Stack is an open-source, self-hostable, and highly customizable authentication and user management system.
We provide frontend and backend libraries for Next.js, React, and JavaScript. You can set it up in one minute and scale with the project as it grows.
Here are some of the components you get out-of-the-box:
Here is the user/project management dashboard:
- Composable React components & hooks
- OAuth (Google, Facebook, GitHub, etc.)
- Magic link and email password authentication (with email verification and password reset)
- Easy to set up with proxied providers (no need to sign up and create OAuth endpoints yourself on all the providers)
- User management & analytics
- Teams & permissions
- User-associated metadata with client-/server-specific permissions
- Out-of-the-box dark/light mode support
- Fully customizable UI, or build your own UI with our functions like
signInWithOAuth
- 100% open-source!
We all know how much overhead there is when starting a new project. Developers need to handle so many things that aren't even part of their core business, like user authentication, user profiles, payments, dashboards, hosting, and more. Our vision is to build a full-stack framework that handles all of this out-of-the-box with less than 10 minutes of setup, so developers can focus on what they really want to build. Authentication is the first step towards this vision.
- Customizable frontend [20. April 2024]
- Teams [8. May 2024]
- Permissions [10. May 2024]
- New dashboard with Shadcn UI [16. May 2024]
- Email template editor [28. May 2024]
- OAuth scope authorization and access token [05. June 2024]
- User analytics (retention, DAU/MAU, user segments, etc.)
- Feature-rich email/notification system
- Vue.js, Htmx, and Svelte support
- Python, golang, and Java backend library
- SSO/SAML integration
To get started with Stack, you need to create a Next.js project using the App router. Then, you can install Stack by running the following command:
npx @stackframe/init-stack@latest
You will then be guided through the installation process.
For further configuration and usage, refer to our documentation.
This is for you if you want to contribute to the Stack project or run the Stack dashboard locally.
Please read the contribution guidelines before contributing.
- Node v20
- pnpm v9
- Docker
Pre-populated .env files for the setup below are available and used by default in .env.development
in each of the packages, but you can choose to create your own .env.local
files instead.
In a terminal, start the dependencies (Postgres and Inbucket) as Docker containers:
docker compose -f dependencies.compose.yaml up
Then:
pnpm install
# Run build to build everything once
pnpm run build
# Run code generation (repeat this after eg. changing the Prisma schema). This is part of the build script, but faster
pnpm run codegen
# Push the most recent Prisma schema to the database
pnpm run prisma db push
# Start the dev server
pnpm run dev
You can now open the dashboard at http://localhost:8101, API on port 8102, demo on port 8103, and docs on port 8104. You can also run the tests with pnpm run test:watch
.
Your IDE may show an error on all @stackframe/XYZ
imports. To fix this, simply restart the TypeScript language server; for example, in VSCode you can open the command palette (Ctrl+Shift+P) and run Developer: Reload Window
or TypeScript: Restart TS server
.
You can also open Prisma Studio to see the database interface and edit data directly:
pnpm run prisma studio
If you make changes to the Prisma schema, you need to run the following command to create a migration:
pnpm run prisma migrate dev
Thanks to our amazing community who have helped us build Stack!
Read the contribution guidelines and join our Discord if you'd also like to help.