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Adding malicious user detection to your Rails app

Not everyone who signs up for your webapp wants to use your service. Wouldn’t it be nice if there was an easy way to automatically block abusers?

Well, it so happens that Sqreen has an API you can easily integrate into your user authentication services that let’s you detect when an email address or IP address is bad news. Even better, this API has been wrapped into a Devise extension.

In this tutorial, we’re going to show you how to build and configure this kind of pro-active protection into your Rails app with the devise_sqreener Devise extension.

How to follow along

This repo contains a very basic Rails app that we are going to modify step by step. The app is basically a page that requires you to create and account and sign in, and then greets you with your email address.

To follow along, clone this repo locally $ git clone https://github.com/sqreen/devise_sqreener_tutorial.git

Each step in the tutorial is represented by a different branch. Begin on the branch step_0, which is where this file is located so you're probably already there.

Run the app

Just so you can see what to expect, and to make sure everything is working as you'd expect, go ahead and run the app.

$ rails server

You should get a URL in the output that you can open, by default http://localhost:3000. You should be welcomed by a login screen:

This looks like a perfectly safe site, nope no problems here.

If you create an account—go ahead and try!—you should be greeted by the only functional page in the app:

I feel confident that this site has my best interests in mind.

Install and configure devise_sqreen

So, let’s get started by installing the devise_sqreener extension. Install the gem by adding this line to the bottom of your Gemfile:

gem 'devise_sqreener'

and then execute

$ bundle

to download the latest version and install it.

Now, let's configure devise_sqreener with our Sqreen API key. Visit my.sqreen.io to access your account, or if you do not have an account, to create one. Either way, let's set up a new API Sandbox.

The new app screen with API Sandbox highlighted

Once you have an API Sandbox set up, click on the key-shaped icon on the left (get it?) to view and copy the API key.

No you cannot have my API key

Let's add the API key to our environment so our app can find it:

$ export SQREEN_API_TOKEN="PUT YOUR TOKEN HERE"

Now, to get the API token to devise_sqreener, we need to update the app configuration. Open config/initializers/devise.rb and add this line just before the final end statement:

  config.sqreen_api_token=ENV["SQREEN_API_TOKEN"]

Database migrations

Oh yes, you didn't think we'd escape without a database migration, did you? Let's assume your user model is called User; then we need to ask devise_sqreener to update this model a skosh.

$ rails generate devise_sqreener User

This will add the :sqreenable flag to your User model, and some new fields in the User table of your database. The generator will also create a migration file. Currently only ActiveRecord is supported.

Let's get that migration knocked out, then? Run:

$ rails db:migrate

Checking everything out.

Restart your app, and load up the page again. It should all still run just fine, and so far there should be no changes—devise_sqreener is installed and configured, but hasn't yet been activated.

Let's change that!


Continue to Step 1

$ git checkout step_1

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A tutorial for helping filter potentially malicious users from signing up for your Rails app.

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