NAME Mojolicious::Plugin::OAuth2 - Auth against OAuth2 APIs DESCRIPTION This Mojolicious plugin allows you to easily authenticate against a OAuth2 provider. It includes configurations for a few popular providers, but you can add your own easily as well. Note that OAuth2 requires https, so you need to have the optional Mojolicious dependency required to support it. Run the command below to check if IO::Socket::SSL is installed. $ mojo version References * * * * SYNOPSIS Example web application use Mojolicious::Lite; plugin "OAuth2" => { facebook => { key => "some-public-app-id", secret => $ENV{OAUTH2_FACEBOOK_SECRET}, }, }; get "/connect" => sub { my $c = shift; $c->delay( sub { my $delay = shift; my $args = {redirect_uri => $c->url_for('connect')->userinfo(undef)->to_abs}; $c->oauth2->get_token(facebook => $args, $delay->begin); }, sub { my ($delay, $err, $data) = @_; return $c->render("connect", error => $err) unless $data->{access_token}; return $c->session(token => $c->redirect_to('profile')); }, ); }; Custom connect button You can add a "connect link" to your template using the "oauth2.auth_url" helper. Example template: Click here to log in: <%= link_to "Connect!", $c->oauth2->auth_url("facebook", scope => "user_about_me email") %> Configuration This plugin takes a hash as config, where the keys are provider names and the values are configuration for each provider. Here is a complete example: plugin "OAuth2" => { custom_provider => { key => "APP_ID", secret => "SECRET_KEY", authorize_url => "https://provider.example.com/auth", token_url => "https://provider.example.com/token", }, }; To make it a bit easier, Mojolicious::Plugin::OAuth2 has already values for "authorize_url" and "token_url" for the following providers: * dailymotion Authentication for Dailymotion video site. * eventbrite Authentication for event site. See also . * facebook OAuth2 for Facebook's graph API, . You can find "key" (App ID) and "secret" (App Secret) from the app dashboard here: . See also . * github Authentication with Github. See also * google OAuth2 for Google. You can find the "key" (CLIENT ID) and "secret" (CLIENT SECRET) from the app console here under "APIs & Auth" and "Credentials" in the menu at . See also . Testing THIS API IS EXPERIMENTAL AND CAN CHANGE WITHOUT NOTICE. To enable a "mocked" OAuth2 api, you need to give the special "mocked" provider a "key": plugin "OAuth2" => { mocked => {key => 42} }; The code above will add two new routes to your application: * GET /mocked/oauth/authorize This route is a web page which contains a link that takes you back to "redirect_uri", with a "code". The "code" default to "fake_code", but can be configured: $c->app->oauth2->providers->{mocked}{return_code} = "..."; The route it self can also be customized: plugin "OAuth2" => { mocked => {authorize_url => '...'} }; * POST /mocked/oauth/token This route is will return a "access_token" which is available in your "oauth2.get_token" callback. The default is "fake_token", but it can be configured: $c->app->oauth2->providers->{mocked}{return_token} = "..."; The route it self can also be customized: plugin "OAuth2" => { mocked => {token_url => '...'} }; HELPERS oauth2.auth_url $url = $c->oauth2->auth_url($provider => \%args); Returns a Mojo::URL object which contain the authorize URL. This is useful if you want to add the authorize URL as a link to your webpage instead of doing a redirect like "oauth2.get_token" does. %args is optional, but can contain: * host Useful if your provider uses different hosts for accessing different accounts. The default is specified in the provider configuration. $url->host($host); * authorize_query Either a hash-ref or an array-ref which can be used to give extra query params to the URL. $url->query($authorize_url); * redirect_uri Useful if you want to go back to a different page than what you came from. The default is: $c->url_for->to_abs->to_string * scope Scope to ask for credentials to. Should be a space separated list. * state A string that will be sent to the identity provider. When the user returns from the identity provider, this exact same string will be carried with the user, as a GET parameter called "state" in the URL that the user will return to. oauth2.get_token $c = $c->oauth2->get_token( $provider_name => \%args, sub { my ($c, $err, $data) = @_; } ); This method will do one of two things: 1. If called from an action on your site, it will redirect you to the $provider_name's "authorize_url". This site will probably have some sort of "Connect" and "Reject" button, allowing the visitor to either connect your site with his/her profile on the OAuth2 provider's page or not. 2. The OAuth2 provider will redirect the user back to your site after clicking the "Connect" or "Reject" button. $data will then contain a key "access_token" on "Connect" and a false value on "Reject". Will redirect to the provider to allow for authorization, then fetch the token. The token gets provided as a parameter to the callback function. Usually you want to store the token in a session or similar to use for API requests. Supported arguments: * host Useful if your provider uses different hosts for accessing different accounts. The default is specified in the provider configuration. * scope Scope to ask for credentials to. Should be a space separated list. oauth2.providers This helper allow you to access the raw providers mapping, which looks something like this: { facebook => { authorize_url => "https://graph.facebook.com/oauth/authorize", token_url => "https://graph.facebook.com/oauth/access_token", key => ..., secret => ..., }, ... } ATTRIBUTES providers Holds a hash of provider information. See oauth2.providers. METHODS register Will register this plugin in your application. See "SYNOPSIS". AUTHOR Marcus Ramberg - "mramberg@cpan.org" Jan Henning Thorsen - "jhthorsen@cpan.org" LICENSE This software is licensed under the same terms as Perl itself.