Server-side verification callbacks are URL requests, with query parameters expanded by Google, that are sent by Google to an external system to notify it that a user should be rewarded for interacting with a rewarded or rewarded interstitial ad. Rewarded SSV (server-side verification) callbacks provide an extra layer of protection against spoofing of client-side callbacks to reward users.
This guide shows you how to verify rewarded SSV callbacks by using the Tink Java Apps third-party cryptographic library to ensure that the query parameters in the callback are legitimate values. Although Tink is used for the purposes of this guide, you have the option to use any third-party library that supports ECDSA. You can also test your server with the testing tool in the AdMob UI.
Check out this fully working example using Java spring-boot.
Prerequisites
Integrate rewarded ads into your mobile app with v3.12.0 or higher of the Google Mobile Ads Unity plugin.
Enable rewarded server-side verification on your ad unit.
Use RewardedAdsVerifier from the Tink Java Apps library
The Tink Java Apps GitHub repository
includes a
RewardedAdsVerifier
helper class to reduce the code required to verify a rewarded SSV callback.
Using this class enables you to verify a callback URL with the following code.
RewardedAdsVerifier verifier = new RewardedAdsVerifier.Builder()
.fetchVerifyingPublicKeysWith(
RewardedAdsVerifier.KEYS_DOWNLOADER_INSTANCE_PROD)
.build();
String rewardUrl = ...;
verifier.verify(rewardUrl);
If the verify()
method executes without raising an exception, the callback
URL was successfully verified. The Rewarding the user
section details best practices regarding when users should be rewarded. For a
breakdown of the steps performed by this class to verify rewarded SSV callbacks,
you can read through the Manual verification of rewarded
SSV section.
SSV callback parameters
Server-side verification callbacks contain query parameters that describe the rewarded ad interaction. Parameter names, descriptions, and example values are listed below. Parameters are sent in alphabetical order.
Parameter Name | Description | Example value |
---|---|---|
ad_network | Ad source identifier for the ad source that fulfilled this ad. Ad source names corresponding to ID values are listed in the Ad source identifiers section. | 1953547073528090325 |
ad_unit | AdMob ad unit ID that was used to request the rewarded ad. | 2747237135 |
key_id | Key to be used to verify SSV callback. This value maps to a public key provided by the AdMob key server. | 1234567890 |
reward_amount | Reward amount as specified in the ad unit settings. | 5 |
reward_item | Reward item as specified in the ad unit settings. | coins |
signature | Signature for SSV callback generated by AdMob. | MEUCIQCLJS_s4ia_sN06HqzeW7Wc3nhZi4RlW3qV0oO-6AIYdQIgGJEh-rzKreO-paNDbSCzWGMtmgJHYYW9k2_icM9LFMY |
timestamp | Timestamp of when the user was rewarded as Epoch time in ms. | 1507770365237823 |
transaction_id | Unique hex encoded identifier for each reward grant event generated by AdMob. | 18fa792de1bca816048293fc71035638 |
user_id | User identifier as provided by
SetUserId .
If no user identifier is provided by the app, this query parameter will not be present in the SSV callback. |
1234567 |
Ad source identifiers
Ad source names and IDs
Nom de la source de l'annonce | ID de la source d'annonces |
---|---|
Aarki (enchères) | 5240798063227064260 |
Ad Generation (enchères) | 1477265452970951479 |
AdColony | 15586990674969969776 |
AdColony (hors SDK) (enchères) | 4600416542059544716 |
AdColony (enchères) | 6895345910719072481 |
AdFalcon | 3528208921554210682 |
Réseau AdMob | 5450213213286189855 |
Cascade d'annonces du réseau AdMob | 1215381445328257950 |
ADResult | 10593873382626181482 |
AMoAd | 17253994435944008978 |
Applovine | 1063618907739174004 |
Applovin (enchères) | 1328079684332308356 |
Chartboost | 2873236629771172317 |
Chocolate Platform (enchères) | 6432849193975106527 |
CrossChannel (MdotM) | 9372067028804390441 |
Événement personnalisé | 18351550913290782395 |
DT Exchange* * Avant le 21 septembre 2022, ce réseau s'appelait "Fyber Marketplace". | 2179455223494392917 |
EMX (enchères) | 8497809869790333482 |
Fluct (enchères) | 8419777862490735710 |
Bourrasques | 3376427960656545613 |
Fyber* * Cette source d'annonces est utilisée pour l'historique des rapports. | 4839637394546996422 |
i-mobile | 5208827440166355534 |
Improve Digital (enchères) | 159382223051638006 |
Place de marché d'index (enchères) | 4100650709078789802 |
InMobi | 7681903010231960328 |
InMobi (enchères) | 6325663098072678541 |
InMobi Exchange (enchères) | 5264320421916134407 |
IronSource | 6925240245545091930 |
ironSource Ads (enchères) | 1643326773739866623 |
Leadbolt | 2899150749497968595 |
LG U+AD | 18298738678491729107 |
LINE Ads Network | 3025503711505004547 |
maio | 7505118203095108657 |
maio (enchères) | 1343336733822567166 |
Media.net (enchères) | 2127936450554446159 |
Auto-promotions par médiation | 6060308706800320801 |
Meta Audience Network* * Avant le 6 juin 2022, ce réseau s'appelait "Facebook Audience Network". | 10568273599589928883 |
Meta Audience Network (enchères)* * Avant le 6 juin 2022, ce réseau s'appelait "Facebook Audience Network (enchères)". | 11198165126854996598 |
Mintegral | 1357746574408896200 |
Mintegral (enchères) | 6250601289653372374 |
MobFox | 8079529624516381459 |
MobFox (enchères) | 3086513548163922365 |
MoPub (obsolète) | 10872986198578383917 |
myTarget | 8450873672465271579 |
Nend | 9383070032774777750 |
Nexxen (enchères)* * Avant le 1er mai 2024, ce réseau était appelé "UnrulyX". | 2831998725945605450 |
ONE par AOL (Millennial Media) | 6101072188699264581 |
ONE par AOL (Nexage) | 3224789793037044399 |
OneTag Exchange (enchères) | 4873891452523427499 |
OpenX (enchères) | 4918705482605678398 |
Pangle | 4069896914521993236 |
Pangle (enchères) | 3525379893916449117 |
PubMatic (enchères) | 3841544486172445473 |
Campagne par réservation | 7068401028668408324 |
RhythmOne (enchères) | 2831998725945605450 |
Rubicon (enchères) | 3993193775968767067 |
Planète SK | 734341340207269415 |
Partage (enchères) | 5247944089976324188 |
Smaato (enchères) | 3362360112145450544 |
Équativ (enchères)* * Avant le 12 janvier 2023, ce réseau était appelé "Smart Adserver". | 5970199210771591442 |
Sonobi (enchères) | 3270984106996027150 |
Tapjoy | 7295217276740746030 |
Tapjoy (enchères) | 4692500501762622178 |
Tencent GDT | 7007906637038700218 |
TripleLift (enchères) | 8332676245392738510 |
Unity Ads | 4970775877303683148 |
Unity Ads (enchères) | 7069338991535737586 |
Verizon Media | 7360851262951344112 |
Verve Group (enchères) | 5013176581647059185 |
Vpon | 1940957084538325905 |
Liftoff Monetize* * Avant le 30 janvier 2023, ce réseau était appelé "Vungle". | 1953547073528090325 |
Liftoff Monetize (enchères)* * Avant le 30 janvier 2023, ce réseau était appelé "Vungle (enchères)". | 4692500501762622185 |
Yieldmo (enchères) | 4193081836471107579 |
YieldOne (enchères) | 3154533971590234104 |
Zucks | 5506531810221735863 |
Rewarding the user
It is important to balance user experience and reward validation when deciding when to reward a user. Server-side callbacks may experience delays before reaching external systems. Therefore, the recommended best practice is to use the client-side callback to reward the user immediately, while performing validation on all rewards upon the receipt of server-side callbacks. This approach provides a good user experience while ensuring the validity of granted rewards.
However, for applications where reward validity is critical (for example, the reward affects your app's in-game economy) and delays in granting rewards are acceptable, waiting for the verified server-side callback may be the best approach.
Custom data
Apps that require extra data in server-side verification callbacks should use
the custom data feature of rewarded ads. Any string value set on a rewarded ad
object is passed to the custom_data
query parameter of the SSV callback. If no
custom data value is set, the custom_data
query parameter value won't be
present in the SSV callback.
The following code sample demonstrates how to set the SSV options after the rewarded ad is loaded.
private void LoadRewardedAd(string adUnitId)
{
// Send the request to load the ad.
AdRequest adRequest = new AdRequest();
RewardedAd.Load(adUnitId, adRequest, (RewardedAd rewardedAd, LoadAdError error) =>
{
// If the operation failed with a reason.
if (error != null)
{
Debug.LogError("Rewarded ad failed to load an ad with error : " + error);
return;
}
var options = new ServerSideVerificationOptions
.Builder()
.SetCustomData("SAMPLE_CUSTOM_DATA_STRING")
.Build()
rewardedAd.SetServerSideVerificationOptions(options);
});
}
If you want to set the custom reward string, you must do so before showing the ad.
Manual verification of rewarded SSV
The steps performed by the RewardedAdsVerifier
class to verify a rewarded
SSV are outlined below. Although the included code snippets are in Java and
leverage the Tink third-party library, these steps can be implemented by you in
the language of your choice, using any third-party library that supports
ECDSA.
Fetch public keys
To verify a rewarded SSV callback, you need a public key provided by AdMob.
A list of public keys to be used to validate the rewarded SSV callbacks can be fetched from the AdMob key server. The list of public keys is provided as a JSON representation with a format similar to the following:
{
"keys": [
{
keyId: 1916455855,
pem: "-----BEGIN PUBLIC KEY-----\nMF...YTPcw==\n-----END PUBLIC KEY-----"
base64: "MFkwEwYHKoZIzj0CAQYI...ltS4nzc9yjmhgVQOlmSS6unqvN9t8sqajRTPcw=="
},
{
keyId: 3901585526,
pem: "-----BEGIN PUBLIC KEY-----\nMF...aDUsw==\n-----END PUBLIC KEY-----"
base64: "MFYwEAYHKoZIzj0CAQYF...4akdWbWDCUrMMGIV27/3/e7UuKSEonjGvaDUsw=="
},
],
}
To retrieve the public keys, connect to the AdMob key server and download the
keys. The following code accomplishes this task and saves the JSON
representation of the keys to the data
variable.
String url = ...;
NetHttpTransport httpTransport = new NetHttpTransport.Builder().build();
HttpRequest httpRequest =
httpTransport.createRequestFactory().buildGetRequest(new GenericUrl(url));
HttpResponse httpResponse = httpRequest.execute();
if (httpResponse.getStatusCode() != HttpStatusCodes.STATUS_CODE_OK) {
throw new IOException("Unexpected status code = " + httpResponse.getStatusCode());
}
String data;
InputStream contentStream = httpResponse.getContent();
try {
InputStreamReader reader = new InputStreamReader(contentStream, UTF_8);
data = readerToString(reader);
} finally {
contentStream.close();
}
Note that public keys are regularly rotated. You will receive an email to inform you of an upcoming rotation. If you're caching public keys, you should update the keys upon receiving this email.
Once the public keys have been fetched, they must be parsed. The
parsePublicKeysJson
method below takes a JSON string, such as the example
above, as input, and creates a mapping from key_id
values to public keys,
which are encapsulated as ECPublicKey
objects from the Tink library.
private static Map<Integer, ECPublicKey> parsePublicKeysJson(String publicKeysJson)
throws GeneralSecurityException {
Map<Integer, ECPublicKey> publicKeys = new HashMap<>();
try {
JSONArray keys = new JSONObject(publicKeysJson).getJSONArray("keys");
for (int i = 0; i < keys.length(); i++) {
JSONObject key = keys.getJSONObject(i);
publicKeys.put(
key.getInt("keyId"),
EllipticCurves.getEcPublicKey(Base64.decode(key.getString("base64"))));
}
} catch (JSONException e) {
throw new GeneralSecurityException("failed to extract trusted signing public keys", e);
}
if (publicKeys.isEmpty()) {
throw new GeneralSecurityException("No trusted keys are available.");
}
return publicKeys;
}
Get content to be verified
The last two query parameters of rewarded SSV callbacks are always signature
and key_id,
in that order. The remaining query parameters specify the content
to be verified. Let's assume you configured AdMob to send reward callbacks to
https://www.myserver.com/mypath
. The snippet below shows an example rewarded
SSV callback with the content to be verified highlighted.
https://www.myserver.com/path?ad_network=54...55&ad_unit=12345678&reward_amount=10&reward_item=coins ×tamp=150777823&transaction_id=12...DEF&user_id=1234567&signature=ME...Z1c&key_id=1268887
The code below demonstrates how to parse the content to be verified from a callback URL as a UTF-8 byte array.
public static final String SIGNATURE_PARAM_NAME = "signature=";
...
URI uri;
try {
uri = new URI(rewardUrl);
} catch (URISyntaxException ex) {
throw new GeneralSecurityException(ex);
}
String queryString = uri.getQuery();
int i = queryString.indexOf(SIGNATURE_PARAM_NAME);
if (i == -1) {
throw new GeneralSecurityException("needs a signature query parameter");
}
byte[] queryParamContentData =
queryString
.substring(0, i - 1)
// i - 1 instead of i because of & in the query string
.getBytes(Charset.forName("UTF-8"));
Get signature and key_id from callback URL
Using the queryString
value from the previous step, parse the signature
and
key_id
query parameters from the callback URL as shown below:
public static final String KEY_ID_PARAM_NAME = "key_id=";
...
String sigAndKeyId = queryString.substring(i);
i = sigAndKeyId.indexOf(KEY_ID_PARAM_NAME);
if (i == -1) {
throw new GeneralSecurityException("needs a key_id query parameter");
}
String sig =
sigAndKeyId.substring(
SIGNATURE_PARAM_NAME.length(), i - 1 /* i - 1 instead of i because of & */);
int keyId = Integer.valueOf(sigAndKeyId.substring(i + KEY_ID_PARAM_NAME.length()));
Perform verification
The final step is to verify the content of the callback URL with the
appropriate public key. Take the mapping returned from the
parsePublicKeysJson
method and use the key_id
parameter from the callback
URL to get the public key from that mapping. Then verify the signature with
that public key. These steps are demonstrated below in the verify
method.
private void verify(final byte[] dataToVerify, int keyId, final byte[] signature)
throws GeneralSecurityException {
Map<Integer, ECPublicKey> publicKeys = parsePublicKeysJson();
if (publicKeys.containsKey(keyId)) {
foundKeyId = true;
ECPublicKey publicKey = publicKeys.get(keyId);
EcdsaVerifyJce verifier = new EcdsaVerifyJce(publicKey, HashType.SHA256, EcdsaEncoding.DER);
verifier.verify(signature, dataToVerify);
} else {
throw new GeneralSecurityException("cannot find verifying key with key ID: " + keyId);
}
}
If the method executes without throwing an exception, the callback URL was successfully verified.
FAQ
- Can I cache the public key provided by the AdMob key server?
- We recommend that you cache the public key provided by the AdMob key server to reduce the number of operations required to validate SSV callbacks. However, note that public keys are regularly rotated and should not be cached for longer than 24 hours.
- How frequently are the public keys provided by the AdMob key server rotated?
- Public keys provided by the AdMob key server are rotated on a variable schedule. To ensure that verification of SSV callbacks continues to work as intended, public keys should not be cached for longer than 24 hours.
- What happens if my server can't be reached?
- Google expects an
HTTP 200 OK
success status response code for SSV callbacks. If your server cannot be reached or does not provide the expected response, Google will re-attempt to send SSV callbacks up to five times in one-second intervals. - How can I verify that SSV callbacks are coming from Google?
- Use reverse DNS lookup to verify that SSV callbacks originate from Google.