This document explains how web server applications use Google API Client Libraries or Google OAuth 2.0 endpoints to implement OAuth 2.0 authorization to access Google APIs.
OAuth 2.0 allows users to share specific data with an application while keeping their usernames, passwords, and other information private. For example, an application can use OAuth 2.0 to obtain permission from users to store files in their Google Drives.
This OAuth 2.0 flow is specifically for user authorization. It is designed for applications that can store confidential information and maintain state. A properly authorized web server application can access an API while the user interacts with the application or after the user has left the application.
Web server applications frequently also use service accounts to authorize API requests, particularly when calling Cloud APIs to access project-based data rather than user-specific data. Web server applications can use service accounts in conjunction with user authorization.
Client libraries
The language-specific examples on this page use Google API Client Libraries to implement OAuth 2.0 authorization. To run the code samples, you must first install the client library for your language.
When you use a Google API Client Library to handle your application's OAuth 2.0 flow, the client library performs many actions that the application would otherwise need to handle on its own. For example, it determines when the application can use or refresh stored access tokens as well as when the application must reacquire consent. The client library also generates correct redirect URLs and helps to implement redirect handlers that exchange authorization codes for access tokens.
Google API Client Libraries for server-side applications are available for the following languages:
Prerequisites
Enable APIs for your project
Any application that calls Google APIs needs to enable those APIs in the API Console.
To enable an API for your project:
- Open the API Library in the Google API Console.
- If prompted, select a project, or create a new one.
- The API Library lists all available APIs, grouped by product family and popularity. If the API you want to enable isn't visible in the list, use search to find it, or click View All in the product family it belongs to.
- Select the API you want to enable, then click the Enable button.
- If prompted, enable billing.
- If prompted, read and accept the API's Terms of Service.
Create authorization credentials
Any application that uses OAuth 2.0 to access Google APIs must have authorization credentials that identify the application to Google's OAuth 2.0 server. The following steps explain how to create credentials for your project. Your applications can then use the credentials to access APIs that you have enabled for that project.
- Go to the Credentials page.
- Click Create credentials > OAuth client ID.
- Select the Web application application type.
- Fill in the form and click Create. Applications that use languages and frameworks
like PHP, Java, Python, Ruby, and .NET must specify authorized redirect URIs. The
redirect URIs are the endpoints to which the OAuth 2.0 server can send responses. These
endpoints must adhere to Google’s validation rules.
For testing, you can specify URIs that refer to the local machine, such as
http://localhost:8080
. With that in mind, please note that all of the examples in this document usehttp://localhost:8080
as the redirect URI.We recommend that you design your app's auth endpoints so that your application does not expose authorization codes to other resources on the page.
After creating your credentials, download the client_secret.json file from the API Console. Securely store the file in a location that only your application can access.
Identify access scopes
Scopes enable your application to only request access to the resources that it needs while also enabling users to control the amount of access that they grant to your application. Thus, there may be an inverse relationship between the number of scopes requested and the likelihood of obtaining user consent.
Before you start implementing OAuth 2.0 authorization, we recommend that you identify the scopes that your app will need permission to access.
We also recommend that your application request access to authorization scopes via an incremental authorization process, in which your application requests access to user data in context. This best practice helps users to more easily understand why your application needs the access it is requesting.
The OAuth 2.0 API Scopes document contains a full list of scopes that you might use to access Google APIs.
Language-specific requirements
To run any of the code samples in this document, you'll need a Google account, access to the Internet, and a web browser. If you are using one of the API client libraries, also see the language-specific requirements below.
PHP
To run the PHP code samples in this document, you'll need:
- PHP 5.6 or greater with the command-line interface (CLI) and JSON extension installed.
- The Composer dependency management tool.
-
The Google APIs Client Library for PHP:
composer require google/apiclient:^2.10
Python
To run the Python code samples in this document, you'll need:
- Python 2.6 or greater
- The pip package management tool.
- The Google APIs Client Library for Python:
pip install --upgrade google-api-python-client
- The
google-auth
,google-auth-oauthlib
, andgoogle-auth-httplib2
for user authorization.pip install --upgrade google-auth google-auth-oauthlib google-auth-httplib2
- The Flask Python web application framework.
pip install --upgrade flask
- The
requests
HTTP library.pip install --upgrade requests
Ruby
To run the Ruby code samples in this document, you'll need:
- Ruby 2.6 or greater
-
The Google Auth Library for Ruby:
gem install googleauth
-
The Sinatra Ruby web application framework.
gem install sinatra
Node.js
To run the Node.js code samples in this document, you'll need:
- The maintenance LTS, active LTS, or current release of Node.js.
-
The Google APIs Node.js Client:
npm install googleapis crypto express express-session
HTTP/REST
You do not need to install any libraries to be able to directly call the OAuth 2.0 endpoints.
Obtaining OAuth 2.0 access tokens
The following steps show how your application interacts with Google's OAuth 2.0 server to obtain a user's consent to perform an API request on the user's behalf. Your application must have that consent before it can execute a Google API request that requires user authorization.
The list below quickly summarizes these steps:
- Your application identifies the permissions it needs.
- Your application redirects the user to Google along with the list of requested permissions.
- The user decides whether to grant the permissions to your application.
- Your application finds out what the user decided.
- If the user granted the requested permissions, your application retrieves tokens needed to make API requests on the user's behalf.
Step 1: Set authorization parameters
Your first step is to create the authorization request. That request sets parameters that identify your application and define the permissions that the user will be asked to grant to your application.
- If you use a Google client library for OAuth 2.0 authentication and authorization, you create and configure an object that defines these parameters.
- If you call the Google OAuth 2.0 endpoint directly, you'll generate a URL and set the parameters on that URL.
The tabs below define the supported authorization parameters for web server applications. The language-specific examples also show how to use a client library or authorization library to configure an object that sets those parameters.
PHP
The code snippet below creates a Google\Client()
object, which defines the
parameters in the authorization request.
That object uses information from your client_secret.json file to identify your
application. (See creating authorization credentials for more about
that file.) The object also identifies the scopes that your application is requesting permission
to access and the URL to your application's auth endpoint, which will handle the response from
Google's OAuth 2.0 server. Finally, the code sets the optional access_type
and
include_granted_scopes
parameters.
For example, this code requests read-only, offline access to a user's Google Drive:
$client = new Google\Client(); // Required, call the setAuthConfig function to load authorization credentials from // client_secret.json file. $client->setAuthConfig('client_secret.json'); // Required, to set the scope value, call the addScope function $client->addScope(Google\Service\Drive::DRIVE_METADATA_READONLY); // Required, call the setRedirectUri function to specify a valid redirect URI for the // provided client_id $client->setRedirectUri('http://' . $_SERVER['HTTP_HOST'] . '/oauth2callback.php'); // Recommended, offline access will give you both an access and refresh token so that // your app can refresh the access token without user interaction. $client->setAccessType('offline'); // Recommended, call the setState function. Using a state value can increase your assurance that // an incoming connection is the result of an authentication request. $client->setState($sample_passthrough_value); // Optional, if your application knows which user is trying to authenticate, it can use this // parameter to provide a hint to the Google Authentication Server. $client->setLoginHint('hint@example.com'); // Optional, call the setPrompt function to set "consent" will prompt the user for consent $client->setPrompt('consent'); // Optional, call the setIncludeGrantedScopes function with true to enable incremental // authorization $client->setIncludeGrantedScopes(true);
Python
The following code snippet uses the google-auth-oauthlib.flow
module to construct
the authorization request.
The code constructs a Flow
object, which identifies your application using
information from the client_secret.json file that you downloaded after
creating authorization credentials. That object also identifies the
scopes that your application is requesting permission to access and the URL to your application's
auth endpoint, which will handle the response from Google's OAuth 2.0 server. Finally, the code
sets the optional access_type
and include_granted_scopes
parameters.
For example, this code requests read-only, offline access to a user's Google Drive:
import google.oauth2.credentials import google_auth_oauthlib.flow # Required, call the from_client_secrets_file method to retrieve the client ID from a # client_secret.json file. The client ID (from that file) and access scopes are required. (You can # also use the from_client_config method, which passes the client configuration as it originally # appeared in a client secrets file but doesn't access the file itself.) flow = google_auth_oauthlib.flow.Flow.from_client_secrets_file( 'client_secret.json', scopes=['https://www.googleapis.com/auth/drive.metadata.readonly']) # Required, indicate where the API server will redirect the user after the user completes # the authorization flow. The redirect URI is required. The value must exactly # match one of the authorized redirect URIs for the OAuth 2.0 client, which you # configured in the API Console. If this value doesn't match an authorized URI, # you will get a 'redirect_uri_mismatch' error. flow.redirect_uri = 'https://www.example.com/oauth2callback' # Generate URL for request to Google's OAuth 2.0 server. # Use kwargs to set optional request parameters. authorization_url, state = flow.authorization_url( # Recommended, enable offline access so that you can refresh an access token without # re-prompting the user for permission. Recommended for web server apps. access_type='offline', # Optional, enable incremental authorization. Recommended as a best practice. include_granted_scopes='true', # Optional, if your application knows which user is trying to authenticate, it can use this # parameter to provide a hint to the Google Authentication Server. login_hint='hint@example.com', # Optional, set prompt to 'consent' will prompt the user for consent prompt='consent')
Ruby
Use the client_secrets.json file that you created to configure a client object in your application. When you configure a client object, you specify the scopes your application needs to access, along with the URL to your application's auth endpoint, which will handle the response from the OAuth 2.0 server.
For example, this code requests read-only, offline access to a user's Google Drive:
require 'google/apis/drive_v3' require "googleauth" require 'googleauth/stores/redis_token_store' client_id = Google::Auth::ClientId.from_file('/path/to/client_secret.json') scope = 'https://www.googleapis.com/auth/drive.metadata.readonly' token_store = Google::Auth::Stores::RedisTokenStore.new(redis: Redis.new) authorizer = Google::Auth::WebUserAuthorizer.new(client_id, scope, token_store, '/oauth2callback')
Your application uses the client object to perform OAuth 2.0 operations, such as generating authorization request URLs and applying access tokens to HTTP requests.
Node.js
The following code snippet creates a google.auth.OAuth2
object, which defines the
parameters in the authorization request.
That object uses information from your client_secret.json file to identify your application. To ask for permissions from a user to retrieve an access token, you redirect them to a consent page. To create a consent page URL:
const {google} = require('googleapis'); const crypto = require('crypto'); const express = require('express'); const session = require('express-session'); /** * To use OAuth2 authentication, we need access to a CLIENT_ID, CLIENT_SECRET, AND REDIRECT_URI * from the client_secret.json file. To get these credentials for your application, visit * https://console.cloud.google.com/apis/credentials. */ const oauth2Client = new google.auth.OAuth2( YOUR_CLIENT_ID, YOUR_CLIENT_SECRET, YOUR_REDIRECT_URL ); // Access scopes for read-only Drive activity. const scopes = [ 'https://www.googleapis.com/auth/drive.metadata.readonly' ]; // Generate a secure random state value. const state = crypto.randomBytes(32).toString('hex'); // Store state in the session req.session.state = state; // Generate a url that asks permissions for the Drive activity scope const authorizationUrl = oauth2Client.generateAuthUrl({ // 'online' (default) or 'offline' (gets refresh_token) access_type: 'offline', /** Pass in the scopes array defined above. * Alternatively, if only one scope is needed, you can pass a scope URL as a string */ scope: scopes, // Enable incremental authorization. Recommended as a best practice. include_granted_scopes: true, // Include the state parameter to reduce the risk of CSRF attacks. state: state });
Important Note - The refresh_token
is only returned on the first
authorization. More details
here.
HTTP/REST
Google's OAuth 2.0 endpoint is at https://accounts.google.com/o/oauth2/v2/auth
. This
endpoint is accessible only over HTTPS. Plain HTTP connections are refused.
The Google authorization server supports the following query string parameters for web server applications:
Parameters | |||||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
client_id |
Required
The client ID for your application. You can find this value in the API Console Credentials page. |
||||||
redirect_uri |
Required
Determines where the API server redirects the user after the user completes the
authorization flow. The value must exactly match one of the authorized redirect URIs for
the OAuth 2.0 client, which you configured in your client's
API Console
Credentials page. If this value doesn't match an
authorized redirect URI for the provided Note that the |
||||||
response_type |
Required
Determines whether the Google OAuth 2.0 endpoint returns an authorization code. Set the parameter value to |
||||||
scope |
Required
A space-delimited list of scopes that identify the resources that your application could access on the user's behalf. These values inform the consent screen that Google displays to the user. Scopes enable your application to only request access to the resources that it needs while also enabling users to control the amount of access that they grant to your application. Thus, there is an inverse relationship between the number of scopes requested and the likelihood of obtaining user consent. We recommend that your application request access to authorization scopes in context whenever possible. By requesting access to user data in context, via incremental authorization, you help users to more easily understand why your application needs the access it is requesting. |
||||||
access_type |
Recommended
Indicates whether your application can refresh access tokens when the user is not present
at the browser. Valid parameter values are Set the value to |
||||||
state |
Recommended
Specifies any string value that your application uses to maintain state between your
authorization request and the authorization server's response.
The server returns the exact value that you send as a You can use this parameter for several purposes, such as directing the user to the
correct resource in your application, sending nonces, and mitigating cross-site request
forgery. Since your |
||||||
include_granted_scopes |
Optional
Enables applications to use incremental authorization to request access to additional
scopes in context. If you set this parameter's value to |
||||||
enable_granular_consent |
Optional
Defaults to When Google enables granular permissions for an application, this parameter will no longer have any effect. |
||||||
login_hint |
Optional
If your application knows which user is trying to authenticate, it can use this parameter to provide a hint to the Google Authentication Server. The server uses the hint to simplify the login flow either by prefilling the email field in the sign-in form or by selecting the appropriate multi-login session. Set the parameter value to an email address or |
||||||
prompt |
Optional
A space-delimited, case-sensitive list of prompts to present the user. If you don't specify this parameter, the user will be prompted only the first time your project requests access. See Prompting re-consent for more information. Possible values are:
|
Step 2: Redirect to Google's OAuth 2.0 server
Redirect the user to Google's OAuth 2.0 server to initiate the authentication and authorization process. Typically, this occurs when your application first needs to access the user's data. In the case of incremental authorization, this step also occurs when your application first needs to access additional resources that it does not yet have permission to access.
PHP
- Generate a URL to request access from Google's OAuth 2.0 server:
$auth_url = $client->createAuthUrl();
- Redirect the user to
$auth_url
:header('Location: ' . filter_var($auth_url, FILTER_SANITIZE_URL));
Python
This example shows how to redirect the user to the authorization URL using the Flask web application framework:
return flask.redirect(authorization_url)
Ruby
- Generate a URL to request access from Google's OAuth 2.0 server:
auth_uri = authorizer.get_authorization_url(login_hint: user_id, request: request)
- Redirect the user to
auth_uri
.
Node.js
-
Use the generated URL
authorizationUrl
from Step 1generateAuthUrl
method to request access from Google's OAuth 2.0 server. -
Redirect the user to
authorizationUrl
.res.redirect(authorizationUrl);
HTTP/REST
Sample redirect to Google's authorization server
An example URL is shown below, with line breaks and spaces for readability.
https://accounts.google.com/o/oauth2/v2/auth? scope=https%3A//www.googleapis.com/auth/drive.metadata.readonly& access_type=offline& include_granted_scopes=true& response_type=code& state=state_parameter_passthrough_value& redirect_uri=https%3A//oauth2.example.com/code& client_id=client_id
After you create the request URL, redirect the user to it.
Google's OAuth 2.0 server authenticates the user and obtains consent from the user for your application to access the requested scopes. The response is sent back to your application using the redirect URL you specified.
Step 3: Google prompts user for consent
In this step, the user decides whether to grant your application the requested access. At this stage, Google displays a consent window that shows the name of your application and the Google API services that it is requesting permission to access with the user's authorization credentials and a summary of the scopes of access to be granted. The user can then consent to grant access to one or more scopes requested by your application or refuse the request.
Your application doesn't need to do anything at this stage as it waits for the response from Google's OAuth 2.0 server indicating whether any access was granted. That response is explained in the following step.
Errors
Requests to Google's OAuth 2.0 authorization endpoint may display user-facing error messages instead of the expected authentication and authorization flows. Common error codes and suggested resolutions are listed below.
admin_policy_enforced
The Google Account is unable to authorize one or more scopes requested due to the policies of their Google Workspace administrator. See the Google Workspace Admin help article Control which third-party & internal apps access Google Workspace data for more information about how an administrator may restrict access to all scopes or sensitive and restricted scopes until access is explicitly granted to your OAuth client ID.
disallowed_useragent
The authorization endpoint is displayed inside an embedded user-agent disallowed by Google's OAuth 2.0 Policies.
Android
Android developers may encounter this error message when opening authorization requests in
android.webkit.WebView
.
Developers should instead use Android libraries such as
Google Sign-In for Android or OpenID Foundation's
AppAuth for Android.
Web developers may encounter this error when an Android app opens a general web link in an embedded user-agent and a user navigates to Google's OAuth 2.0 authorization endpoint from your site. Developers should allow general links to open in the default link handler of the operating system, which includes both Android App Links handlers or the default browser app. The Android Custom Tabs library is also a supported option.
iOS
iOS and macOS developers may encounter this error when opening authorization requests in
WKWebView
.
Developers should instead use iOS libraries such as
Google Sign-In for iOS or OpenID Foundation's
AppAuth for iOS.
Web developers may encounter this error when an iOS or macOS app opens a general web link in
an embedded user-agent and a user navigates to Google's OAuth 2.0 authorization endpoint from
your site. Developers should allow general links to open in the default link handler of the
operating system, which includes both
Universal Links
handlers or the default browser app. The
SFSafariViewController
library is also a supported option.
org_internal
The OAuth client ID in the request is part of a project limiting access to Google Accounts in a specific Google Cloud Organization. For more information about this configuration option see the User type section in the Setting up your OAuth consent screen help article.
invalid_client
The OAuth client secret is incorrect. Review the OAuth client configuration, including the client ID and secret used for this request.
invalid_grant
When refreshing an access token or using incremental authorization, the token may have expired or has been invalidated. Authenticate the user again and ask for user consent to obtain new tokens. If you are continuing to see this error, ensure that your application has been configured correctly and that you are using the correct tokens and parameters in your request. Otherwise, the user account may have been deleted or disabled.
redirect_uri_mismatch
The redirect_uri
passed in the authorization request does not match an authorized
redirect URI for the OAuth client ID. Review authorized redirect URIs in the
Google API Console Credentials page.
The redirect_uri
parameter may refer to the OAuth out-of-band (OOB) flow that has
been deprecated and is no longer supported. Refer to the
migration guide to update your
integration.
invalid_request
There was something wrong with the request you made. This could be due to a number of reasons:
- The request was not properly formatted
- The request was missing required parameters
- The request uses an authorization method that Google doesn't support. Verify your OAuth integration uses a recommended integration method
Step 4: Handle the OAuth 2.0 server response
The OAuth 2.0 server responds to your application's access request by using the URL specified in the request.
If the user approves the access request, then the response contains an authorization code. If the user does not approve the request, the response contains an error message. The authorization code or error message that is returned to the web server appears on the query string, as shown below:
An error response:
https://oauth2.example.com/auth?error=access_denied
An authorization code response:
https://oauth2.example.com/auth?code=4/P7q7W91a-oMsCeLvIaQm6bTrgtp7
Sample OAuth 2.0 server response
You can test this flow by clicking on the following sample URL, which requests read-only access to view metadata for files in your Google Drive:
https://accounts.google.com/o/oauth2/v2/auth? scope=https%3A//www.googleapis.com/auth/drive.metadata.readonly& access_type=offline& include_granted_scopes=true& response_type=code& state=state_parameter_passthrough_value& redirect_uri=https%3A//oauth2.example.com/code& client_id=client_id
After completing the OAuth 2.0 flow, you should be redirected to
http://localhost/oauth2callback
, which will likely yield a
404 NOT FOUND
error unless your local machine serves a file at that address. The
next step provides more detail about the information returned in the URI when the user is
redirected back to your application.
Step 5: Exchange authorization code for refresh and access tokens
After the web server receives the authorization code, it can exchange the authorization code for an access token.
PHP
To exchange an authorization code for an access token, use the authenticate
method:
$client->authenticate($_GET['code']);
You can retrieve the access token with the getAccessToken
method:
$access_token = $client->getAccessToken();
Python
On your callback page, use the google-auth
library to verify the authorization
server response. Then, use the flow.fetch_token
method to exchange the authorization
code in that response for an access token:
state = flask.session['state'] flow = google_auth_oauthlib.flow.Flow.from_client_secrets_file( 'client_secret.json', scopes=['https://www.googleapis.com/auth/drive.metadata.readonly'], state=state) flow.redirect_uri = flask.url_for('oauth2callback', _external=True) authorization_response = flask.request.url flow.fetch_token(authorization_response=authorization_response) # Store the credentials in the session. # ACTION ITEM for developers: # Store user's access and refresh tokens in your data store if # incorporating this code into your real app. credentials = flow.credentials flask.session['credentials'] = { 'token': credentials.token, 'refresh_token': credentials.refresh_token, 'token_uri': credentials.token_uri, 'client_id': credentials.client_id, 'client_secret': credentials.client_secret, 'scopes': credentials.scopes}
Ruby
On your callback page, use the googleauth
library to verify the authorization server
response. Use the authorizer.handle_auth_callback_deferred
method to save the
authorization code and redirect back to the URL that originally requested authorization. This
defers the exchange of the code by temporarily stashing the results in the user's session.
target_url = Google::Auth::WebUserAuthorizer.handle_auth_callback_deferred(request) redirect target_url
Node.js
To exchange an authorization code for an access token, use the getToken
method:
const url = require('url'); // Receive the callback from Google's OAuth 2.0 server. app.get('/oauth2callback', async (req, res) => { let q = url.parse(req.url, true).query; if (q.error) { // An error response e.g. error=access_denied console.log('Error:' + q.error); } else if (q.state !== req.session.state) { //check state value console.log('State mismatch. Possible CSRF attack'); res.end('State mismatch. Possible CSRF attack'); } else { // Get access and refresh tokens (if access_type is offline) let { tokens } = await oauth2Client.getToken(q.code); oauth2Client.setCredentials(tokens); });
HTTP/REST
To exchange an authorization code for an access token, call the
https://oauth2.googleapis.com/token
endpoint and set the following parameters:
Fields | |
---|---|
client_id |
The client ID obtained from the API Console Credentials page. |
client_secret |
The client secret obtained from the API Console Credentials page. |
code |
The authorization code returned from the initial request. |
grant_type |
As defined in the OAuth 2.0
specification, this field's value must be set to authorization_code . |
redirect_uri |
One of the redirect URIs listed for your project in the
API Console
Credentials page for the given
client_id . |
The following snippet shows a sample request:
POST /token HTTP/1.1 Host: oauth2.googleapis.com Content-Type: application/x-www-form-urlencoded code=4/P7q7W91a-oMsCeLvIaQm6bTrgtp7& client_id=your_client_id& client_secret=your_client_secret& redirect_uri=https%3A//oauth2.example.com/code& grant_type=authorization_code
Google responds to this request by returning a JSON object that contains a short-lived access
token and a refresh token.
Note that the refresh token is only returned if your application set the access_type
parameter to offline
in the initial request to Google's
authorization server.
The response contains the following fields:
Fields | |
---|---|
access_token |
The token that your application sends to authorize a Google API request. |
expires_in |
The remaining lifetime of the access token in seconds. |
refresh_token |
A token that you can use to obtain a new access token. Refresh tokens are valid until the
user revokes access.
Again, this field is only present in this response if you set the access_type
parameter to offline in the initial request to Google's authorization server.
|
scope |
The scopes of access granted by the access_token expressed as a list of
space-delimited, case-sensitive strings. |
token_type |
The type of token returned. At this time, this field's value is always set to
Bearer . |
The following snippet shows a sample response:
{ "access_token": "1/fFAGRNJru1FTz70BzhT3Zg", "expires_in": 3920, "token_type": "Bearer", "scope": "https://www.googleapis.com/auth/drive.metadata.readonly", "refresh_token": "1//xEoDL4iW3cxlI7yDbSRFYNG01kVKM2C-259HOF2aQbI" }
Errors
When exchanging the authorization code for an access token you may encounter the following error instead of the expected response. Common error codes and suggested resolutions are listed below.
invalid_grant
The supplied authorization code is invalid or in the wrong format. Request a new code by restarting the OAuth process to prompt the user for consent again.
Calling Google APIs
PHP
Use the access token to call Google APIs by completing the following steps:
- If you need to apply an access token to a new
Google\Client
object — for example, if you stored the access token in a user session — use thesetAccessToken
method:$client->setAccessToken($access_token);
- Build a service object for the API that you want to call. You build a service object by
providing an authorized
Google\Client
object to the constructor for the API you want to call. For example, to call the Drive API:$drive = new Google\Service\Drive($client);
- Make requests to the API service using the
interface provided by the service object.
For example, to list the files in the authenticated user's Google Drive:
$files = $drive->files->listFiles(array())->getItems();
Python
After obtaining an access token, your application can use that token to authorize API requests on behalf of a given user account or service account. Use the user-specific authorization credentials to build a service object for the API that you want to call, and then use that object to make authorized API requests.
- Build a service object for the API that you want to call. You build a service object by
calling the
googleapiclient.discovery
library'sbuild
method with the name and version of the API and the user credentials: For example, to call version 3 of the Drive API:from googleapiclient.discovery import build drive = build('drive', 'v2', credentials=credentials)
- Make requests to the API service using the
interface provided by the service object.
For example, to list the files in the authenticated user's Google Drive:
files = drive.files().list().execute()
Ruby
After obtaining an access token, your application can use that token to make API requests on behalf of a given user account or service account. Use the user-specific authorization credentials to build a service object for the API that you want to call, and then use that object to make authorized API requests.
- Build a service object for the API that you want to call.
For example, to call version 3 of the Drive API:
drive = Google::Apis::DriveV3::DriveService.new
- Set the credentials on the service:
drive.authorization = credentials
- Make requests to the API service using the
interface
provided by the service object.
For example, to list the files in the authenticated user's Google Drive:
files = drive.list_files
Alternately, authorization can be provided on a per-method basis by supplying the
options
parameter to a method:
files = drive.list_files(options: { authorization: credentials })
Node.js
After obtaining an access token and setting it to the OAuth2
object, use the object
to call Google APIs. Your application can use that token to authorize API requests on behalf of
a given user account or service account. Build a service object for the API that you want to call.
const { google } = require('googleapis'); // Example of using Google Drive API to list filenames in user's Drive. const drive = google.drive('v3'); drive.files.list({ auth: oauth2Client, pageSize: 10, fields: 'nextPageToken, files(id, name)', }, (err1, res1) => { if (err1) return console.log('The API returned an error: ' + err1); const files = res1.data.files; if (files.length) { console.log('Files:'); files.map((file) => { console.log(`${file.name} (${file.id})`); }); } else { console.log('No files found.'); } });
HTTP/REST
After your application obtains an access token, you can use the token to make calls to a Google
API on behalf of a given
user account if the scope(s) of access required by the API have been granted. To do this, include
the access token in a request to the API by including either an access_token
query
parameter or an Authorization
HTTP header Bearer
value. When possible,
the HTTP header is preferable, because query strings tend to be visible in server logs. In most
cases you can use a client library to set up your calls to Google APIs (for example, when
calling the Drive Files API).
You can try out all the Google APIs and view their scopes at the OAuth 2.0 Playground.
HTTP GET examples
A call to the
drive.files
endpoint (the Drive Files API) using the Authorization: Bearer
HTTP
header might look like the following. Note that you need to specify your own access token:
GET /drive/v2/files HTTP/1.1 Host: www.googleapis.com Authorization: Bearer access_token
Here is a call to the same API for the authenticated user using the access_token
query string parameter:
GET https://www.googleapis.com/drive/v2/files?access_token=access_token
curl
examples
You can test these commands with the curl
command-line application. Here's an
example that uses the HTTP header option (preferred):
curl -H "Authorization: Bearer access_token" https://www.googleapis.com/drive/v2/files
Or, alternatively, the query string parameter option:
curl https://www.googleapis.com/drive/v2/files?access_token=access_token
Complete example
The following example prints a JSON-formatted list of files in a user's Google Drive after the user authenticates and gives consent for the application to access the user's Drive metadata.
PHP
To run this example:
- In the API Console, add the URL of the local machine to the
list of redirect URLs. For example, add
http://localhost:8080
. - Create a new directory and change to it. For example:
mkdir ~/php-oauth2-example cd ~/php-oauth2-example
- Install the Google API Client
Library for PHP using Composer:
composer require google/apiclient:^2.10
- Create the files
index.php
andoauth2callback.php
with the content below. - Run the example with a web server configured to serve PHP. If you use PHP 5.6 or newer, you
can use PHP's built-in test web server:
php -S localhost:8080 ~/php-oauth2-example
index.php
<?php require_once __DIR__.'/vendor/autoload.php'; session_start(); $client = new Google\Client(); $client->setAuthConfig('client_secrets.json'); $client->addScope(Google\Service\Drive::DRIVE_METADATA_READONLY); if (isset($_SESSION['access_token']) && $_SESSION['access_token']) { $client->setAccessToken($_SESSION['access_token']); $drive = new Google\Service\Drive($client); $files = $drive->files->listFiles(array())->getItems(); echo json_encode($files); } else { $redirect_uri = 'http://' . $_SERVER['HTTP_HOST'] . '/oauth2callback.php'; header('Location: ' . filter_var($redirect_uri, FILTER_SANITIZE_URL)); }
oauth2callback.php
<?php require_once __DIR__.'/vendor/autoload.php'; session_start(); $client = new Google\Client(); $client->setAuthConfigFile('client_secrets.json'); $client->setRedirectUri('http://' . $_SERVER['HTTP_HOST'] . '/oauth2callback.php'); $client->addScope(Google\Service\Drive::DRIVE_METADATA_READONLY); if (! isset($_GET['code'])) { // Generate and set state value $state = bin2hex(random_bytes(16)); $client->setState($state); $_SESSION['state'] = $state; $auth_url = $client->createAuthUrl(); header('Location: ' . filter_var($auth_url, FILTER_SANITIZE_URL)); } else { // Check the state value if (!isset($_GET['state']) || $_GET['state'] !== $_SESSION['state']) { die('State mismatch. Possible CSRF attack.'); } $client->authenticate($_GET['code']); $_SESSION['access_token'] = $client->getAccessToken(); $redirect_uri = 'http://' . $_SERVER['HTTP_HOST'] . '/'; header('Location: ' . filter_var($redirect_uri, FILTER_SANITIZE_URL)); }
Python
This example uses the Flask framework. It
runs a web application at http://localhost:8080
that lets you test the OAuth 2.0
flow. If you go to that URL, you should see four links:
- Test an API request: This link points to a page that tries to execute a sample API request. If necessary, it starts the authorization flow. If successful, the page displays the API response.
- Test the auth flow directly: This link points to a page that tries to send the user through the authorization flow. The app requests permission to submit authorized API requests on the user's behalf.
- Revoke current credentials: This link points to a page that revokes permissions that the user has already granted to the application.
- Clear Flask session credentials: This link clears authorization credentials that are stored in the Flask session. This lets you see what would happen if a user who had already granted permission to your app tried to execute an API request in a new session. It also lets you see the API response your app would get if a user had revoked permissions granted to your app, and your app still tried to authorize a request with a revoked access token.
# -*- coding: utf-8 -*- import os import flask import requests import google.oauth2.credentials import google_auth_oauthlib.flow import googleapiclient.discovery # This variable specifies the name of a file that contains the OAuth 2.0 # information for this application, including its client_id and client_secret. CLIENT_SECRETS_FILE = "client_secret.json" # This OAuth 2.0 access scope allows for full read/write access to the # authenticated user's account and requires requests to use an SSL connection. SCOPES = ['https://www.googleapis.com/auth/drive.metadata.readonly'] API_SERVICE_NAME = 'drive' API_VERSION = 'v2' app = flask.Flask(__name__) # Note: A secret key is included in the sample so that it works. # If you use this code in your application, replace this with a truly secret # key. See https://flask.palletsprojects.com/quickstart/#sessions. app.secret_key = 'REPLACE ME - this value is here as a placeholder.' @app.route('/') def index(): return print_index_table() @app.route('/test') def test_api_request(): if 'credentials' not in flask.session: return flask.redirect('authorize') # Load credentials from the session. credentials = google.oauth2.credentials.Credentials( **flask.session['credentials']) drive = googleapiclient.discovery.build( API_SERVICE_NAME, API_VERSION, credentials=credentials) files = drive.files().list().execute() # Save credentials back to session in case access token was refreshed. # ACTION ITEM: In a production app, you likely want to save these # credentials in a persistent database instead. flask.session['credentials'] = credentials_to_dict(credentials) return flask.jsonify(**files) @app.route('/authorize') def authorize(): # Create flow instance to manage the OAuth 2.0 Authorization Grant Flow steps. flow = google_auth_oauthlib.flow.Flow.from_client_secrets_file( CLIENT_SECRETS_FILE, scopes=SCOPES) # The URI created here must exactly match one of the authorized redirect URIs # for the OAuth 2.0 client, which you configured in the API Console. If this # value doesn't match an authorized URI, you will get a 'redirect_uri_mismatch' # error. flow.redirect_uri = flask.url_for('oauth2callback', _external=True) authorization_url, state = flow.authorization_url( # Enable offline access so that you can refresh an access token without # re-prompting the user for permission. Recommended for web server apps. access_type='offline', # Enable incremental authorization. Recommended as a best practice. include_granted_scopes='true') # Store the state so the callback can verify the auth server response. flask.session['state'] = state return flask.redirect(authorization_url) @app.route('/oauth2callback') def oauth2callback(): # Specify the state when creating the flow in the callback so that it can # verified in the authorization server response. state = flask.session['state'] flow = google_auth_oauthlib.flow.Flow.from_client_secrets_file( CLIENT_SECRETS_FILE, scopes=SCOPES, state=state) flow.redirect_uri = flask.url_for('oauth2callback', _external=True) # Use the authorization server's response to fetch the OAuth 2.0 tokens. authorization_response = flask.request.url flow.fetch_token(authorization_response=authorization_response) # Store credentials in the session. # ACTION ITEM: In a production app, you likely want to save these # credentials in a persistent database instead. credentials = flow.credentials flask.session['credentials'] = credentials_to_dict(credentials) return flask.redirect(flask.url_for('test_api_request')) @app.route('/revoke') def revoke(): if 'credentials' not in flask.session: return ('You need to <a href="/authorize">authorize</a> before ' + 'testing the code to revoke credentials.') credentials = google.oauth2.credentials.Credentials( **flask.session['credentials']) revoke = requests.post('https://oauth2.googleapis.com/revoke', params={'token': credentials.token}, headers = {'content-type': 'application/x-www-form-urlencoded'}) status_code = getattr(revoke, 'status_code') if status_code == 200: return('Credentials successfully revoked.' + print_index_table()) else: return('An error occurred.' + print_index_table()) @app.route('/clear') def clear_credentials(): if 'credentials' in flask.session: del flask.session['credentials'] return ('Credentials have been cleared.<br><br>' + print_index_table()) def credentials_to_dict(credentials): return {'token': credentials.token, 'refresh_token': credentials.refresh_token, 'token_uri': credentials.token_uri, 'client_id': credentials.client_id, 'client_secret': credentials.client_secret, 'scopes': credentials.scopes} def print_index_table(): return ('<table>' + '<tr><td><a href="/test">Test an API request</a></td>' + '<td>Submit an API request and see a formatted JSON response. ' + ' Go through the authorization flow if there are no stored ' + ' credentials for the user.</td></tr>' + '<tr><td><a href="/authorize">Test the auth flow directly</a></td>' + '<td>Go directly to the authorization flow. If there are stored ' + ' credentials, you still might not be prompted to reauthorize ' + ' the application.</td></tr>' + '<tr><td><a href="/revoke">Revoke current credentials</a></td>' + '<td>Revoke the access token associated with the current user ' + ' session. After revoking credentials, if you go to the test ' + ' page, you should see an <code>invalid_grant</code> error.' + '</td></tr>' + '<tr><td><a href="/clear">Clear Flask session credentials</a></td>' + '<td>Clear the access token currently stored in the user session. ' + ' After clearing the token, if you <a href="/test">test the ' + ' API request</a> again, you should go back to the auth flow.' + '</td></tr></table>') if __name__ == '__main__': # When running locally, disable OAuthlib's HTTPs verification. # ACTION ITEM for developers: # When running in production *do not* leave this option enabled. os.environ['OAUTHLIB_INSECURE_TRANSPORT'] = '1' # Specify a hostname and port that are set as a valid redirect URI # for your API project in the Google API Console. app.run('localhost', 8080, debug=True)
Ruby
This example uses the Sinatra framework.
require 'google/apis/drive_v3' require 'sinatra' require 'googleauth' require 'googleauth/stores/redis_token_store' configure do enable :sessions set :client_id, Google::Auth::ClientId.from_file('/path/to/client_secret.json') set :scope, Google::Apis::DriveV3::AUTH_DRIVE_METADATA_READONLY set :token_store, Google::Auth::Stores::RedisTokenStore.new(redis: Redis.new) set :authorizer, Google::Auth::WebUserAuthorizer.new(settings.client_id, settings.scope, settings.token_store, '/oauth2callback') end get '/' do user_id = settings.client_id.id credentials = settings.authorizer.get_credentials(user_id, request) if credentials.nil? redirect settings.authorizer.get_authorization_url(login_hint: user_id, request: request) end drive = Google::Apis::DriveV3::DriveService.new files = drive.list_files(options: { authorization: credentials }) "<pre>#{JSON.pretty_generate(files.to_h)}</pre>" end get '/oauth2callback' do target_url = Google::Auth::WebUserAuthorizer.handle_auth_callback_deferred(request) redirect target_url end
Node.js
To run this example:
-
In the API Console, add the URL of the
local machine to the list of redirect URLs. For example, add
http://localhost
. - Make sure you have maintenance LTS, active LTS, or current release of Node.js installed.
-
Create a new directory and change to it. For example:
mkdir ~/nodejs-oauth2-example cd ~/nodejs-oauth2-example
-
Install the
Google API Client
Library
for Node.js using npm:
npm install googleapis
-
Create the files
main.js
with the content below. -
Run the example:
node .\main.js
main.js
const http = require('http'); const https = require('https'); const url = require('url'); const { google } = require('googleapis'); const crypto = require('crypto'); const express = require('express'); const session = require('express-session'); /** * To use OAuth2 authentication, we need access to a CLIENT_ID, CLIENT_SECRET, AND REDIRECT_URI. * To get these credentials for your application, visit * https://console.cloud.google.com/apis/credentials. */ const oauth2Client = new google.auth.OAuth2( YOUR_CLIENT_ID, YOUR_CLIENT_SECRET, YOUR_REDIRECT_URL ); // Access scopes for read-only Drive activity. const scopes = [ 'https://www.googleapis.com/auth/drive.metadata.readonly' ]; /* Global variable that stores user credential in this code example. * ACTION ITEM for developers: * Store user's refresh token in your data store if * incorporating this code into your real app. * For more information on handling refresh tokens, * see https://github.com/googleapis/google-api-nodejs-client#handling-refresh-tokens */ let userCredential = null; async function main() { const app = express(); app.use(session({ secret: 'your_secure_secret_key', // Replace with a strong secret resave: false, saveUninitialized: false, })); // Example on redirecting user to Google's OAuth 2.0 server. app.get('/', async (req, res) => { // Generate a secure random state value. const state = crypto.randomBytes(32).toString('hex'); // Store state in the session req.session.state = state; // Generate a url that asks permissions for the Drive activity scope const authorizationUrl = oauth2Client.generateAuthUrl({ // 'online' (default) or 'offline' (gets refresh_token) access_type: 'offline', /** Pass in the scopes array defined above. * Alternatively, if only one scope is needed, you can pass a scope URL as a string */ scope: scopes, // Enable incremental authorization. Recommended as a best practice. include_granted_scopes: true, // Include the state parameter to reduce the risk of CSRF attacks. state: state }); res.redirect(authorizationUrl); }); // Receive the callback from Google's OAuth 2.0 server. app.get('/oauth2callback', async (req, res) => { // Handle the OAuth 2.0 server response let q = url.parse(req.url, true).query; if (q.error) { // An error response e.g. error=access_denied console.log('Error:' + q.error); } else if (q.state !== req.session.state) { //check state value console.log('State mismatch. Possible CSRF attack'); res.end('State mismatch. Possible CSRF attack'); } else { // Get access and refresh tokens (if access_type is offline) let { tokens } = await oauth2Client.getToken(q.code); oauth2Client.setCredentials(tokens); /** Save credential to the global variable in case access token was refreshed. * ACTION ITEM: In a production app, you likely want to save the refresh token * in a secure persistent database instead. */ userCredential = tokens; // Example of using Google Drive API to list filenames in user's Drive. const drive = google.drive('v3'); drive.files.list({ auth: oauth2Client, pageSize: 10, fields: 'nextPageToken, files(id, name)', }, (err1, res1) => { if (err1) return console.log('The API returned an error: ' + err1); const files = res1.data.files; if (files.length) { console.log('Files:'); files.map((file) => { console.log(`${file.name} (${file.id})`); }); } else { console.log('No files found.'); } }); } }); // Example on revoking a token app.get('/revoke', async (req, res) => { // Build the string for the POST request let postData = "token=" + userCredential.access_token; // Options for POST request to Google's OAuth 2.0 server to revoke a token let postOptions = { host: 'oauth2.googleapis.com', port: '443', path: '/revoke', method: 'POST', headers: { 'Content-Type': 'application/x-www-form-urlencoded', 'Content-Length': Buffer.byteLength(postData) } }; // Set up the request const postReq = https.request(postOptions, function (res) { res.setEncoding('utf8'); res.on('data', d => { console.log('Response: ' + d); }); }); postReq.on('error', error => { console.log(error) }); // Post the request with data postReq.write(postData); postReq.end(); }); const server = http.createServer(app); server.listen(80); } main().catch(console.error);
HTTP/REST
This Python example uses the Flask framework and the Requests library to demonstrate the OAuth 2.0 web flow. We recommend using the Google API Client Library for Python for this flow. (The example in the Python tab does use the client library.)
import json import flask import requests app = flask.Flask(__name__) CLIENT_ID = '123456789.apps.googleusercontent.com' CLIENT_SECRET = 'abc123' # Read from a file or environmental variable in a real app SCOPE = 'https://www.googleapis.com/auth/drive.metadata.readonly' REDIRECT_URI = 'http://example.com/oauth2callback' @app.route('/') def index(): if 'credentials' not in flask.session: return flask.redirect(flask.url_for('oauth2callback')) credentials = json.loads(flask.session['credentials']) if credentials['expires_in'] <= 0: return flask.redirect(flask.url_for('oauth2callback')) else: headers = {'Authorization': 'Bearer {}'.format(credentials['access_token'])} req_uri = 'https://www.googleapis.com/drive/v2/files' r = requests.get(req_uri, headers=headers) return r.text @app.route('/oauth2callback') def oauth2callback(): if 'code' not in flask.request.args: state = str(uuid.uuid4()) flask.session['state'] = state auth_uri = ('https://accounts.google.com/o/oauth2/v2/auth?response_type=code' '&client_id={}&redirect_uri={}&scope={}&state={}').format(CLIENT_ID, REDIRECT_URI, SCOPE, state) return flask.redirect(auth_uri) else: if 'state' not in flask.request.args or flask.request.args['state'] != flask.session['state']: return 'State mismatch. Possible CSRF attack.', 400 auth_code = flask.request.args.get('code') data = {'code': auth_code, 'client_id': CLIENT_ID, 'client_secret': CLIENT_SECRET, 'redirect_uri': REDIRECT_URI, 'grant_type': 'authorization_code'} r = requests.post('https://oauth2.googleapis.com/token', data=data) flask.session['credentials'] = r.text return flask.redirect(flask.url_for('index')) if __name__ == '__main__': import uuid app.secret_key = str(uuid.uuid4()) app.debug = False app.run()
Redirect URI validation rules
Google applies the following validation rules to redirect URIs in order to help developers keep their applications secure. Your redirect URIs must adhere to these rules. See RFC 3986 section 3 for the definition of domain, host, path, query, scheme and userinfo, mentioned below.
Validation rules | |
---|---|
Scheme |
Redirect URIs must use the HTTPS scheme, not plain HTTP. Localhost URIs (including localhost IP address URIs) are exempt from this rule. |
Host |
Hosts cannot be raw IP addresses. Localhost IP addresses are exempted from this rule. |
Domain |
“googleusercontent.com” .goo.gl ) unless
the app owns the domain. Furthermore, if an app that owns a shortener domain chooses to
redirect to that domain, that redirect URI must either contain
“/google-callback/” in its path or end with
“/google-callback” . |
Userinfo |
Redirect URIs cannot contain the userinfo subcomponent. |
Path |
Redirect URIs cannot contain a path traversal (also called directory backtracking),
which is represented by an |
Query |
Redirect URIs cannot contain open redirects. |
Fragment |
Redirect URIs cannot contain the fragment component. |
Characters |
Redirect URIs cannot contain certain characters including:
|
Incremental authorization
In the OAuth 2.0 protocol, your app requests authorization to access resources, which are identified by scopes. It is considered a best user-experience practice to request authorization for resources at the time you need them. To enable that practice, Google's authorization server supports incremental authorization. This feature lets you request scopes as they are needed and, if the user grants permission for the new scope, returns an authorization code that may be exchanged for a token containing all scopes the user has granted the project.
For example, an app that lets people sample music tracks and create mixes might need very few resources at sign-in time, perhaps nothing more than the name of the person signing in. However, saving a completed mix would require access to their Google Drive. Most people would find it natural if they only were asked for access to their Google Drive at the time the app actually needed it.
In this case, at sign-in time the app might request the openid
and
profile
scopes to perform basic sign-in, and then later request the
https://www.googleapis.com/auth/drive.file
scope at the time of the first request to save a
mix.
To implement incremental authorization, you complete the normal flow for requesting an access token but make sure that the authorization request includes previously granted scopes. This approach allows your app to avoid having to manage multiple access tokens.
The following rules apply to an access token obtained from an incremental authorization:
- The token can be used to access resources corresponding to any of the scopes rolled into the new, combined authorization.
- When you use the refresh token for the combined authorization to obtain an access token, the
access token represents the combined authorization and can be used for any of the
scope
values included in the response. - The combined authorization includes all scopes that the user granted to the API project even if the grants were requested from different clients. For example, if a user granted access to one scope using an application's desktop client and then granted another scope to the same application via a mobile client, the combined authorization would include both scopes.
- If you revoke a token that represents a combined authorization, access to all of that authorization's scopes on behalf of the associated user are revoked simultaneously.
The language-specific code samples in Step 1: Set authorization parameters and the sample HTTP/REST redirect URL in Step 2: Redirect to Google's OAuth 2.0 server all use incremental authorization. The code samples below also show the code that you need to add to use incremental authorization.
PHP
$client->setIncludeGrantedScopes(true);
Python
In Python, set the include_granted_scopes
keyword argument to true
to
ensure that an authorization request includes previously granted scopes. It is very possible that
include_granted_scopes
will not be the only keyword argument that you set, as
shown in the example below.
authorization_url, state = flow.authorization_url( # Enable offline access so that you can refresh an access token without # re-prompting the user for permission. Recommended for web server apps. access_type='offline', # Enable incremental authorization. Recommended as a best practice. include_granted_scopes='true')
Ruby
auth_client.update!( :additional_parameters => {"include_granted_scopes" => "true"} )
Node.js
const authorizationUrl = oauth2Client.generateAuthUrl({ // 'online' (default) or 'offline' (gets refresh_token) access_type: 'offline', /** Pass in the scopes array defined above. * Alternatively, if only one scope is needed, you can pass a scope URL as a string */ scope: scopes, // Enable incremental authorization. Recommended as a best practice. include_granted_scopes: true });
HTTP/REST
GET https://accounts.google.com/o/oauth2/v2/auth? client_id=your_client_id& response_type=code& state=state_parameter_passthrough_value& scope=https%3A//www.googleapis.com/auth/drive.file& redirect_uri=https%3A//oauth2.example.com/code& prompt=consent& include_granted_scopes=true
Refreshing an access token (offline access)
Access tokens periodically expire and become invalid credentials for a related API request. You can refresh an access token without prompting the user for permission (including when the user is not present) if you requested offline access to the scopes associated with the token.
- If you use a Google API Client Library, the client object refreshes the access token as needed as long as you configure that object for offline access.
- If you are not using a client library, you need to set the
access_type
HTTP query parameter tooffline
when redirecting the user to Google's OAuth 2.0 server. In that case, Google's authorization server returns a refresh token when you exchange an authorization code for an access token. Then, if the access token expires (or at any other time), you can use a refresh token to obtain a new access token.
Requesting offline access is a requirement for any application that needs to access a Google
API when the user is not present. For example, an app that performs backup services or
executes actions at predetermined times needs to be able to refresh its access token when the
user is not present. The default style of access is called online
.
Server-side web applications, installed applications, and devices all obtain refresh tokens during the authorization process. Refresh tokens are not typically used in client-side (JavaScript) web applications.
PHP
If your application needs offline access to a Google API, set the API client's access type to
offline
:
$client->setAccessType("offline");
After a user grants offline access to the requested scopes, you can continue to use the API client to access Google APIs on the user's behalf when the user is offline. The client object will refresh the access token as needed.
Python
In Python, set the access_type
keyword argument to offline
to ensure
that you will be able to refresh the access token without having to re-prompt the user for
permission. It is very possible that access_type
will not be the only keyword
argument that you set, as shown in the example below.
authorization_url, state = flow.authorization_url( # Enable offline access so that you can refresh an access token without # re-prompting the user for permission. Recommended for web server apps. access_type='offline', # Enable incremental authorization. Recommended as a best practice. include_granted_scopes='true')
After a user grants offline access to the requested scopes, you can continue to use the API client to access Google APIs on the user's behalf when the user is offline. The client object will refresh the access token as needed.
Ruby
If your application needs offline access to a Google API, set the API client's access type to
offline
:
auth_client.update!( :additional_parameters => {"access_type" => "offline"} )
After a user grants offline access to the requested scopes, you can continue to use the API client to access Google APIs on the user's behalf when the user is offline. The client object will refresh the access token as needed.
Node.js
If your application needs offline access to a Google API, set the API client's access type to
offline
:
const authorizationUrl = oauth2Client.generateAuthUrl({ // 'online' (default) or 'offline' (gets refresh_token) access_type: 'offline', /** Pass in the scopes array defined above. * Alternatively, if only one scope is needed, you can pass a scope URL as a string */ scope: scopes, // Enable incremental authorization. Recommended as a best practice. include_granted_scopes: true });
After a user grants offline access to the requested scopes, you can continue to use the API client to access Google APIs on the user's behalf when the user is offline. The client object will refresh the access token as needed.
Access tokens expire. This library will automatically use a refresh token to obtain a new access token if it is about to expire. An easy way to make sure you always store the most recent tokens is to use the tokens event:
oauth2Client.on('tokens', (tokens) => { if (tokens.refresh_token) { // store the refresh_token in your secure persistent database console.log(tokens.refresh_token); } console.log(tokens.access_token); });
This tokens event only occurs in the first authorization, and you need to have set your
access_type
to offline
when calling the generateAuthUrl
method to receive the refresh token. If you have already given your app the requisiste permissions
without setting the appropriate constraints for receiving a refresh token, you will need to
re-authorize the application to receive a fresh refresh token.
To set the refresh_token
at a later time, you can use the setCredentials
method:
oauth2Client.setCredentials({ refresh_token: `STORED_REFRESH_TOKEN` });
Once the client has a refresh token, access tokens will be acquired and refreshed automatically in the next call to the API.
HTTP/REST
To refresh an access token, your application sends an HTTPS POST
request to Google's authorization server (https://oauth2.googleapis.com/token
) that
includes the following parameters:
Fields | |
---|---|
client_id |
The client ID obtained from the API Console. |
client_secret |
The client secret obtained from the API Console. |
grant_type |
As
defined in the
OAuth 2.0 specification,
this field's value must be set to refresh_token . |
refresh_token |
The refresh token returned from the authorization code exchange. |
The following snippet shows a sample request:
POST /token HTTP/1.1 Host: oauth2.googleapis.com Content-Type: application/x-www-form-urlencoded client_id=your_client_id& client_secret=your_client_secret& refresh_token=refresh_token& grant_type=refresh_token
As long as the user has not revoked the access granted to the application, the token server returns a JSON object that contains a new access token. The following snippet shows a sample response:
{ "access_token": "1/fFAGRNJru1FTz70BzhT3Zg", "expires_in": 3920, "scope": "https://www.googleapis.com/auth/drive.metadata.readonly", "token_type": "Bearer" }
Note that there are limits on the number of refresh tokens that will be issued; one limit per client/user combination, and another per user across all clients. You should save refresh tokens in long-term storage and continue to use them as long as they remain valid. If your application requests too many refresh tokens, it may run into these limits, in which case older refresh tokens will stop working.
Revoking a token
In some cases a user may wish to revoke access given to an application. A user can revoke access by visiting Account Settings. See the Remove site or app access section of the Third-party sites & apps with access to your account support document for more information.
It is also possible for an application to programmatically revoke the access given to it. Programmatic revocation is important in instances where a user unsubscribes, removes an application, or the API resources required by an app have significantly changed. In other words, part of the removal process can include an API request to ensure the permissions previously granted to the application are removed.
PHP
To programmatically revoke a token, call revokeToken()
:
$client->revokeToken();
Python
To programmatically revoke a token, make a request to
https://oauth2.googleapis.com/revoke
that includes the token as a parameter and sets the
Content-Type
header:
requests.post('https://oauth2.googleapis.com/revoke', params={'token': credentials.token}, headers = {'content-type': 'application/x-www-form-urlencoded'})
Ruby
To programmatically revoke a token, make an HTTP request to the oauth2.revoke
endpoint:
uri = URI('https://oauth2.googleapis.com/revoke') response = Net::HTTP.post_form(uri, 'token' => auth_client.access_token)
The token can be an access token or a refresh token. If the token is an access token and it has a corresponding refresh token, the refresh token will also be revoked.
If the revocation is successfully processed, then the status code of the response is
200
. For error conditions, a status code 400
is returned along with an
error code.
Node.js
To programmatically revoke a token, make an HTTPS POST request to /revoke
endpoint:
const https = require('https'); // Build the string for the POST request let postData = "token=" + userCredential.access_token; // Options for POST request to Google's OAuth 2.0 server to revoke a token let postOptions = { host: 'oauth2.googleapis.com', port: '443', path: '/revoke', method: 'POST', headers: { 'Content-Type': 'application/x-www-form-urlencoded', 'Content-Length': Buffer.byteLength(postData) } }; // Set up the request const postReq = https.request(postOptions, function (res) { res.setEncoding('utf8'); res.on('data', d => { console.log('Response: ' + d); }); }); postReq.on('error', error => { console.log(error) }); // Post the request with data postReq.write(postData); postReq.end();
The token parameter can be an access token or a refresh token. If the token is an access token and it has a corresponding refresh token, the refresh token will also be revoked.
If the revocation is successfully processed, then the status code of the response is
200
. For error conditions, a status code 400
is returned along with an
error code.
HTTP/REST
To programmatically revoke a token, your application makes a request to
https://oauth2.googleapis.com/revoke
and includes the token as a parameter:
curl -d -X -POST --header "Content-type:application/x-www-form-urlencoded" \ https://oauth2.googleapis.com/revoke?token={token}
The token can be an access token or a refresh token. If the token is an access token and it has a corresponding refresh token, the refresh token will also be revoked.
If the revocation is successfully processed, then the HTTP status code of the response is
200
. For error conditions, an HTTP status code 400
is returned along
with an error code.
Implementing Cross-Account Protection
An additional step you should take to protect your users' accounts is implementing Cross-Account Protection by utilizing Google's Cross-Account Protection Service. This service lets you subscribe to security event notifications which provide information to your application about major changes to the user account. You can then use the information to take action depending on how you decide to respond to events.
Some examples of the event types sent to your app by Google's Cross-Account Protection Service are:
-
https://schemas.openid.net/secevent/risc/event-type/sessions-revoked
-
https://schemas.openid.net/secevent/oauth/event-type/token-revoked
-
https://schemas.openid.net/secevent/risc/event-type/account-disabled
See the Protect user accounts with Cross-Account Protection page for more information on how to implement Cross Account Protection and for the full list of available events.