I've searched for solutions, but everything I can find seems mostly outdated.
We're using the Python API for GAE and creating login urls in the following manner:
users.create_login_url(continue_url, "Yahoo", "http://yahoo.com/"),
Which works fine for sites such as Google, Yahoo, Aol, Blogger, Flickr, etc... but we're aware that Facebook and Twitter don't work in this manner.
Can anyone show any examples of how to authenticate users on App Engine using Facebook, Twitter, and LinkedIn?
Thanks!
First, one has to register their application on Facebook and get an Application ID. Details:
Register here Facebook authentication overview
Then, I used the facebook python SDK, along with the facebook javascript api (which is the canonical way to do authentication with facebook). Here's a working example of authenticaion I used.
Direct link to the Facebook python SDK
Direct link to the Facebook Javascript SDK
If the service you want to sign in with doesn't support OpenID, you need to do it the same way you would on any other service: Set up your own sessions library, handle logins in a site-specific manner, and keep track of signed in user sessions using the session library.
Related
I'm new to web dev, and trying to build an application using google app engine's java standard environment, which will require user authentication. I'd like to provide authentication which requires only a username and password of the user, as opposed to a phone number or social account.
As I look through the options listed in app engine's auth tutorial, if I'm understanding them correctly, none of them allow login without a phone number or social account? https://cloud.google.com/appengine/docs/standard/java/oauth/
If so, are there alternatives available while still using app engine? I've read some about 'web container managed authentication' but I'm not sure if its something app engine will support, or if its a full solution.
Is it possible/feasible to roll fully custom authentication in the app engine standard environment? As I search for custom authentication tutorials I see a lot of articles recommending against this, but it's not clear to me what the alternative is.
Thanks for any information
As it's mention on the OpenID Connect documents of Google Cloud, it's important for you and your users security to authenticate using well proven and debugged code. Google offers Firebase Authentication which let's users log in with an Email and password.
If you still want to implement the authorize part on your own, you can use your preferred web framework and probably it will have an authorizing process.
For example, in python you can use Django authorize system to provide users for a custom way to log in.
But, as I said before, I highly recommend you to use the Google APIs for authorizing as they are OpenID certificated.
I want to add social sign-in feature to my Google App Engine based application and hence want to add Google's authentication mechanism along with FB log-in.
I am confused because Google has provided at least 3 different ways to do this.
Google+ sign-in (https://developers.google.com/+/web/signin/server-side-flow)
Users service provided on Google App Engine
Federated Authentication (https://developers.google.com/appengine/articles/openid)
I would like to know which method is the most recent and which method is used widely?
Thanks,
Chandrashekhar
#1 Google+ Sign In allows users to log in via OAuth 2.0, but requires users to have Google Plus enabled. Google+ Sign In also provides additional functionality to the Google+ APIs such as sharing and social integration. However, you could just use standard OAuth 2.0 for login, which removes the Google+ requirement.
#2 Users Service is a Google App Engine API. It allows any user with a Google Account to login. This is different to OAuth 2.0 - it uses Googles standard login pages and you can use it right out of the box without having to configure any OAuth scopes etc. You can get going with this very quickly.
#3 Federated Login integrates the Open ID standard with the Google App Engine Users API. This allows your users to log in with an Open ID (ie credentials they have registered with an 'Open ID provider'), and you to use the standard Users Service API. There are many Open ID providers out there, including Google.
Your question states that you want to add a "social sign-in feature" along with "FB log-in". So, that basically rules #1 & #2 out. Unfortunately, Facebook (and Twitter) are not Open ID providers, so that kind of rules #3 out too. For these, you will need to implement their own authentication mechanisms (Facebook Login and Sign in with Twitter). There is a great boilerplate repo on GitHub that has some code (in python) to help you get going.
I have integrated my application with Google apps marketplace with old version of OpenID and getting the data from Google calendar by using Google calendar version 2 API. Now I need to integrate every thing to new version. I have confused a little bit as Google is providing various authentication and authorization process. I looked in to OpenID connect, JWT (JSON Web Token), Google calendar version 3 service account. May any one please help me out from this issue like that should I use to authenticate as well as for authorization. Thanks in advance.
https://developers.google.com/accounts/docs/OAuth2 gives a good overview on various ways to authenticate with Google APIs and when to use them. For instance JWT is useful when your application uses Google APIs to store/retrieve its own data i.e. not to access data of your application's user.
Also see https://developers.google.com/google-apps/calendar/auth
We have an HTML5 client accessing a Google Cloud Endpoints backend. We want to offer users a reasonable range of sign-in methods, e.g.: sign-in with an existing OpenID, or alternatively sign-up with an email and password. These seem like basic requirements to us! If there is a better alternative that does not restrict our audience, then we'd consider it.
We're encountering two problems: (1) it seems the Endpoints service will only authenticate Google accounts, and (2) we don't know how to support "sign-up with email and password" together with Endpoints.
Edited: We found that our requirements can work together with Endpoints, but we did not find any Python examples to help, or to support an OpenID provider. We created our own "email/password" authentication option and enable it in parallel with Google OAuth. Overall the documentation on authentication when using Cloud Endpoints is minimal. Documentation and examples are stronger for the newer "Mobile Backend" project.
You are right, at this point you can build an oAuth provider using the lib provided in app-engine but that requires your users to have an Google account. So to protect my API I had to build my own custom oAuth2 provider. I did this by using the python oAuthLib library (oAuthLib). They have an awesome doc that will guide you through. I also made a rough document on how I made it app engine specific. If interested please take a look at the link Blog page
I hope this helps.
Over Google Application Engine, I want to add Yahoo, Google & Facebook login options for the users in my application.
Since Facebook does not support federated login using openid, how could I implement login option for all facebook, yahoo & google using JavaScript in my application?
Is OAuth only way to implement all three facebook, yahoo & google login options?
If Yes, is there any sample code to refer to implement using
a. java script + google cloud endpoints?
b. java servlets?
There are a variety of toolkits out there that should help you; for example, have a look at oauth.io. If you have to roll it yourself, talking to FB/G/Y at the raw HTTP/JSON level is not actually that hard. In the case of Google there’s the Google+ Sign-In widget that is pretty slick, and FB of course has similar stuff.
It’s not java servlet, but in https://code.google.com/p/favcolor-accountchooser/source/browse/rp.rb there’s Ruby source code for doing OAuth authentication to Google, FB, and Microsoft Live (but not Yahoo)