OAuth login and API access for Plain.
Project description
plain.oauth
Let users log in with OAuth providers.
This library is intentionally minimal. It has no dependencies and a single database model. If you simply want users to log in with GitHub, Google, Twitter, etc. (and maybe use that access token for API calls), then this is the library for you.
There are three OAuth flows that it makes possible:
- Signup via OAuth (new user, new OAuth connection)
- Login via OAuth (existing user, existing OAuth connection)
- Connect/disconnect OAuth accounts to a user (existing user, new OAuth connection)
Usage
Install the package from PyPi:
pip install plain-oauth
Add plain.oauth
to your INSTALLED_PACKAGES
in settings.py
:
INSTALLED_PACKAGES = [
...
"plain.oauth",
]
In your urls.py
, include plain.oauth.urls
:
urlpatterns = [
path("oauth/", include("plain.oauth.urls")),
...
]
Then run migrations:
python manage.py migrate plain.oauth
Create a new OAuth provider (or copy one from our examples):
# yourapp/oauth.py
import requests
from plain.oauth.providers import OAuthProvider, OAuthToken, OAuthUser
class ExampleOAuthProvider(OAuthProvider):
authorization_url = "https://example.com/login/oauth/authorize"
def get_oauth_token(self, *, code, request):
response = requests.post(
"https://example.com/login/oauth/token",
headers={
"Accept": "application/json",
},
data={
"client_id": self.get_client_id(),
"client_secret": self.get_client_secret(),
"code": code,
},
)
response.raise_for_status()
data = response.json()
return OAuthToken(
access_token=data["access_token"],
)
def get_oauth_user(self, *, oauth_token):
response = requests.get(
"https://example.com/api/user",
headers={
"Accept": "application/json",
"Authorization": f"token {oauth_token.access_token}",
},
)
response.raise_for_status()
data = response.json()
return OAuthUser(
# The provider ID is required
id=data["id"],
# And you can populate any of your User model fields with additional kwargs
email=data["email"],
username=data["username"],
)
Create your OAuth app/consumer on the provider's site (GitHub, Google, etc.).
When setting it up, you'll likely need to give it a callback URL.
In development this can be http://localhost:8000/oauth/github/callback/
(if you name it "github"
like in the example below).
At the end you should get some sort of "client id" and "client secret" which you can then use in your settings.py
:
OAUTH_LOGIN_PROVIDERS = {
"github": {
"class": "yourapp.oauth.GitHubOAuthProvider",
"kwargs": {
"client_id": environ["GITHUB_CLIENT_ID"],
"client_secret": environ["GITHUB_CLIENT_SECRET"],
# "scope" is optional, defaults to ""
# You can add other fields if you have additional kwargs in your class __init__
# def __init__(self, *args, custom_arg="default", **kwargs):
# self.custom_arg = custom_arg
# super().__init__(*args, **kwargs)
},
},
}
Then add a login button (which is a form using POST rather than a basic link, for security purposes):
<h1>Login</h1>
<form action="{% url 'oauth:login' 'github' %}" method="post">
{{ csrf_input }}
<button type="submit">Login with GitHub</button>
</form>
Depending on your URL and provider names,
your OAuth callback will be something like https://example.com/oauth/{provider}/callback/
.
That's pretty much it!
Advanced usage
Handling OAuth errors
The most common error you'll run into is if an existing user clicks a login button, but they haven't yet connected that provider to their account. For security reasons, the required flow here is that the user actually logs in with another method (however they signed up) and then connects the OAuth provider from a settings page.
For this error (and a couple others),
there is an error template that is rendered.
You can customize this by copying oauth/error.html
to one of your own template directories:
{% extends "base.html" %}
{% block content %}
<h1>OAuth Error</h1>
<p>{{ oauth_error }}</p>
{% endblock %}
Connecting and disconnecting OAuth accounts
To connect and disconnect OAuth accounts, you can add a series of forms to a user/profile settings page. Here's an very basic example:
{% extends "base.html" %}
{% block content %}
Hello {{ request.user }}!
<h2>Existing connections</h2>
<ul>
{% for connection in request.user.oauth_connections.all %}
<li>
{{ connection.provider_key }} [ID: {{ connection.provider_user_id }}]
<form action="{% url 'oauth:disconnect' connection.provider_key %}" method="post">
{{ csrf_input }}
<input type="hidden" name="provider_user_id" value="{{ connection.provider_user_id }}">
<button type="submit">Disconnect</button>
</form>
</li>
{% endfor %}
</ul>
<h2>Add a connection</h2>
<ul>
{% for provider_key in oauth_provider_keys %}
<li>
{{ provider_key}}
<form action="{% url 'oauth:connect' provider_key %}" method="post">
{{ csrf_input }}
<button type="submit">Connect</button>
</form>
</li>
{% endfor %}
</ul>
{% endblock %}
The get_provider_keys
function can help populate the list of options:
from plain.oauth.providers import get_provider_keys
class ExampleView(TemplateView):
template_name = "index.html"
def get_context(self, **kwargs):
context = super().get_context(**kwargs)
context["oauth_provider_keys"] = get_provider_keys()
return context
Using a saved access token
import requests
# Get the OAuth connection for a user
connection = user.oauth_connections.get(provider_key="github")
# If the token can expire, check and refresh it
if connection.access_token_expired():
connection.refresh_access_token()
# Use the token in an API call
token = connection.access_token
response = requests.get(...)
Using the Django system check
This library comes with a Django system check to ensure you don't remove a provider from settings.py
that is still in use in your database.
You do need to specify the --database
for this to run when using the check command by itself:
python manage.py check --database default
FAQs
How is this different from Django OAuth libraries?
The short answer is that it does less.
In django-allauth
(maybe the most popular alternative)
you get all kinds of other features like managing multiple email addresses,
email verification,
a long list of supported providers,
and a whole suite of forms/urls/views/templates/signals/tags.
And in my experience,
it's too much.
It often adds more complexity to your app than you actually need (or want) and honestly it can just be a lot to wrap your head around.
Personally, I don't like the way that your OAuth settings are stored in the database vs when you use settings.py
,
and the implications for doing it one way or another.
The other popular OAuth libraries have similar issues, and I think their weight outweighs their usefulness for 80% of the use cases.
Why aren't providers included in the library itself?
One thing you'll notice is that we don't have a long list of pre-configured providers in this library. Instead, we have some examples (which you can usually just copy, paste, and use) and otherwise encourage you to wire up the provider yourself. Often times all this means is finding the two OAuth URLs ("oauth/authorize" and "oauth/token") in their docs, and writing two class methods that do the actual work of getting the user's data (which is often customized anyway).
We've written examples for the following providers:
Just copy that code and paste it in your project. Tweak as necessary!
This might sound strange at first. But in the long run we think it's actually much more maintainable for both us (as library authors) and you (as app author). If something breaks with a provider, you can fix it immediately! You don't need to try to run changes through us or wait for an upstream update. You're welcome to contribute an example to this repo, and there won't be an expectation that it "works perfectly for every use case until the end of time".
Redirect/callback URL mismatch in local development?
If you're doing local development through a proxy/tunnel like ngrok,
then the callback URL might be automatically built as http
instead of https
.
This is the Django setting you're probably looking for:
SECURE_PROXY_SSL_HEADER = ("HTTP_X_FORWARDED_PROTO", "https")
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