJWT's encoders and decoders using the io.jsonwebtoken.io.Encoders
and io.jsonwebtoken.io.Decoders
utility classes.
io.jsonwebtoken.io.Encoders
:
io.jsonwebtoken.io.Decoders
:
All cryptographic operations, like encryption and message digest calculations, result in binary data - raw byte arrays.
Because raw byte arrays cannot be represented natively in JSON, the JWT specifications employ the Base64URL encoding scheme to represent these raw byte values in JSON documents or compound structures like a JWT.
This means that the Base64 and Base64URL algorithms take a raw byte array and converts the bytes into a string suitable to use in text documents and protocols like HTTP. These algorithms can also convert these strings back into the original raw byte arrays for decryption or signature verification as necessary.
That's nice and convenient, but there are two very important properties of Base64 (and Base64URL) text strings that are critical to remember when they are used in security scenarios like with JWTs:
- Base64 is not encryption
- Changing Base64 characters does not automatically invalidate data.
Base64-encoded text is not encrypted.
While a byte array representation can be converted to text with the Base64 algorithms, anyone in the world can take Base64-encoded text, decode it with any standard Base64 decoder, and obtain the underlying raw byte array data. No key or secret is required to decode Base64 text - anyone can do it.
Based on this, when encoding sensitive byte data with Base64 - like a shared or private key - the resulting string NOT is safe to expose publicly.
A base64-encoded key is still sensitive information and must
be kept as secret and as safe as the original thing you got the bytes from (e.g. a Java PrivateKey
or SecretKey
instance).
After Base64-encoding data into a string, it is possible to then encrypt the string to keep it safe from prying eyes if desired, but this is different. Encryption is not encoding. They are separate concepts.
In an effort to see if signatures or encryption is truly validated correctly, some try to edit a JWT string - particularly the Base64-encoded signature part - to see if the edited string fails security validations.
This conceptually makes sense: change the signature string, you would assume that signature validation would fail.
But this doesn't always work. Changing base64 characters is an invalid test.
Why?
Because of the way the Base64 algorithm works, there are multiple Base64 strings that can represent the same raw byte array.
Going into the details of the Base64 algorithm is out of scope for this documentation, but there are many good
Stackoverflow answers
and JJWT issue comments that explain this in detail.
Here's one good answer:
Remember that Base64 encodes each 8 bit entity into 6 bit chars. The resulting string then needs exactly 11 * 8 / 6 bytes, or 14 2/3 chars. But you can't write partial characters. Only the first 4 bits (or 2/3 of the last char) are significant. The last two bits are not decoded. Thus all of:
dGVzdCBzdHJpbmo dGVzdCBzdHJpbmp dGVzdCBzdHJpbmq dGVzdCBzdHJpbmr
All decode to the same 11 bytes (116, 101, 115, 116, 32, 115, 116, 114, 105, 110, 106).
As you can see by the above 4 examples, they all decode to the same exact 11 bytes. So just changing one or two characters at the end of a Base64 string may not work and can often result in an invalid test.
JJWT's default Base64/Base64URL decoders automatically ignore illegal Base64 characters located in the beginning and
end of an encoded string. Therefore prepending or appending invalid characters like {
or ]
or similar will also
not fail JJWT's signature checks either. Why?
Because such edits - whether changing a trailing character or two, or appending invalid characters - do not actually change the real signature, which in cryptographic contexts, is always a byte array. Instead, tests like these change a text encoding of the byte array, and as we covered above, they are different things.
So JJWT 'cares' more about the real byte array and less about its text encoding because that is what actually matters in cryptographic operations. In this sense, JJWT follows the Robustness Principle in being slightly lenient on what is accepted per the rules of Base64, but if anything in the real underlying byte array is changed, then yes, JJWT's cryptographic assertions will definitely fail.
To help understand JJWT's approach, we have to remember why signatures exist. From our documentation above on signing JWTs:
- guarantees it was created by someone we know (it is authentic), as well as
- guarantees that no-one has manipulated or changed it after it was created (its integrity is maintained).
Just prepending or appending invalid text to try to 'trick' the algorithm doesn't change the integrity of the underlying claims or signature byte arrays, nor the authenticity of the claims byte array, because those byte arrays are still obtained intact.
Please see JJWT Issue #518 and its referenced issues and links for more information.
If for some reason you want to specify your own Base64Url encoder and decoder, you can use the JwtBuilder
base64UrlEncodeWith
method to set the encoder:
Encoder<byte[], String> base64UrlEncoder = getMyBase64UrlEncoder(); //implement me
String jws = Jwts.builder()
.base64UrlEncodeWith(base64UrlEncoder)
// ... etc ...
and the JwtParserBuilder
's base64UrlDecodeWith
method to set the decoder:
Decoder<String, byte[]> base64UrlDecoder = getMyBase64UrlDecoder(); //implement me
Jwts.parserBuilder()
.base64UrlDecodeWith(base64UrlEncoder)
// ... etc ...
- JSON Web Token for Java and Android
- How to Create and Verify JWTs in Java
- Where to Store Your JWTs - Cookies vs HTML5 Web Storage
- Use JWT the Right Way!
- Token Authentication for Java Applications
- JJWT Changelog
Maintained by Les Hazlewood & Okta
This project is open-source via the Apache 2.0 License.