To log in via DDP, simply send a method call. You alter it slightly depending on how you want to log in.
I'll use ddp-tools to try and explain how to log in, since it would be communicating with purely ddp. The login details in the below examples are
The username is user_1, password is qwerty (yeah I know its bad), and email address is [email protected], the login token is MxNY9BFPKra2uNWG7
The format is
ddp call <method call name> [<param1>..]
Which is the same as doing ddpclient.call(<method call name>,<param1>,callback)
in nodejs
To log in with email and password
ddp call 'login' '{"password":"qwerty","user":{"email":"[email protected]"}}'
To log in with a username and password
ddp call 'login' '{"password":"qwerty","user":{"username":"user_1"}}'
To log in with a token (what meteor saves when you log in:
ddp call 'login' '{"resume":"MxNY9BFPKra2uNWG7"}'
--
The difficult one: SRP
If you don't want to send the password in plain-text like the above way, you're not using a SSL secured/https connection you can use SRP.
To login with SRP its a little bit tricker as it has a couple of stages
1. Begin a passwordExchange to establish the key to communicate the hash
2. Send a login call with the hash calculated using the reply from 1)
Step 1:
-Begin a SRP password exchange:
ddp call 'beginPasswordExchange' '{"A":"A","user":{"email":"[email protected]"}}
The response will be something like
{"identity":"identity","salt":"salt","B":B"}
Then you can use this to login:
ddp call 'login' '{"srp":{"M":"srp hash"}}'
Similarly you can use the username instead of the email above.
So to get the values of M, and A you need an SRP library. Since there's an SRP library in meteor its easy to explain how to get the password from each, its quite tricky. If you want to write one in another language you could use wikipedia's explanation to build the methods out
So we begin an srp exchange (from the SRP library in meteors SRP package), since you're using node.js you could include all the files in your project (except package.js)
var srp = new SRP.Client(password);
This will give you A
, then you will get back data that you can respond with:
var response = srp.respondToChallenge(result);
This will finally give you the SHA hash to reply with using 'M', taking in 'B' and the salt.
Finally
Don't forget to check the final response when you do log in to see if the result matches what it should be
srp.verifyConfirmation({HAMK: result.HAMK}
Again these are all from the SRP library in Meteor, but they're all part of the SRP spec as on wikipedia. Meteor's SRP uses SHA256 as the hashing function.
Examples: