convex-setup-auth
Sets up Convex authentication with user management, identity mapping, and access control. Use this skill when adding login or signup to a Convex app, configuring Convex Auth, Clerk, WorkOS AuthKit, Auth0, or custom JWT providers, wiring auth.config.ts, protecting queries and mutations with ctx.auth.getUserIdentity(), creating a users table with identity mapping, or setting up role-based access control, even if the user just says "add auth" or "make it require login."
Best use case
convex-setup-auth is best used when you need a repeatable AI agent workflow instead of a one-off prompt.
Sets up Convex authentication with user management, identity mapping, and access control. Use this skill when adding login or signup to a Convex app, configuring Convex Auth, Clerk, WorkOS AuthKit, Auth0, or custom JWT providers, wiring auth.config.ts, protecting queries and mutations with ctx.auth.getUserIdentity(), creating a users table with identity mapping, or setting up role-based access control, even if the user just says "add auth" or "make it require login."
Teams using convex-setup-auth should expect a more consistent output, faster repeated execution, less prompt rewriting.
When to use this skill
- You want a reusable workflow that can be run more than once with consistent structure.
When not to use this skill
- You only need a quick one-off answer and do not need a reusable workflow.
- You cannot install or maintain the underlying files, dependencies, or repository context.
Installation
Claude Code / Cursor / Codex
Manual Installation
- Download SKILL.md from GitHub
- Place it in
.claude/skills/convex-setup-auth/SKILL.mdinside your project - Restart your AI agent — it will auto-discover the skill
How convex-setup-auth Compares
| Feature / Agent | convex-setup-auth | Standard Approach |
|---|---|---|
| Platform Support | Not specified | Limited / Varies |
| Context Awareness | High | Baseline |
| Installation Complexity | Unknown | N/A |
Frequently Asked Questions
What does this skill do?
Sets up Convex authentication with user management, identity mapping, and access control. Use this skill when adding login or signup to a Convex app, configuring Convex Auth, Clerk, WorkOS AuthKit, Auth0, or custom JWT providers, wiring auth.config.ts, protecting queries and mutations with ctx.auth.getUserIdentity(), creating a users table with identity mapping, or setting up role-based access control, even if the user just says "add auth" or "make it require login."
Where can I find the source code?
You can find the source code on GitHub using the link provided at the top of the page.
SKILL.md Source
# Convex Authentication Setup
Implement secure authentication in Convex with user management and access control.
## When to Use
- Setting up authentication for the first time
- Implementing user management (users table, identity mapping)
- Creating authentication helper functions
- Setting up auth providers (Convex Auth, Clerk, WorkOS AuthKit, Auth0, custom JWT)
## When Not to Use
- Auth for a non-Convex backend
- Pure OAuth/OIDC documentation without a Convex implementation
- Debugging unrelated bugs that happen to surface near auth code
- The auth provider is already fully configured and the user only needs a one-line fix
## First Step: Choose the Auth Provider
Convex supports multiple authentication approaches. Do not assume a provider.
Before writing setup code:
1. Ask the user which auth solution they want, unless the repository already makes it obvious
2. If the repo already uses a provider, continue with that provider unless the user wants to switch
3. If the user has not chosen a provider and the repo does not make it obvious, ask before proceeding
Common options:
- [Convex Auth](https://docs.convex.dev/auth/convex-auth) - good default when the user wants auth handled directly in Convex
- [Clerk](https://docs.convex.dev/auth/clerk) - use when the app already uses Clerk or the user wants Clerk's hosted auth features
- [WorkOS AuthKit](https://docs.convex.dev/auth/authkit/) - use when the app already uses WorkOS or the user wants AuthKit specifically
- [Auth0](https://docs.convex.dev/auth/auth0) - use when the app already uses Auth0
- Custom JWT provider - use when integrating an existing auth system not covered above
Look for signals in the repo before asking:
- Dependencies such as `@clerk/*`, `@workos-inc/*`, `@auth0/*`, or Convex Auth packages
- Existing files such as `convex/auth.config.ts`, auth middleware, provider wrappers, or login components
- Environment variables that clearly point at a provider
## After Choosing a Provider
Read the provider's official guide and the matching local reference file:
- Convex Auth: [official docs](https://docs.convex.dev/auth/convex-auth), then `references/convex-auth.md`
- Clerk: [official docs](https://docs.convex.dev/auth/clerk), then `references/clerk.md`
- WorkOS AuthKit: [official docs](https://docs.convex.dev/auth/authkit/), then `references/workos-authkit.md`
- Auth0: [official docs](https://docs.convex.dev/auth/auth0), then `references/auth0.md`
The local reference files contain the concrete workflow, expected files and env vars, gotchas, and validation checks.
Use those sources for:
- package installation
- client provider wiring
- environment variables
- `convex/auth.config.ts` setup
- login and logout UI patterns
- framework-specific setup for React, Vite, or Next.js
For shared auth behavior, use the official Convex docs as the source of truth:
- [Auth in Functions](https://docs.convex.dev/auth/functions-auth) for `ctx.auth.getUserIdentity()`
- [Storing Users in the Convex Database](https://docs.convex.dev/auth/database-auth) for optional app-level user storage
- [Authentication](https://docs.convex.dev/auth) for general auth and authorization guidance
- [Convex Auth Authorization](https://labs.convex.dev/auth/authz) when the provider is Convex Auth
Prefer official docs over recalled steps, because provider CLIs and Convex Auth internals change between versions. Inventing setup from memory risks outdated patterns.
For third-party providers, only add app-level user storage if the app actually needs user documents in Convex. Not every app needs a `users` table.
For Convex Auth, follow the Convex Auth docs and built-in auth tables rather than adding a parallel `users` table plus `storeUser` flow, because Convex Auth already manages user records internally.
After running provider initialization commands, verify generated files and complete the post-init wiring steps the provider reference calls out. Initialization commands rarely finish the entire integration.
## Core Pattern: Protecting Backend Functions
The most common auth task is checking identity in Convex functions.
```ts
// Bad: trusting a client-provided userId
export const getMyProfile = query({
args: { userId: v.id("users") },
handler: async (ctx, args) => {
return await ctx.db.get(args.userId);
},
});
```
```ts
// Good: verifying identity server-side
export const getMyProfile = query({
args: {},
handler: async (ctx) => {
const identity = await ctx.auth.getUserIdentity();
if (!identity) throw new Error("Not authenticated");
return await ctx.db
.query("users")
.withIndex("by_tokenIdentifier", (q) =>
q.eq("tokenIdentifier", identity.tokenIdentifier),
)
.unique();
},
});
```
## Workflow
1. Determine the provider, either by asking the user or inferring from the repo
2. Ask whether the user wants local-only setup or production-ready setup now
3. Read the matching provider reference file
4. Follow the official provider docs for current setup details
5. Follow the official Convex docs for shared backend auth behavior, user storage, and authorization patterns
6. Only add app-level user storage if the docs and app requirements call for it
7. Add authorization checks for ownership, roles, or team access only where the app needs them
8. Verify login state, protected queries, environment variables, and production configuration if requested
If the flow blocks on interactive provider or deployment setup, ask the user explicitly for the exact human step needed, then continue after they complete it.
For UI-facing auth flows, offer to validate the real sign-up or sign-in flow after setup is done.
If the environment has browser automation tools, you can use them.
If it does not, give the user a short manual validation checklist instead.
## Reference Files
### Provider References
- `references/convex-auth.md`
- `references/clerk.md`
- `references/workos-authkit.md`
- `references/auth0.md`
## Checklist
- [ ] Chosen the correct auth provider before writing setup code
- [ ] Read the relevant provider reference file
- [ ] Asked whether the user wants local-only setup or production-ready setup
- [ ] Used the official provider docs for provider-specific wiring
- [ ] Used the official Convex docs for shared auth behavior and authorization patterns
- [ ] Only added app-level user storage if the app actually needs it
- [ ] Did not invent a cross-provider `users` table or `storeUser` flow for Convex Auth
- [ ] Added authentication checks in protected backend functions
- [ ] Added authorization checks where the app actually needs them
- [ ] Clear error messages ("Not authenticated", "Unauthorized")
- [ ] Client auth provider configured for the chosen provider
- [ ] If requested, production auth setup is covered tooRelated Skills
convex
Routing skill for Convex work in this repo. Use when the user explicitly invokes the `convex` skill, asks which Convex workflow or skill to use, or says they are working on a Convex app without naming a specific task yet. Do not prefer this skill when the request is clearly about setting up Convex, authentication, components, migrations, or performance.
convex-security-check
Quick security audit checklist covering authentication, function exposure, argument validation, row-level access control, and environment variable handling
convex-security-audit
Deep security review patterns for authorization logic, data access boundaries, action isolation, rate limiting, and protecting sensitive operations
convex-schema-validator
Defining and validating database schemas with proper typing, index configuration, optional fields, unions, and migration strategies for schema changes
convex-realtime
Patterns for building reactive apps including subscription management, optimistic updates, cache behavior, and paginated queries with cursor-based loading
convex-quickstart
Initializes a new Convex project from scratch or adds Convex to an existing app. Use this skill when starting a new project with Convex, scaffolding with npm create convex@latest, adding Convex to an existing React, Next.js, Vue, Svelte, or other frontend, wiring up ConvexProvider, configuring environment variables for the deployment URL, or running npx convex dev for the first time, even if the user just says "set up Convex" or "add a backend."
convex-performance-patterns
Guide for Convex performance optimization including denormalization, index design, avoiding N+1 queries, OCC (Optimistic Concurrency Control), and handling hot spots. Use when optimizing query performance, designing data models, handling high-contention writes, or troubleshooting OCC errors. Activates for performance issues, index optimization, denormalization patterns, or concurrency control tasks.
convex-performance-audit
Audits and optimizes Convex application performance across hot-path reads, write contention, subscription cost, and function limits. Use this skill when a Convex feature is slow or expensive, npx convex insights shows high bytes or documents read, OCC conflict errors or mutation retries appear, subscriptions or UI updates are costly, functions hit execution or transaction limits, or the user mentions performance, latency, read amplification, or invalidation problems in a Convex app.
convex-migrations
Schema migration strategies for evolving applications including adding new fields, backfilling data, removing deprecated fields, index migrations, and zero-downtime migration patterns
convex-migration-helper
Plans and executes safe Convex schema and data migrations using the widen-migrate-narrow workflow and the @convex-dev/migrations component. Use this skill when a deployment fails schema validation, existing documents need backfilling, fields need adding or removing or changing type, tables need splitting or merging, or a zero-downtime migration strategy is needed. Also use when the user mentions breaking schema changes, multi-deploy rollouts, or data transformations on existing Convex tables.
convex-http-actions
External API integration and webhook handling including HTTP endpoint routing, request/response handling, authentication, CORS configuration, and webhook signature validation
convex-helpers-patterns
Guide for convex-helpers library patterns including Triggers, Row-Level Security (RLS), Relationship helpers, Custom Functions, Rate Limiting, and Workpool. Use when implementing automatic side effects, access control, relationship traversal, auth wrappers, or concurrency management. Activates for triggers setup, RLS implementation, custom function wrappers, or convex-helpers integration tasks.