c8e2fba13e
Rewrites all 12 frontend ADRs from a custom structure to the MADR 2.1.2 template required by the VS Code ADR Manager extension: bullet metadata (Status/Date), standardised section headings, "Chosen option: X, because Y" wording, and explicit Pros/Cons blocks per option.
49 lines
1.6 KiB
Markdown
49 lines
1.6 KiB
Markdown
# Store JWT authentication token in localStorage
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- Status: accepted
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- Date: 2026-04-26
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## Context and Problem Statement
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The application requires persistent authentication across browser sessions. Where should the JWT token be stored client-side?
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## Decision Drivers
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- Application is internal — used by a known, controlled user base; not publicly accessible.
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- Implementation simplicity.
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- Compatibility with Angular functional guards and the APP_INITIALIZER auth bootstrap.
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## Considered Options
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- Store JWT in localStorage
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- Store JWT in an httpOnly cookie
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## Decision Outcome
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Chosen option: "Store JWT in localStorage", because the application is internal with a controlled user base, making the XSS risk acceptable, and localStorage avoids the additional CSRF complexity of cookie-based auth.
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### Positive Consequences
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- Simple implementation — no server-side session management.
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- Token persists across browser restarts without requiring re-login.
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- Works seamlessly with Angular functional guards and `APP_INITIALIZER`.
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### Negative Consequences
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- Accessible to JavaScript — an XSS attack could exfiltrate the token.
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- If the application ever becomes publicly accessible or handles sensitive data, this decision must be revisited.
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## Pros and Cons of the Options
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### Store JWT in localStorage
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- Good, because simple to implement and operate.
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- Good, because survives browser restarts.
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- Bad, because XSS-vulnerable.
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### Store JWT in an httpOnly cookie
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- Good, because inaccessible to JavaScript — XSS-safe.
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- Bad, because requires CSRF protection (SameSite cookie policy or CSRF tokens).
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- Bad, because more complex server-side coordination.
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