Approov is an API security solution used to verify that requests received by your backend services originate from trusted versions of your mobile apps.
This repo implements the Approov server-side request verification code in Ruby (framework agnostic), which performs the verification check before allowing valid traffic to be processed by the API endpoint.
The quickstart was tested with the following Operating Systems:
- Ubuntu 20.04
- MacOS Big Sur
- Windows 10 WSL2 - Ubuntu 20.04
First, setup the Approov CLI.
Now, register the API domain for which Approov will issues tokens:
approov api -add api.example.com
NOTE: By default a symmetric key (HS256) is used to sign the Approov token on a valid attestation of the mobile app for each API domain it's added with the Approov CLI, so that all APIs will share the same secret and the backend needs to take care to keep this secret secure.
A more secure alternative is to use asymmetric keys (RS256 or others) that allows for a different keyset to be used on each API domain and for the Approov token to be verified with a public key that can only verify, but not sign, Approov tokens.
To implement the asymmetric key you need to change from using the symmetric HS256 algorithm to an asymmetric algorithm, for example RS256, that requires you to first add a new key, and then specify it when adding each API domain. Please visit Managing Key Sets on the Approov documentation for more details.
Next, enable your Approov admin
role with:
eval `approov role admin`
For the Windows powershell:
set APPROOV_ROLE=admin:___YOUR_APPROOV_ACCOUNT_NAME_HERE___
Now, get your Approov Secret with the Approov CLI:
approov secret -get base64
Next, add the Approov secret to your project .env
file:
APPROOV_BASE64_SECRET=approov_base64_secret_here
Now, to check the Approov token we will use the jwt/ruby-jwt package, that you can install with:
gem install jwt
NOTE: If you are not using yet the
dotenv
package then you also nee to add it to the install command.
Next, add this code to your project:
require 'dotenv'
require 'jwt'
require 'base64'
env = Dotenv.parse(".env")
if not env['HTTP_PORT']
env['HTTP_PORTP'] = 8002
end
if not env['SERVER_HOSTNAME']
env['SERVER_HOSTNAME'] = '127.0.0.1'
end
if not env['APPROOV_BASE64_SECRET']
raise "Missing in the .env file the value for the variable: APPROOV_BASE64_SECRET"
end
APPROOV_SECRET = Base64.decode64(env['APPROOV_BASE64_SECRET'])
def verifyApproovToken headers
begin
approov_token = headers['approov-token']
if not approov_token
# You may want to add some logging here
return nil
end
options = { algorithm: 'HS256' }
approov_token_claims, header = JWT.decode approov_token, APPROOV_SECRET, true, options
return approov_token_claims
rescue JWT::DecodeError => e
# You may want to add some logging here
return nil
rescue JWT::ExpiredSignature => e
# You may want to add some logging here
return nil
rescue JWT::InvalidIssuerError => e
# You may want to add some logging here
return nil
rescue JWT::InvalidIatError
# You may want to add some logging here
return nil
end
# You may want to add some logging here
return nil
end
Now you just need to invoke verifyApproovToken()
function for the endpoints you want to protected:
if not approov_token_claims = verifyApproovToken(headers)
sendResponse(connection, 401, JSON.generate({}))
next
end
NOTE: When the Approov token validation fails we return a
401
with an empty body, because we don't want to give clues to an attacker about the reason the request failed, and you can go even further by returning a400
.
Not enough details in the bare bones quickstart? No worries, check the detailed quickstarts that contain a more comprehensive set of instructions, including how to test the Approov integration.
In order to correctly check for the expiration times of the Approov tokens is very important that the backend server is synchronizing automatically the system clock over the network with an authoritative time source. In Linux this is usually done with a NTP server.
In order to correctly check for the expiration times of the Approov tokens is very important that the backend server is synchronizing automatically the system clock over the network with an authoritative time source. In Linux this is usually done with a NTP server.
If you find any issue while following our instructions then just report it here, with the steps to reproduce it, and we will sort it out and/or guide you to the correct path.
If you wish to explore the Approov solution in more depth, then why not try one of the following links as a jumping off point: