Installing Auth.js
Start by installing the appropriate package for your framework.
npm install next-auth@beta
Installing @auth/core
is not necessary, as a user you should never have to
interact with @auth/core
.
Setup Environment
The only environment variable that is mandatory is the AUTH_SECRET
. This is a random value used by the library to encrypt tokens and email
verification hashes. (See Deployment to learn more). You can generate one via the official Auth.js CLI running:
npx auth secret
This will also add it to your .env
file, respecting the framework conventions (eg.: Next.js’ .env.local
).
Configure
Next, create the Auth.js config file and object. This is where you can control the behaviour of the library and specify custom authentication logic, adapters, etc. We recommend all frameworks to create an auth.ts
file in the project. In this file we’ll pass in all the options to the framework specific initalization function and then export the route handler(s), signin and signout methods, and more.
You can name this file whatever you want and place it wherever you like, these are just conventions we’ve come up with.
- Start by creating a new
auth.ts
file at the root of your app with the following content.
import NextAuth from "next-auth"
export const { handlers, signIn, signOut, auth } = NextAuth({
providers: [],
})
- Add a Route Handler under
/app/api/auth/[...nextauth]/route.ts
.
This file must be an App Router Route Handler, however, the rest of your app
can stay under page/
if you’d like.
import { handlers } from "@/auth" // Referring to the auth.ts we just created
export const { GET, POST } = handlers
- Add optional Middleware to keep the session alive, this will update the session expiry every time its called.
export { auth as middleware } from "@/auth"
Setup Authentication Methods
With that, the basic setup is complete! Next we’ll setup the first authentication methods and fill out that providers
array.