• Stars
    star
    1,446
  • Rank 32,535 (Top 0.7 %)
  • Language
    Ruby
  • Created about 13 years ago
  • Updated 3 months ago

Reviews

There are no reviews yet. Be the first to send feedback to the community and the maintainers!

Repository Details

Oauth2 strategy for Google

Gem Version

OmniAuth Google OAuth2 Strategy

Strategy to authenticate with Google via OAuth2 in OmniAuth.

Get your API key at: https://code.google.com/apis/console/ Note the Client ID and the Client Secret.

For more details, read the Google docs: https://developers.google.com/accounts/docs/OAuth2

Installation

Add to your Gemfile:

gem 'omniauth-google-oauth2'

Then bundle install.

Google API Setup

  • Go to 'https://console.developers.google.com'
  • Select your project.
  • Go to Credentials, then select the "OAuth consent screen" tab on top, and provide an 'EMAIL ADDRESS' and a 'PRODUCT NAME'
  • Wait 10 minutes for changes to take effect.

Usage

Here's an example for adding the middleware to a Rails app in config/initializers/omniauth.rb:

Rails.application.config.middleware.use OmniAuth::Builder do
  provider :google_oauth2, ENV['GOOGLE_CLIENT_ID'], ENV['GOOGLE_CLIENT_SECRET']
end
OmniAuth.config.allowed_request_methods = %i[get]

You can now access the OmniAuth Google OAuth2 URL: /auth/google_oauth2

For more examples please check out examples/omni_auth.rb

Using Devise? Skip the above and jump down to the Devise section! After setting up the provider via Devise, you can reference the confdiurations below.

NOTE: While developing your application, if you change the scope in the initializer you will need to restart your app server. Remember that either the 'email' or 'profile' scope is required!

Configuration

You can configure several options, which you pass in to the provider method via a hash:

  • scope: A comma-separated list of permissions you want to request from the user. See the Google OAuth 2.0 Playground for a full list of available permissions. Caveats:

    • The email and profile scopes are used by default. By defining your own scope, you override these defaults, but Google requires at least one of email or profile, so make sure to add at least one of them to your scope!
    • Scopes starting with https://www.googleapis.com/auth/ do not need that prefix specified. So while you can use the smaller scope books since that permission starts with the mentioned prefix, you should use the full scope URL https://docs.google.com/feeds/ to access a user's docs, for example.
  • redirect_uri: Override the redirect_uri used by the gem.

  • prompt: A space-delimited list of string values that determines whether the user is re-prompted for authentication and/or consent. Possible values are:

    • none: No authentication or consent pages will be displayed; it will return an error if the user is not already authenticated and has not pre-configured consent for the requested scopes. This can be used as a method to check for existing authentication and/or consent.
    • consent: The user will always be prompted for consent, even if they have previously allowed access a given set of scopes.
    • select_account: The user will always be prompted to select a user account. This allows a user who has multiple current account sessions to select one amongst them.

    If no value is specified, the user only sees the authentication page if they are not logged in and only sees the consent page the first time they authorize a given set of scopes.

  • image_aspect_ratio: The shape of the user's profile picture. Possible values are:

    • original: Picture maintains its original aspect ratio.
    • square: Picture presents equal width and height.

    Defaults to original.

  • image_size: The size of the user's profile picture. The image returned will have width equal to the given value and variable height, according to the image_aspect_ratio chosen. Additionally, a picture with specific width and height can be requested by setting this option to a hash with width and height as keys. If only width or height is specified, a picture whose width or height is closest to the requested size and requested aspect ratio will be returned. Defaults to the original width and height of the picture.

  • name: The name of the strategy. The default name is google_oauth2 but it can be changed to any value, for example google. The OmniAuth URL will thus change to /auth/google and the provider key in the auth hash will then return google.

  • access_type: Defaults to offline, so a refresh token is sent to be used when the user is not present at the browser. Can be set to online. More about offline access

  • hd: (Optional) Limit sign-in to a particular Google Apps hosted domain. This can be simply string 'domain.com' or an array %w(domain.com domain.co). More information at: https://developers.google.com/accounts/docs/OpenIDConnect#hd-param

  • jwt_leeway: Number of seconds passed to the JWT library as leeway. Defaults to 60 seconds. Note this only works if you use jwt 2.1, as the leeway option was removed in later versions.

  • skip_jwt: Skip JWT processing. This is for users who are seeing JWT decoding errors with the iat field. Always try adjusting the leeway before disabling JWT processing.

  • login_hint: When your app knows which user it is trying to authenticate, it can provide this parameter as a hint to the authentication server. Passing this hint suppresses the account chooser and either pre-fill the email box on the sign-in form, or select the proper session (if the user is using multiple sign-in), which can help you avoid problems that occur if your app logs in the wrong user account. The value can be either an email address or the sub string, which is equivalent to the user's Google+ ID.

  • include_granted_scopes: If this is provided with the value true, and the authorization request is granted, the authorization will include any previous authorizations granted to this user/application combination for other scopes. See Google's Incremental Authorization for additional details.

  • enable_granular_consent: If this is provided with the value true, users can choose to only grant access to specific data. See Google's How to handle granular permissions guide for additional details.

  • openid_realm: Set the OpenID realm value, to allow upgrading from OpenID based authentication to OAuth 2 based authentication. When this is set correctly an openid_id value will be set in ['extra']['id_info'] in the authentication hash with the value of the user's OpenID ID URL.

  • provider_ignores_state: You will need to set this to true when using the One-time Code Flow below. In this flow there is no server side redirect that would set the state.

  • overridable_authorize_options: By default, all authorize_options can be overridden with request parameters. You can restrict the behavior by using this option.

Here's an example of a possible configuration where the strategy name is changed, the user is asked for extra permissions, the user is always prompted to select their account when logging in and the user's profile picture is returned as a thumbnail:

Rails.application.config.middleware.use OmniAuth::Builder do
  provider :google_oauth2, ENV['GOOGLE_CLIENT_ID'], ENV['GOOGLE_CLIENT_SECRET'],
    {
      scope: 'email, profile, http://gdata.youtube.com',
      prompt: 'select_account',
      image_aspect_ratio: 'square',
      image_size: 50
    }
end

Auth Hash

Here's an example of an authentication hash available in the callback by accessing request.env['omniauth.auth']:

{
  "provider" => "google_oauth2",
  "uid" => "100000000000000000000",
  "info" => {
    "name" => "John Smith",
    "email" => "[email protected]",
    "first_name" => "John",
    "last_name" => "Smith",
    "image" => "https://lh4.googleusercontent.com/photo.jpg",
    "urls" => {
      "google" => "https://plus.google.com/+JohnSmith"
    }
  },
  "credentials" => {
    "token" => "TOKEN",
    "refresh_token" => "REFRESH_TOKEN",
    "expires_at" => 1496120719,
    "expires" => true
  },
  "extra" => {
    "id_token" => "ID_TOKEN",
    "id_info" => {
      "azp" => "APP_ID",
      "aud" => "APP_ID",
      "sub" => "100000000000000000000",
      "email" => "[email protected]",
      "email_verified" => true,
      "at_hash" => "HK6E_P6Dh8Y93mRNtsDB1Q",
      "iss" => "accounts.google.com",
      "iat" => 1496117119,
      "exp" => 1496120719
    },
    "raw_info" => {
      "sub" => "100000000000000000000",
      "name" => "John Smith",
      "given_name" => "John",
      "family_name" => "Smith",
      "profile" => "https://plus.google.com/+JohnSmith",
      "picture" => "https://lh4.googleusercontent.com/photo.jpg?sz=50",
      "email" => "[email protected]",
      "email_verified" => "true",
      "locale" => "en",
      "hd" => "company.com"
    }
  }
}

Devise

First define your application id and secret in config/initializers/devise.rb. Do not use the snippet mentioned in the Usage section.

Configuration options can be passed as the last parameter here as key/value pairs.

config.omniauth :google_oauth2, 'GOOGLE_CLIENT_ID', 'GOOGLE_CLIENT_SECRET', {}

NOTE: If you are using this gem with devise with above snippet in config/initializers/devise.rb then do not create config/initializers/omniauth.rb which will conflict with devise configurations.

Then add the following to 'config/routes.rb' so the callback routes are defined.

devise_for :users, controllers: { omniauth_callbacks: 'users/omniauth_callbacks' }

Make sure your model is omniauthable. Generally this is "/app/models/user.rb"

devise :omniauthable, omniauth_providers: [:google_oauth2]

Then make sure your callbacks controller is setup.

# app/controllers/users/omniauth_callbacks_controller.rb:

class Users::OmniauthCallbacksController < Devise::OmniauthCallbacksController
  def google_oauth2
      # You need to implement the method below in your model (e.g. app/models/user.rb)
      @user = User.from_omniauth(request.env['omniauth.auth'])

      if @user.persisted?
        flash[:notice] = I18n.t 'devise.omniauth_callbacks.success', kind: 'Google'
        sign_in_and_redirect @user, event: :authentication
      else
        session['devise.google_data'] = request.env['omniauth.auth'].except('extra') # Removing extra as it can overflow some session stores
        redirect_to new_user_registration_url, alert: @user.errors.full_messages.join("\n")
      end
  end
end

and bind to or create the user

def self.from_omniauth(access_token)
    data = access_token.info
    user = User.where(email: data['email']).first

    # Uncomment the section below if you want users to be created if they don't exist
    # unless user
    #     user = User.create(name: data['name'],
    #        email: data['email'],
    #        password: Devise.friendly_token[0,20]
    #     )
    # end
    user
end

For your views you can login using:

<%# omniauth-google-oauth2 1.0.x uses OmniAuth 2 and requires using HTTP Post to initiate authentication: %>
<%= link_to "Sign in with Google", user_google_oauth2_omniauth_authorize_path, method: :post %>

<%# omniauth-google-oauth2 prior 1.0.0: %>
<%= link_to "Sign in with Google", user_google_oauth2_omniauth_authorize_path %>

<%# Devise prior 4.1.0: %>
<%= link_to "Sign in with Google", user_omniauth_authorize_path(:google_oauth2) %>

An overview is available at https://github.com/plataformatec/devise/wiki/OmniAuth:-Overview

One-time Code Flow (Hybrid Authentication)

Google describes the One-time Code Flow here. This hybrid authentication flow has significant functional and security advantages over a pure server-side or pure client-side flow. The following steps occur in this flow:

  1. The client (web browser) authenticates the user directly via Google's JS API. During this process assorted modals may be rendered by Google.
  2. On successful authentication, Google returns a one-time use code, which requires the Google client secret (which is only available server-side).
  3. Using a AJAX request, the code is POSTed to the Omniauth Google OAuth2 callback.
  4. The Omniauth Google OAuth2 gem will validate the code via a server-side request to Google. If the code is valid, then Google will return an access token and, if this is the first time this user is authenticating against this application, a refresh token. Both of these should be stored on the server. The response to the AJAX request indicates the success or failure of this process.

This flow is immune to replay attacks, and conveys no useful information to a man in the middle.

The omniauth-google-oauth2 gem supports this mode of operation when provider_ignores_state is set to true. Implementors simply need to add the appropriate JavaScript to their web page, and they can take advantage of this flow. An example JavaScript snippet follows.

// Basic hybrid auth example following the pattern at:
// https://developers.google.com/identity/sign-in/web/reference

<script src="https://apis.google.com/js/platform.js?onload=init" async defer></script>

...

function init() {
  gapi.load('auth2', function() {
    // Ready.
    $('.google-login-button').click(function(e) {
      e.preventDefault();

      gapi.auth2.authorize({
        client_id: 'YOUR_CLIENT_ID',
        cookie_policy: 'single_host_origin',
        scope: 'email profile',
        response_type: 'code'
      }, function(response) {
        if (response && !response.error) {
          // google authentication succeed, now post data to server.
          jQuery.ajax({type: 'POST', url: '/auth/google_oauth2/callback', data: response,
            success: function(data) {
              // response from server
            }
          });
        } else {
          // google authentication failed
        }
      });
    });
  });
};

Note about mobile clients (iOS, Android)

The documentation at https://developers.google.com/identity/sign-in/ios/offline-access specifies the REDIRECT_URI to be either a set value or an EMPTY string for mobile logins to work. Else, you will run into redirect_uri_mismatch errors.

In that case, ensure to send an additional parameter redirect_uri= (empty string) to the /auth/google_oauth2/callback URL from your mobile device.

Note about CORS

If you're making POST requests to /auth/google_oauth2/callback from another domain, then you need to make sure 'X-Requested-With': 'XMLHttpRequest' header is included with your request, otherwise your server might respond with OAuth2::Error, : Invalid Value error.

Getting around the redirect_uri_mismatch error (See Issue #365)

If you are struggling with a persistent redirect_uri_mismatch, you can instead pass the access_token from getAuthResponse directly to the auth/google_oauth2/callback endpoint, like so:

// Initialize the GoogleAuth object
let googleAuth;
gapi.load('client:auth2', async () => {
  await gapi.client.init({ scope: '...', client_id: '...' });
  googleAuth = gapi.auth2.getAuthInstance();
});

// Call this when the Google Sign In button is clicked
async function signInGoogle() {
  const googleUser = await googleAuth.signIn(); // wait for the user to authorize through the modal
  const { access_token } = googleUser.getAuthResponse();

  const data = new FormData();
  data.append('access_token', access_token);

  const response = await api.post('/auth/google_oauth2/callback', data)
  console.log(response);
}

Using Axios

If you're making a GET resquests from another domain using access_token.

axios
  .get(
    'url(path to your callback}',
    { params: { access_token: 'token' } },
    headers....
    )

If you're making a POST resquests from another domain using access_token.

axios
  .post(
    'url(path to your callback}',
    { access_token: 'token' },
    headers....
    )

--OR--

axios
  .post(
    'url(path to your callback}',
    null,
      {
        params: {
          access_token: 'token'
        },
        headers....
      }
    )

Fixing Protocol Mismatch for redirect_uri in Rails

Just set the full_host in OmniAuth based on the Rails.env.

# config/initializers/omniauth.rb
OmniAuth.config.full_host = Rails.env.production? ? 'https://domain.com' : 'http://localhost:3000'

License

Copyright (c) 2018 by Josh Ellithorpe

Permission is hereby granted, free of charge, to any person obtaining a copy of this software and associated documentation files (the "Software"), to deal in the Software without restriction, including without limitation the rights to use, copy, modify, merge, publish, distribute, sublicense, and/or sell copies of the Software, and to permit persons to whom the Software is furnished to do so, subject to the following conditions:

The above copyright notice and this permission notice shall be included in all copies or substantial portions of the Software.

THE SOFTWARE IS PROVIDED "AS IS", WITHOUT WARRANTY OF ANY KIND, EXPRESS OR IMPLIED, INCLUDING BUT NOT LIMITED TO THE WARRANTIES OF MERCHANTABILITY, FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE AND NONINFRINGEMENT. IN NO EVENT SHALL THE AUTHORS OR COPYRIGHT HOLDERS BE LIABLE FOR ANY CLAIM, DAMAGES OR OTHER LIABILITY, WHETHER IN AN ACTION OF CONTRACT, TORT OR OTHERWISE, ARISING FROM, OUT OF OR IN CONNECTION WITH THE SOFTWARE OR THE USE OR OTHER DEALINGS IN THE SOFTWARE.

More Repositories

1

s

Open a web search in your terminal.
Go
2,306
star
2

bitcoincash

Bitcoin Cash - Peer-to-Peer Electronic Cash
CSS
145
star
3

simplechat

Simple chat client written in meteor
JavaScript
76
star
4

docker-bitcoin

Bitcoin Cash full node images for Docker.
Dockerfile
74
star
5

throttled

Bandwidth limiter and QoS solution.
C++
59
star
6

em-shorty

Another URL shortener based on Event Machine and rack-fiber_pool
Ruby
58
star
7

ws-tcp-proxy

Simple websocket tcp proxy.
Go
29
star
8

smartmask

smartBCH wallet that interacts with MetaMask
Vue
18
star
9

fp-sin

Simple Sinatra shell with all the goodies.
Ruby
12
star
10

pickynode

Some people are picky about the bitcoin nodes they connect to.
Ruby
8
star
11

authpoint

Starting point for rails 3.1 apps using omniauth
Ruby
6
star
12

gemsync

Sync gems across multiple ruby installations.
Ruby
5
star
13

startpoint

Starting point for rails projects. Based on the 2.3.x series.
ActionScript
4
star
14

starcraft2

Tiny sc2 api wrapper.
Ruby
4
star
15

ports

Collection of custom macports
4
star
16

pickynode-bchd

Some people are picky about the bitcoin cash nodes they connect to with bchd.
Ruby
4
star
17

kube-ipfs

Kuberntes configurations for IPFS
Shell
3
star
18

thoughts

https://thoughts.greyh.at
CSS
3
star
19

modttl

OS X/BSD app to modify the TTL of outgoing packets.
2
star
20

handcash-go

HandCash API implementation for Go
2
star
21

kube-smartbch

Kubernetes configurations for smartBCH.
2
star
22

luckytigers.cash

Site for Lucky Tigers
Solidity
1
star
23

reapersnft

Rails Reapers Backend
Ruby
1
star
24

moodies.cash

Minting site for moodies.cash
Solidity
1
star
25

utopia-bot-docker

Dockerfile
1
star
26

greyh.at

HTML
1
star
27

backclose

A simple chrome extension. When you try to go back with no history it closes the tab.
JavaScript
1
star
28

pixelatedink

pixelatedink.io
HTML
1
star
29

kube-imageproxy

Kubernetes configurations for imageproxy.
1
star
30

helm-configs

1
star
31

summons.reapers.cash

First Reapers Summons
Solidity
1
star
32

jumps-io

1
star
33

reapers.cash

https://reapers.cash
Solidity
1
star
34

zquestz.github.com

Github pages.
1
star
35

kube-flipstarter

Kubernetes configurations for flipstarter.cash
1
star
36

PandoraMan

Small Cocoa wrapper for the Pandora service.
Objective-C
1
star