What if some users do not need to be users? - google-app-engine

At this GAE docs page regarding users services I find this statement:
If your app uses OpenID and the user must sign in, your app will be redirected to the URL /_ah/login_required. You must create a page that lets the user sign in using an OpenID identifier. To specify this page, add an entry to your app.yaml file of the following form:
url: /_ah/login_required
script: do_openid_login.py
Some of my users do not need to be users, but are sort of guests who provide input that is stored in the datastore. I don't understand whether the docs mean that in my situation open_id cannot be used, or if it must be used another way. I hope my app can use open_id with the app.yaml done as above but just not asking "guests" to authenticate. Is that right?
My question here has to do with another of my questions which is unanswered and I am trying to develop a demo which will answer that question.

The section you quoted states that it applies when "the user must sign in". You do not have to force all users to sign in. The docs demonstrate how to configure app.yaml to require sign-in on certain pages. However, they also state:
If an application needs different behavior, the application can
implement the user handling itself. See the Users API for more
information.
You're in this camp. You can use the Users API to implement the sign-in logic yourself. Here's the simplest example:
from google.appengine.api import users
user = users.get_current_user()
if not user:
# Handle guest users here or redirect them to sign-in if required.
else:
# This user is signed in.

Related

Role based authentication with firebase and angularjs

I am using email/password authentication via Firebase, so currently I only have authenticated user and non-authenticated user. But for the app, I would like to have admin, moderator, user and guest four different kinds of role.
I did some research, but could not find any existing example or logic to do so. Here are my initial thoughs, but not sure if it is feasible. Basically two steps:
Create a table in firebase called User, while Firebase record the email/password, I also push the data(email/password), and role information to the table.
In the route, check if the user has the appropriate role to access the certain page
Any other better way to do it? Any idea would be appreciated!
I had similar issue while working with role based authorization. I followed same pattern of saving users role and then retriving it when needed. If you are using ui-router for routes then probably you can use angular-permission module which works on the same concept and is easy to use.
You can find that module here: https://github.com/Narzerus/angular-permission

Does exposing a user's uid in the url pose a security threat for Firebase?

I've got a small review system built in AngularJS and Firebase and the only way to identify which review is made by which user is via the uid of the user. The idea is when you then click on the user's name, you should be taken to the profile of that user.
So I would then create a route looking like /profile/{{review.author.uid}} which could translate into /profile/facebook:123234243 for example.
My question is, does it pose a security threat showing the uid in the url like this? Can it be used for any malicious actions against a user's third party account etc?
I've tried looking through their website but I can't find anything on this subject.
EDIT: Note that I need a Firebase specific answer, not a generic one about database id:s.

What is this "Not logged in" screen from "_ah/login" that appears with oauth2client?

I'm playing with the oauth2client.appengine Oauth2Decorator and it interjects it's own screen asking for an email address:
The URL is http://127.0.0.1:8080/_ah/login?continue=http%3A//127.0.0.1%3A8080/mypage
I'm guessing that its intention is to mock being different users during development? But that leaves some questions:
Does it only appear on the dev server?
Do I have to do anything to make it go away when deploying to production, or is that magic?
How do I turn it off for development?
What does it actually do?
if the user is being redirected to an oauth consent page nonetheless what's the point of this?
As you can see I just don't get it. I do see that it gives my get_current_user() a result - a user instance with the email address that I submit.
I recognise that this is effectively the same question as
"How to Bypass Local Login Screen with Oauth2 and GAE", which seems to conclude that the whole oauth2client library is fairly useless and it is best that we all go off and write own authentication flows? Seriously?
If that's the state of things alternative suggestions are welcome (in the comments). My workflow is to send the user off to be granted permissions via Google's Oauth so my webapp can proceed to do stuff on their behalf.
If you want to use the get_current_user() that is provided by Google you can't really avoid it and it is actually something very useful. If you want to do your own authentication stuff then just don't use it and you won't be redirected to /_ah/login.
In short this is just to simulate locally the actual Google Login. It would be a huge mess to login to your actual account while on development mode and it will be really hard to simulate multiple users. That code is not executed online and instead you are being redirected to Google for approval.

GAE enforcing sign in by app.yaml, python decorators or users.get_current_user?

I'm using 'login' option in my app.yaml configuration file for a GAE application. Looks like this:
- url: /admin/.*
script: myapp.app
login: admin
- url: /.*
script: myapp.app
login: required
UPDATE (by suggestion of bossylobster): I want a user always signed in (unsigned users can't do anything), and I need to know who the user is. Actually, I need OAuth2 credentials to communicate with Google APIs (for example, I need to fetch some user's info with Google Profiles API, and write in the user's calendar with Google Calendar API). Finally, I need an admin user to perform some operations (like create new domain's users, with Google Provisioning API)
I'm using google-api-client library, and playing around with oauth2 decorators. Then, in my RequestHandlers, I have this:
class MainHandler(webapp.RequestHandler):
#decorator.oauth_aware
def get(self):
if decorator.has_credentials():
# do something
else:
url = decorator.authorize_url()
self.response.out.write(template.render('templates/index.html',
{'authorize_url': url}))
Finally, I've read about another method:
user = users.get_current_user()
if user:
# do something
else:
greeting = ("Sign in or register." %
users.create_login_url("/"))
self.response.out.write("<html><body>%s</body></html>" % greeting)
What is the best method to handle the user's authentication to fit my needs (see UPDATE)?
Many thanks in advance
I think you may be confusing what the OAuth 2.0 decorator does vs. the other two approaches.
The OAuth 2.0 decorator is not specific to your app, you would use it if you want to get OAuth 2.0 credentials for your users and then use those to communicate with Google APIs.
The other two are simply ways to get the user information from a session cookie that is set by App Engine.
If you really want a decorator, you would use login_required, documented here:
https://developers.google.com/appengine/docs/python/tools/webapp/utilmodule
There is no one best approach between specifying in app.yaml, checking if users.get_current_user is None or using #login_required on specified handlers.
A rough approximation of the three distinct times you'd want to use these are the following:
1) If you want users to be logged in, but don't need to know the specific user, use login: required in app.yaml.
2) If want to know the user, but also have a fallback if the user is not logged in, use users.get_current_user and tailor your behavior to the user or to None if that is the returned value.
3) If you want to know the user and always have one logged in, use #login_required.
UPDATE:
(Based on a further explanation of needs.) Since you always want to log your users in and always want OAuth 2.0 credentials for them, you should always use decorator.oauth_required.
As for using the APIs, only the Google Calendar API can be used with the google-api-python-client library. The Google Apps Provisioning API is a Google Data API, while the Calendar API is a discovery-based API.
As a result, you'll need to use the gdata-python-client library to use the Provisioning API. You'll need to manually convert from a oauth2client.client.OAuth2Credentials object to a gdata.gauth.OAuth2Token object to use the same token for either one.
When using OAuth2Decorator, you'll be able to access an instance of oauth2client.client.OAuth2Credentials via decorator.credentials().
SECOND UPDATE:
I recently added support for this to gdata-python-client.
from gdata.gauth import OAuth2TokenFromCredentials
auth_token = OAuth2TokenFromCredentials(decorator.credentials())
auth_token.authorize(client)
The implementation allows the two token/credentials objects decorator.credentials() and auth_token to stay in sync, no matter which object you change values on.

How do I design a database to support OpenID

I'm looking into implementing OpenID, but I drawing a blank as to how the database would look with new / existing users. How does stackoverflow do it? I understand the concept that an external site does the authentication for me, but as far as storing user information on my end I need help with.
Since this is one of the top search results when searching for OpenID
Database Structures on Google, and the Plaxo link referenced in the
previous answer is no longer around. I've copied and pasted the
content of the Plaxo instructions below. I was able to get them by
using the wayback machine page referenced
here.
Keep in mind that because of StackOverflow's 30000 character restrictions, I will have to crop certain sections, and Joseph Smarr included some images in his
instructions, so you might want to look at the wayback machine page I
referenced.
-Jason
A Recipe for OpenID-Enabling Your Site
Prepared by Joseph Smarr at Plaxo on July 18, 2007.
This is a step-by-step tutorial guide for implementing OpenID consumer-side support with a web site that already has users with accounts. It will explain how to easily let new users sign up for an account on your site using their OpenID URL and how to let existing users attach their OpenID(s) so they can sign in using them.
I developed this guide by talking to fellow OpenID developers at the Internet Identity Workshop and elsewhere, and by implementing OpenID support for Plaxo using these instructions. I've also posted detailed screenshots of Plaxo's implementation for reference. I've intended for this guide to be clear and complete and to follow best-practices, but if you have any questions or feedback, please let me know at ob_male('joseph','plaxo.com'); or by posting a comment on Plaxo's blog.
This guide may look a bit long, but my hope is you can just follow it straight through without thinking much, and you'll be completely done by the time you reach the end! :)
Overview
I'm assuming your web site currently has:
A user database with rows for each user
Each user has a unique internal user ID
Users currently sign in using a username/e-mail and password
A registration flow for signing up new users and getting collecting basic profile info
A signin page for authenticating users
Internally you authenticate users based on username/e-mail and password, look up their unique user ID, and use it in the rest of your site
A settings page for users to manage their account info.
If your site doesn't look like this, you should still be able to follow along, but some of the sections may not be relevant to you.
Snipped.. so check the wayback machine link up above for the rest.
Implementation details
Install an OpenID consumer library
There are OpenID libraries already available in many popular programming languages that will do almost all of the heavy lifting for you. The team at JanRain wrote a bunch of them and are generally super-smart and knowledgeable when it comes to OpenID, so they'd probably make a good resource if you need help here.
Depending on the library, you may need to provide a persistent store for associations with OpenID provider sites. Essentially this is just storing a mapping from a server/handle string to an association string. You'll need to store the association at least for the session (to verify an OpenID authentication) but ideally you should store them longer so you won't have to re-associate every time you redirect to the OpenID provider (doing so will result in a faster redirect). You can use memcached, a database, or any other persistent storage medium you have access to.
Create a new OpenID database table
Use a schema like this (this will work with MySQL, but you may have to tweak it slightly if you use a different database or if you represent your internal user IDs differently): create table user_openids (
openid_url varchar(255) not null,
primary key (openid_url),
user_id int not null,
index (user_id)
);
Keep a single global table so you can use it to look up OpenIDs for all your users (even if you have your users partitioned into multiple databases).
Store OpenID URLs in canonicalized form for robust lookup (i.e. so if users enter their OpenID slightly differently next time, you can still map it to their account). Most OpenID libraries will provide a canonicaliztion function, but briefly you should add http:// if it's missing and you should convert the protocol and domain to lowercase (but NOT the rest of the URL), so e.g. "WWW.AOL.COM/myOpenID" should be stored as "http://www.aol.com/myOpenID". You should also probably remove any trailing slashes from the URL.
If you usually have a layer of database-access code, you should expose the following functions to your application (in each case I've sketched the SQL to implement the function). As a reminder, all functions that take an OpenID as input should canonicalize it prior to looking it up in the database.
GetUserId(openid_url)select user_id from user_openids where openid_url = openid_url
GetOpenIDsByUser(user_id)select openid_url from user_openids where user_id = user_id
AttachOpenID(openid_url, user_id)insert into user_openids values (openid_url, user_id)
DetachOpenID(openid_url, user_id)delete from user_openids where openid_url = openid_url and user_id = user_id
DetachOpenIDsByUser(user_id)delete from user_openids where user_id = user_id
Add OpenID UI to your registration page
Add a section to your registration page where OpenID users can sign up using their OpenID. The UI goal should be that OpenID users can easily identify that your site supports OpenID, but that users without OpenID can continue to register normally without being confused. You can either put an OpenID input box directly on the page or link to an OpenID page where users can enter their OpenID.
Wherever you put it, you should follow the community standards for naming and styling the text field where users enter their OpenID:
Use "openid_url" as the ID and name attributes of the text field (this will allow plug-ins to easily identify and handle OpenID input boxes across different web sites)
Add the small OpenID logo as a background image to the text box, using CSS like this:background: #FFFFFF url('/images/openid-icon-small.gif') no-repeat scroll 0pt 50%;
padding-left: 18px;
It's also a good idea to provide a brief explanation of what OpenID is and how your users can use it on your site (since you'll probably get curious people clicking through to take a look).
Wrap the OpenID text box in a form that will submit to your OpenID login CGI, which we'll build below.
Upon providing an OpenID and signing in to the OpenID provider, you'll need to redirect your user back to your registration page with a couple of small tweaks. First, you should show the OpenID that the user is registering with, preferably with the small OpenID logo next to it to consistently identify it as an OpenID (see the screenshots below for an example). Second, you should NOT ask the user for a site-specific password, since they'll be signing in with their OpenID. So hide the password fields and make sure your registration code will allow this (you may need to stick in a random password behind the scenes if your code requires some password text, just don't show it to the user). [Note: it's fine to let users enter a site-specific password later by using your account settings page, but the point here is that one of the major benefits you're providing OpenID users is that they no longer need to maintain separate credentials for each site they use.]
Here are some screenshots of how we added OpenID to Plaxo's registration flow:
Add OpenID UI to your signin page
Add a section to your signin page where OpenID users can sign in using their OpenID. This will work both for existing users of your site that have attached an OpenID to their account and new users, who will be able to sign up using their OpenID (using the same flow as above). Like with the registration page, the UI goal should be a balance between being obvious to OpenID users without overly distracting or confusing the rest of your users. You should name and style your OpenID box as specified above in the registration page. And like above, the form surrounding the OpenID input box should go to the OpenID login CGI you're about to build.
In addition to your main signin page, you may also have signin UI in your home page or elsewhere. You should ideally provide an option to sign in using OpenID in every place you provide a traditional signin option.
Here are some screenshots of how we added OpenID to Plaxo's signin pages:
Create a new OpenID login web page / CGI
Your CGI should take two basic input (query) parameters:
openid_url: the OpenID entered by the user (for registration, signin, attaching, etc.)
action_type: the operation the user wants to perform. Possible values will be login, complete, attach, list, and delete. (If you're using Rails or a similar system, these could also be controller methods and thus part of the URL itself.)
Implement the login action (this is where the UI you added to the registration and signin flows will both submit to)
Look up the provided openid_url using the GetUserId function described above.
If the OpenID is already attached to a user in your system, check to see if the user is currently signed in to your site.
If the user is not signed in, they are attempting to sign in as an existing user, so prepare to redirect to their OpenID provider, but set a flag to NOT ask the provider for registration info (since the user is not signing up for a new account).
If the user is already signed in, and this OpenID already belongs to them (i.e. the OpenID URL is mapped to the same user_id as the currently signed-in user), then you don't have to do anything (this user is already signed in and already attached that OpenID, so this is a no-op). This is an edge case.
If the user is already signed in but the OpenID belongs to a different user, show an error message saying that this OpenID has already been claimed by another user. You can also provide the user the option to sign out and try again. This is an edge case.
If the OpenID is NOT currently in your database, the user is trying to sign up for a new account, so prepare to redirect to their OpenID provider and ask for registration info.
Save the provided openid_url in your session, since you'll need it to remember it when the OpenID provider redirects back to you, and the provider may not return it to you. If you don't have a session, you can use your database, but it has to be somewhere persistent and protected from user-tampering (i.e. not in a cookie or something that could be changed or forged by the user). (The reason you need to store the requested OpenID is that OpenID lets users delegate their OpenID to another provider behind-the-scenes. For instance, if I try to sign up with the OpenID josephsmarr.com, I may have actually delegated that URL to a different OpenID like jsmarr.myopenid.com, and when the provider returns to you to complete authentication, you need to remember that I wanted to sign up as josephsmarr.com and not jsmarr.myopenid.com. Luckily your OpenID library will most likely handle this for you, but you still have to keep the originally requested OpenID in your session for now. This may be solved in the upcoming OpenID 2.0 spec.)
Construct your return_to URL for the OpenID provider to return to after the user has authenticated. This will be your OpenID login CGI with the complete action specified.
If you've determined above that the user is registering for a new account, decide what registration info to ask for. Most OpenID providers support the simple-registration extension, which is a list of common registration fields that you can request as required or optional for your site, including full name, e-mail, nickname, gender, date of birth, gender, postal code, country, language, and time zone. If you ask for these fields and the user consents to provide them, you can pre-fill them into your registration flow, thus removing time and friction from your registration process. If your OpenID consumer library doesn't natively support requesting simple-registration parameters, see if they have a general facility for supporting extensions, or worst-case you can manually add it to the generated redirect URL before redirecting.
Call checkid_setup in your OpenID library to generate the URL to redirect to the user's OpenID provider. Pass in the (canonicalized) OpenID provided by the user and the return_to URL you constructed above. Also pass in the simple registration info you want if appropriate. Depending on your library, you may need to trap and handle some errors from this function. But assuming everything goes well, it will give you back a URL to redirect to.
Have your CGI redirect to the provided URL, ideally by issuing a server-side redirect response.
The user will be redirected to their OpenID provider's web site. They will be asked to sign in (unless they've recently signed in there), they will be asked whether they trust your web site, and if you've asked for simple registration info, they'll be asked what info they want to share with you. Once they complete this process, the OpenID provider will redirect the user back to the return_to URL you supplied, which will then let you initiate your complete action to finish the job.Here are some screenshots of signing into an OpenID provider (myopenid.com in this case) and being prompted to share some registration info with Plaxo:
Implement the complete action (this is where the user gets redirected after signing in to their OpenID provider):
When the OpenID provider redirects to your return_to URL, they will add a bunch of additional query string parameters that contain the information needed to verify the user's authentication with this OpenID. Depending on the OpenID library you're using, you may need to gather these up into a data structure to pass in to the verification function, or it may do it for you.
Get the OpenID the user initially requested from your session (you stored it before redirecting to the OpenID provider above).
Call id_res in your OpenID library to verify the authentication data you've been sent by the OpenID provider. Pass in the OpenID that the user initially requested, along with the query parameters as needed. This function will check to see if everything looks valid. If you get an error back, display an appropriate error message to your user. Otherwise you've now confirmed that the user has authenticated the OpenID they provided to you.
Optional: after successfully verifying the OpenID, you may wish to set a persistent cookie for your site with the OpenID used so that you can recognize that the user has an OpenID next time they come to your site and pre-fill the OpenID box on the signin page. If you do this, make sure to also clear the cookie when the user explicitly signs out.
Look up the verified OpenID again using the GetUserId function. If you don't find it in your database, check to see if the user is currently signed in on your site. If they are, perform the attach action below to attach this OpenID to their existing account. Otherwise, it's time to start the registration process for a new account using this OpenID. Start by storing the verified OpenID in your session so your account creation code will remember the user has already verified this OpenID. (Do NOT use the same session variable you used to store the requested OpenID, since the user can type in anything there.) Then redirect your user to your registration flow and pass along the simple registration data you got back (if any). You will probably have to map the fields returned by simple-registration to the registration parameters that your site normally takes.
As described above, the registration page should show the OpenID prominently in the account information, and you should NOT ask the user to enter a password for your site, since they'll be using their OpenID to sign in. In addition, you should pre-fill any registration info provided from their OpenID provider. It is fine to ask for additional registration info and maintain your current policies about which fields are required and optional. (Using OpenID should be an acceleration for registering on your site, but should not require you to change what information you require or otherwise change your site's normal behavior). Finally, you should provide a link for existing users of your service to attach this OpenID to their existing account, if they have one. This will handle the case of existing users that weren't signed in and entered their OpenID and have no found themselves in the new-user registration flow. [Since this isn't common, it's better to just have a small link at the beginning of the registration flow rather than asking every user "do you want to register a new account or sign in to an existing account" when they first verify their OpenID.]
When the user completes your site's registration flow and you create a user account, attach the verified OpenID to the newly created account using your AttachOpenID function. [If your user table and OpenID table are in separate databases and cannot be part of the same transaction, there is a small chance that the attach command could fail and leave you with an orphaned user account. There's no easy way to prevent this in 100% of cases, but since it's rare and the user can always sign up again, in most cases you can ignore this race condition and just hope for the best.
If you found that the verified OpenID was attached to an existing account, you can now sign the user in as you normally would if they'd signed in through your traditional method. (If the user happens to be signed in to a different account, sign them out and then sign them in as the user the OpenID is attached to, since they just proved they own it).
Implement the attach action (for existing users to attach additional OpenIDs to their account):
(This action will be called as part of the complete action when the user is already signed in and has just verified a new OpenID. So make sure the user is signed in before calling this action.)
Attach the verified OpenID to the signed-in user's account using your AttachOpenID function.
Show a confirmation message that this OpenID has now been attached and can be used to sign in from now on. Consider redirecting to the list action so the user can now see this OpenID among the list of attached OpenIDs for their account.Here's a screenshot of Plaxo's attach confirmation page:
Implement the list action (for showing a signed-in user the OpenIDs attached to their account):
Require the user to be signed in (redirect through your signin page first if needed).
Fetch the list of attached OpenIDs for the signed-in user by calling your GetOpenIDsByUser function.
Show the list of OpenIDs in a web page with a link by each one to detach it if the user wants. The links will call the delete action below and pass in the OpenID to delete as the openid_url parameter.
Provide a link or input box to attach an additional OpenID. This will take the user through the login and attach flows (since the user is already signed in) and end up back on the list page.
If your site already has a general settings page, you should provide a link to "Manage your OpenIDs" that links to this list page. You may also decide to build this functionality directly into your current settings page.Here's a screenshot of Plaxo's list page, as well as links to it from our current settings pages:
Implement the delete action (for detaching an OpenID from a user's account):
Require the user to be signed in (redirect through your signin page first if needed).
Optional: Check whether the user is trying to delete the last credential they could use to sign in to your site. If the user has not set up a normal password on your site and this is the only OpenID attached to their account, deleting their last OpenID would essentially lock them out of their account forever. If you don't have a good way to recover users in this situation, show an error message if the user tries to delete their last attached credential, saying essentially "You can't delete the last OpenID attached to your account because you'd have no way to sign in. First attach another OpenID or create a password for this site."
Assuming it's ok to proceed, detach the OpenID provided by the openid_url parameter from the signed-in user's account by calling your DetachOpenID function. If the OpenID provided is not currently attached to the user's account, you can choose to show an error or just treat it as a no-op success.
Show a confirmation message that this OpenID has now been detached and can no longer be used to sign in to your site. Tell the user that if they want to re-attach this OpenID, they will have to go through the normal verification process to re-attach it. Consider redirecting to the list action so the user can see the updated list of OpenIDs attached to their account.Here are some screenshots of detaching an OpenID from a Plaxo account:
Add a hook to your delete-user routine to detach all OpenIDs from that user.
If your site currently lets users delete their accounts, it's important that you also detach any OpenIDs that were attached so they can be re-attached to another account later. You can do this by calling your DetachOpenIDsByUser function inside your delete-user routine, or by otherwise triggering this function when deleting a user.
...and you're done!
Snipped.. so check the wayback machine link up above for the rest. Joseph goes
through some best practices for OpenID, but at this point you should have a working
example.

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