DB migration compat / Back-compat — Current branch migrations with ${{ needs.check-migrations-changed.outputs.base_branch }} branch code (push) Has been cancelled
DB migration compat / Forward-compat — Current branch code with ${{ needs.check-migrations-changed.outputs.base_branch }} branch migrations (push) Has been cancelled
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Make sure you've read the CONTRIBUTING.md guidelines:
https://github.com/stack-auth/stack-auth/blob/dev/CONTRIBUTING.md
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<!-- CURSOR_SUMMARY -->
---
> [!NOTE]
> **High Risk**
> Touches authentication and OAuth token/authorize flows and changes how
client requests are validated, so regressions could cause widespread
login/client-access failures. Also includes a data migration that alters
effective security posture for existing projects.
>
> **Overview**
> Adds a **project-level toggle**
(`project.requirePublishableClientKey`) to control whether client
requests/OAuth flows must include a publishable client key, including a
DB migration that backfills existing projects to require it.
>
> Backend auth now treats the publishable client key as *optional when
allowed*, introducing a public sentinel (`__stack_public_client__`) and
returning a new specific error
(`PUBLISHABLE_CLIENT_KEY_REQUIRED_FOR_PROJECT`) across smart request
auth + OAuth `authorize`/`callback`/`token` endpoints.
>
> Dashboard and SDKs update key generation/display and request
construction to handle missing publishable keys, expose an advanced
toggle on the Project Keys page, and extend internal config overrides to
support a new `project` level; E2E/tests and schema fuzzing are expanded
accordingly, and CI adds a forward-compat migration check job when
back-compat fails.
>
> <sup>Written by [Cursor
Bugbot](https://cursor.com/dashboard?tab=bugbot) for commit
5d06c08613. This will update automatically
on new commits. Configure
[here](https://cursor.com/dashboard?tab=bugbot).</sup>
<!-- /CURSOR_SUMMARY -->
<!-- This is an auto-generated comment: release notes by coderabbit.ai
-->
## Summary by CodeRabbit
* **New Features**
* Project-level config to require publishable client keys; migration
applied to existing projects.
* **Improvements**
* Auth flows now support optional publishable client keys with explicit
validation and a sentinel for keyless OAuth.
* Dashboard/UI and SDKs handle publishable keys as optional and
conditionally show/generate them.
* Admin/client APIs extended to manage project-level overrides.
* **Bug Fixes**
* Key validation behavior aligned with project config.
* **Tests**
* Expanded E2E and unit tests covering optional/required publishable-key
scenarios.
* **Documentation**
* Spec and knowledge docs updated to describe the sentinel and config
behavior.
<!-- end of auto-generated comment: release notes by coderabbit.ai -->
### Summary of Changes
Previously, on the Swift SDK, the `signInWithOAuth` function wasn't
working. In this PR, we fix it by having the `getOAuthUrl` function to
actually redirect correctly. Note that to do so, we updated the
`validRedirectUrl` check on the backend to accept app native redirects
(from our new trusted url scheme). Another thing to note is that we
added functionality to the `TokenStore` abstraction to conditionally
refresh the access token that the user is trying to fetch if it is
expired/close to expiring if possible. `getOAuthUrl` will attempt to get
a valid access token, and thus will rely on our algorithm documented in
`utilities.md`.
The specs serve as the source of truth.
We go further and implement Apple Native sign in. To do so, we have it
hit a new route on the backend and verify the `jwtToken` retrieved by
the sdk against an Apple-provided set of `jwks`. We use jose to do so,
in line with the rest of the codebase.
We take this opportunity to refactor the oauth provider route owing to
the amount of duplicated logic. Additionally, to enable the apple sign
in, users will have to update the Apple authentication method modal on
the dashboard and add accepted bundle ids. These are identifiers for
projects, and we will check the `JWT` on the backend to make sure the
audience is set to an accepted bundleId.
We also update the Apple modal to be more informative.
### Using the new Features
To use the Apple native sign in, users will have to 1) sign up with an
apple developer account, 2) set up their bundleids for their projects by
connecting them to the apple developer account, 3) update the Stack-Auth
Authentication Methods dashboard apple modal with the relevant fields.
Then, trying to sign in with apple with our Swift SDK will use the apple
native sign in.
### UI Changes
Renamed the fields in the apple modal. Added a new field for bundle ids.
See below.
https://github.com/user-attachments/assets/0e760c0e-3198-4818-ac7f-4900d7a125bb
Co-authored-by: Konstantin Wohlwend <n2d4xc@gmail.com>