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Mastering Elixir

You're reading from   Mastering Elixir Build and scale concurrent, distributed, and fault-tolerant applications

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Product type Paperback
Published in Jul 2018
Publisher Packt
ISBN-13 9781788472678
Length 574 pages
Edition 1st Edition
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Authors (2):
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André Albuquerque André Albuquerque
Author Profile Icon André Albuquerque
André Albuquerque
Daniel Caixinha Daniel Caixinha
Author Profile Icon Daniel Caixinha
Daniel Caixinha
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Table of Contents (13) Chapters Close

Preface 1. Preparing for the Journey Ahead FREE CHAPTER 2. Innards of an Elixir Project 3. Processes – The Bedrock of Concurrency and Fault Tolerance 4. Powered by Erlang/OTP 5. Demand-Driven Processing 6. Metaprogramming – Code That Writes Itself 7. Persisting Data Using Ecto 8. Phoenix – A Flying Web Framework 9. Finding Zen through Testing 10. Deploying to the Cloud 11. Keeping an Eye on Your Processes 12. Other Books You May Enjoy

Authenticating users


In the last chapter, we saw how we handle user passwords in the Accounts context, using the comeonin library to sign and verify them. In this chapter, our focus is on extending our web interface to allow users to sign up and log in to our application, and also to restrict certain pages to logged in users. There's a myriad of libraries in the Elixir ecosystem that would allow us to achieve this in only a few lines of code. However, implementing our own authentication solution is beneficial for two reasons: it will give us the opportunity to explore Phoenix in greater depth and it will give us more freedom in how the authentication is made, allowing us to adapt it to fit our needs.

In order to have users authenticated, we first need to have the ability to create users in our application. We'll do this part from the bottom up, building the logic around the authentication of a user, and when that part is done, we'll work on allowing a user to sign up and log in.

As we hinted...

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