requests_oauth2client
is an OAuth 2.x client for Python, able to obtain, refresh and revoke tokens from any
OAuth2.x/OIDC compliant Authorization Server. It sits upon and extends the famous requests HTTP client module.
It can act as an OAuth 2.0 / 2.1 client, to automatically get and renew Access Tokens, based on the Client Credentials, Authorization Code, Refresh token, Token Exchange, JWT Bearer, Device Authorization, Resource Owner Password or CIBA grants. Additional grant types are easy to add if needed.
It also supports OpenID Connect 1.0, PKCE, Client Assertions, Token Revocation and Introspection, Resource Indicators, JWT-secured Authorization Requests, Pushed Authorization Requests, Authorization Server Issuer Identification, Demonstrating Proof of Possession, as well as using custom params to any endpoint, and other important features that are often overlooked or needlessly complex in other client libraries.
And it also includes a wrapper around requests.Session that makes it super easy to use REST-style APIs, with or without OAuth 2.x.
Please note that despite the name, this library has no relationship with Google oauth2client library.
Full module documentation is available at https://guillp.github.io/requests_oauth2client/.
requests_oauth2client
is available from PyPi, so installing it is
as easy as:
pip install requests_oauth2client
Everything from requests_oauth2client
is available from the root module, so you can import it like this:
from requests_oauth2client import *
Or you can import individual objects from this package as usual. Note that importing *
automatically imports
requests
, so no need to import it yourself.
If you have already obtained an access token for the API you want to call, you can convert it to an instance of
BearerToken. Instances of this class work as a requests
compatible auth handler.
import requests
from requests_oauth2client import BearerToken
token = BearerToken("my_access_token")
resp = requests.get("https://my.protected.api/endpoint", auth=token)
This authentication handler will add a Authorization: Bearer <my_access_token>
header in the request, with your access
token value, properly formatted according to RFC6750.
OAuth2Client offers several methods that implement the communication to the various endpoints that are standardised by OAuth 2.0 and its extensions. These endpoints include the Token Endpoint, Revocation, Introspection, UserInfo, BackChannel Authentication and Device Authorization Endpoints.
You must provide the URLs for these endpoints if you intend to use them. Otherwise, only the Token Endpoint is mandatory
to initialize an OAuth2Client
.
To initialize an instance of OAuth2Client
, you only need the Token Endpoint URI from your Authorization Server (AS),
and the credentials for your application, typically a client_id
and a client_secret
, usually also provided by the
AS:
from requests_oauth2client import OAuth2Client
oauth2client = OAuth2Client(
token_endpoint="https://url.to.the/token_endpoint",
client_id="my_client_id",
client_secret="my_client_secret",
)
The Token Endpoint is the only endpoint that is mandatory to obtain tokens. Credentials are used to authenticate the
client everytime it sends a request to its Authorization Server. Usually, these are a static Client ID and Secret, which
are the equivalent of a username and a password, but meant for an application instead of for a human user. The default
authentication method used by OAuth2Client
is Client Secret Post, but other standardized methods such as Client
Secret Basic, Client Secret JWT or Private Key JWT are supported as well. See
more about client authentication methods below.
Instead of providing each endpoint URL yourself, you may also use the AS metadata endpoint URI, or the document data itself, to initialize your OAuth 2.0 client with the appropriate endpoints.
OAuth2Client has dedicated methods to send requests to the Token Endpoint using different standardized grants. Since the Token Endpoint URL and Client Authentication Method are already declared for the client at initialization, the only required parameters for these methods are those that will be sent in the request to the Token Endpoint.
These methods directly return a BearerToken if the request is successful, or raise an exception if it fails. BearerToken contains all the data returned by the Token Endpoint, including the Access Token. It will also:
- Keep track of the Access Token expiration date (based on the
expires_in
hint as returned by the AS). This date is accessible with theexpires_at
attribute. - Contain the Refresh Token, if returned by the AS, accessible with the
refresh_token
attribute. - Contain the ID Token, if returned by the AS, accessible with the
id_token
attribute (typically available when using the Authorization Code flow). - Keep track of other associated metadata as well, also accessible as attributes with the same name:
token.custom_attr
, or with subscription syntaxtoken["my.custom.attr"]
.
You can create such a BearerToken yourself if needed:
from requests_oauth2client import BearerToken
bearer_token = BearerToken(access_token="an_access_token", expires_in=60)
print(bearer_token)
# {'access_token': 'an_access_token',
# 'expires_in': 55,
# 'token_type': 'Bearer'}
print(bearer_token.expires_at)
# datetime.datetime(2021, 8, 20, 9, 56, 59, 498793)
assert not bearer_token.is_expired()
print(bearer_token.expires_in)
# 40
Note that the expires_in
indicator here is not static. It keeps track of the token lifetime, in seconds, and is
calculated as the time flies. The actual static expiration date is accessible with the expires_at
property. You can
check if a token is expired with
bearer_token.is_expired().
You can use a BearerToken instance anywhere you can use an access_token as string.
Using OAuth2Client directly is useful for testing or debugging OAuth2.x flows, but it may not be suitable for actual
applications where tokens must be obtained, used during their lifetime, then obtained again or refreshed once they are
expired. requests_oauth2client
contains several requests compatible Auth Handlers (as subclasses of
requests.auth.AuthBase), that will
take care of obtaining tokens when required, then will cache those tokens until they are expired, and will obtain new
ones (or refresh them, when possible), once the initial token is expired. Those are best used with a requests.Session,
or an ApiClient, which is a wrapper around Session
with a few enhancements as described below.
To send a request using the Client Credentials grant, use the .client_credentials() method, providing the necessary parameters as keyword arguments in the token request.
from requests_oauth2client import OAuth2Client
oauth2client = OAuth2Client(
token_endpoint="https://url.to.the/token_endpoint",
client_id="client_id",
client_secret="client_secret",
)
token = oauth2client.client_credentials(scope="myscope")
# or, if your AS uses resource indicator:
token = oauth2client.client_credentials(scope="myscope", resource="https://myapi.local")
# or, if your AS uses 'audience' as parameter to identify the requested API (Auth0 style):
token = oauth2client.client_credentials(audience="https://myapi.local")
# or, if your AS uses custom parameters:
token = oauth2client.client_credentials(scope="myscope", custom_param="custom_value")
Parameters such as scope
, resource
, or audience
, as well as any other required parameters by the Authorization
Server (AS), can be passed as keyword parameters. These parameters will be included in the token request sent to the AS.
Please note that none of those parameters are mandatory at the client level, but some might be required by your AS to
fulfill your request.
You can use the
OAuth2ClientCredentialsAuth
auth handler. It takes an OAuth2Client
as parameter, and the additional kwargs to pass to the token endpoint:
import requests
from requests_oauth2client import OAuth2Client, OAuth2ClientCredentialsAuth
oauth2client = OAuth2Client(
token_endpoint="https://url.to.the/token_endpoint",
client_id="client_id",
client_secret="client_secret",
)
auth = OAuth2ClientCredentialsAuth(
oauth2client, scope="myscope", resource="https://myapi.local"
)
# use it like this:
requests.get("https://myapi.local/resource", auth=auth)
# or like this:
session = requests.Session()
session.auth = auth
resp = session.get("https://myapi.local/resource")
Once again, extra parameters such as scope
, resource
or audience
are allowed if required.
When you send your first request, OAuth2ClientCredentialsAuth will automatically retrieve an access token from the AS using the Client Credentials grant, then will include it in the request. Next requests will use the same token, as long as it is valid. A new token will be automatically retrieved once the previous one is expired.
You can configure a leeway, which is a period of time before the actual expiration, in seconds, when a new token will be
obtained. This may help getting continuous access to the API when the client and API clocks are slightly out of sync.
Use the parameter leeway
to OAuth2ClientCredentialsAuth
:
from requests_oauth2client import OAuth2ClientCredentialsAuth
auth = OAuth2ClientCredentialsAuth(
oauth2client,
scope="myscope",
leeway=30,
)
Obtaining tokens using the Authorization code grant is made in 3 steps:
-
your application must open a specific url called the Authentication Request in a browser.
-
your application must obtain and validate the Authorization Response, which is a redirection back to your application that contains an Authorization Code as parameter. This redirect back (often called "callback") is initiated by the Authorization Server after any necessary interaction with the user is complete (Registration, Login, Profile completion, Multi-Factor Authentication, Authorization, Consent, etc.)
-
your application must then exchange this Authorization Code for an Access Token, with a request to the Token Endpoint.
Using an OAuth2Client
will help you with all those steps, as described below.
To be able to use the Authorization Code grant, you need 2 (optionally 3) URIs:
- the URL for Authorization Endpoint, which is the url where you must send your Authorization Requests
- the Redirect URI, which is the url pointing to your application, where the Authorization Server will reply with Authorization Response
- optionally, the issuer identifier, if your AS uses Issuer Identification.
You can declare those URIs when initializing your OAuth2Client
instance, or you can
use the AS discovery endpoint to initialize those URLs
automatically. Then you can generate valid Authorization Requests by calling the method .authorization_request()
, with
the request specific parameters, such as scope
, state
, nonce
as parameter:
from requests_oauth2client import OAuth2Client
client = OAuth2Client(
token_endpoint="https://url.to.the/token_endoint",
authorization_endpoint="https://url.to.the/authorization_endpoint",
redirect_uri="https://url.to.my.application/redirect_uri",
client_id="client_id",
client_secret="client_secret",
)
az_request = client.authorization_request(scope="openid email profile")
print(az_request)
# this will look like this, with line feeds for display purposes only:
# https://url.to.the.as/authorization_endpoint
# ?client_id=client_id
# &redirect_uri=https%3A%2F%2Furl.to.my.application%2Fredirect_uri
# &response_type=code
# &scope=openid+email+profile
# &state=FBx9mWeLwoKGgG76vhi6v61-4mgxmgZhtWIa7aTffdY
# &nonce=iHZJokhkGOAojff1tdknRyz9mPZyy5vq9JDlVaUHyqk
# &code_challenge=TG7qgdyKnwUPuoQ6NNJRlLMoHbeVmJlB8g0VOcfQEkc
# &code_challenge_method=S256
# you can send the user to that url with:
import webbrowser
webbrowser.open(az_request.uri)
Note that the state
, nonce
and code_challenge
parameters are generated with secure random values by default.
Should you wish to use your own values, you can pass them as parameters to OAuth2Client.authorization_request()
. For
PKCE, you need to pass your generated code_verifier
, and the code_challenge
will automatically be derived from it.
If you want to disable PKCE, you can pass code_challenge_method=None
when initializing your OAuth2Client
.
Once you have redirected the user browser to the Authorization Request URI, and after the user is successfully authenticated and authorized, plus any other extra interactive step is complete, the AS will respond with a redirection to your redirect_uri. That is the Authorization Response. It contains several parameters that must be retrieved by your client. The Authorization Code is one of those parameters, but you must also validate that the state matches your request; if using AS Issuer Identification, you must also validate that the issuer matches what is expected. You can do this with:
# using the `az_request` as defined above
response_uri = input(
"Please enter the full url and/or params obtained on the redirect_uri: "
)
# say the callback url is https://url.to.my.application/redirect_uri?code=an_az_code&state=FBx9mWeLwoKGgG76vhi6v61-4mgxmgZhtWIa7aTffdY&issuer=https://url.to.the.as
az_response = az_request.validate_callback(response_uri)
This auth_response
is an AuthorizationResponse
instance and contains everything that is needed for your application
to complete the authentication and get its tokens from the AS.
Once you have obtained the AS response, containing an authorization code, your application must exchange it for actual Token(s).
To exchange a code for Access and/or ID tokens, use the OAuth2Client.authorization_code() method. If you have obtained an AuthorizationResponse as described above, you can simply do:
token = oauth2client.authorization_code(az_response)
This will automatically include the code
, redirect_uri
and code_verifier
parameters in the Token Request, as
expected by the AS. You may include extra parameters if required, or you may pass your own parameters, without using an
AuthorizationResponse
instance, like this:
token = oauth2client.authorization_code(
code=code,
code_verifier=code_verifier,
redirect_uri=redirect_uri,
custom_param=custom_value,
)
The OAuth2AuthorizationCodeAuth handler takes an OAuth2Client and an authorization code as parameter, plus whatever additional keyword parameters are required by your Authorization Server:
from requests_oauth2client import OAuth2Client, ApiClient, OAuth2AuthorizationCodeAuth
oauth2client = OAuth2Client(
token_endpoint="https://url.to.the/token_endpoint",
authorization_endpoint="https://url.to.the/authorization_endpoint",
auth=("client_id", "client_secret"),
)
api_client = ApiClient(
"https://your.protected.api/endpoint",
auth=OAuth2AuthorizationCodeAuth(
oauth2client,
"my_authorization_code",
),
)
# any request using api_client will trigger exchanging the code for an access_token, which is then cached, and refreshed later if needed
resp = api_client.post(data={...})
OAuth2AuthorizationCodeAuth will take care of refreshing the token automatically once it is expired, using the refresh token, if available.
Authorization Requests generated by OAuth2Client.authorization_request()
are instance of the class
AuthorizationRequest
.
You can also use that class directly to generate your requests, but in that case you need to supply your Authorization
Endpoint URI, your client_id
, redirect_uri
, etc. You can access every parameter from an AuthorizationRequest
instance, as well as the generated code_verifier
, as attributes of this instance. Once an Authorization Request URL is
generated, it your application responsibility to redirect or otherwise send the user to that URL. You may use the
webbrowser
module from Python standard library to do so. Here is an example for generating Authorization Requests:
from requests_oauth2client import AuthorizationRequest
az_request = AuthorizationRequest(
"https://url.to.the/authorization_endpoint",
client_id="my_client_id",
redirect_uri="http://localhost/callback", # this redirect_uri is specific to your app
scope="openid email profile",
# extra parameters such as `resource` can be included as well if required by your AS
resource="https://my.resource.local/api",
)
print(
az_request
) # this request will look like this, with line breaks for display purposes only
# https://url.to.the/authorization_endpoint
# ?client_id=my_client_id
# &redirect_uri=http%3A%2F%2Flocalhost%callback
# &response_type=code
# &state=kHWL4VwcbUbtPR4mtht6yMAGG_S-ZcBh5RxI_IGDmJc
# &nonce=mSGOS1M3LYU9ncTvvutoqUR4n1EtmaC_sQ3db4dyMAc
# &scope=openid+email+profile
# &code_challenge=W3n02f6xUKoDVbmhWEWz3h780b-Ci6ucnBS_d7nogmQ
# &code_challenge_method=S256
# &resource=https%3A%2F%2Fmy.resource.local%2Fapi
print(az_request.code_verifier)
# 'gYK-ZnQfoat2bghwed7oEz--wvn4D70ksJ5GuWO9sXXygZ7PMnUlSpBmMCcNRHxdgTS9m_roYwGxF6HQxIqZVwXmxRJUziFHUFxDrNuUIjCJCx6gBhPlpFbUXulB1fo2'
Helpers for the Device Authorization Grant are also included. To get device and user codes, read the response attributes (including Device Code, User Code, Verification URI, etc.), then pooling the Token Endpoint:
from requests_oauth2client import (
OAuth2Client,
DeviceAuthorizationPoolingJob,
BearerToken,
)
client = OAuth2Client(
token_endpoint="https://url.to.the/token_endpoint",
device_authorization_endpoint="https://url.to.the/device_authorization_endpoint",
auth=("client_id", "client_secret"),
)
da_resp = client.authorize_device()
# `da_resp` contains the Device Code, User Code, Verification URI, and other info returned by the AS:
da_resp.device_code
da_resp.user_code
da_resp.verification_uri
da_resp.verification_uri_complete
da_resp.expires_at
da_resp.interval
# Send/show the Verification Uri and User Code to the user. They must use a browser to visit that URL, authenticate, and input the User Code.
# You can then request the Token endpoint to check if the user successfully authorized your device like this:
pool_job = DeviceAuthorizationPoolingJob(client, da_resp)
resp = None
while resp is None:
resp = pool_job()
assert isinstance(resp, BearerToken)
DeviceAuthorizationPoolingJob
will automatically obey the pooling period. Everytime you call pool_job()
, it will wait the appropriate number of
seconds as indicated by the AS, and will apply slow-down requests.
Use OAuth2DeviceCodeAuth as auth handler to exchange a device code for an access token:
from requests_oauth2client import ApiClient, OAuth2DeviceCodeAuth, OAuth2Client
client = OAuth2Client(
token_endpoint="https://url.to.the/token_endpoint",
device_authorization_endpoint="https://url.to.the/device_authorization_endpoint",
auth=("client_id", "client_secret"),
)
device_auth_resp = client.authorize_device()
# expose user_code and verification_uri or verification_uri_complete to the user
device_auth_resp.user_code
device_auth_resp.verification_uri
device_auth_resp.verification_uri_complete
# then try to send your request with an OAuth2DeviceCodeAuth handler
# this will pool the token endpoint until the user authorizes the device
api_client = ApiClient(
"https://your.protected.api/endpoint",
auth=OAuth2DeviceCodeAuth(client, device_auth_resp),
)
resp = api_client.post(
data={...}
) # the first call will hang until the user authorizes your app and the token endpoint returns a token.
To initiate a BackChannel Authentication against the dedicated endpoint, read the response attributes and pool the Token Endpoint until the end-user successfully authenticates:
from requests_oauth2client import (
OAuth2Client,
BearerToken,
BackChannelAuthenticationPoolingJob,
)
client = OAuth2Client(
token_endpoint="https://url.to.the/token_endpoint",
backchannel_authentication_endpoint="https://url.to.the/backchannel_authorization_endpoint",
auth=("client_id", "client_secret"),
)
ba_resp = client.backchannel_authentication_request(
scope="openid email profile",
login_hint="user@example.net",
)
# `ba_resp` will contain the response attributes as returned by the AS, including an `auth_req_id`:
ba_resp.auth_req_id
ba_resp.expires_in # decreases with time
ba_resp.expires_at # a static `datetime` to keep track of the expiration date, based on the "expires_in" returned by the AS
ba_resp.interval # the pooling interval indicated by the AS
ba_resp.custom # if the AS respond with additional attributes, they are also accessible
pool_job = BackChannelAuthenticationPoolingJob(client, ba_resp)
resp = None
while resp is None:
resp = pool_job()
assert isinstance(resp, BearerToken)
Hints by the AS to slow down pooling will automatically be obeyed.
To send a token exchange request, use the OAuth2Client.token_exchange() method:
from requests_oauth2client import OAuth2Client, ClientSecretJwt
client = OAuth2Client(
"https://url.to.the/token_endpoint",
auth=ClientSecretJwt("client_id", "client_secret"),
)
token = client.token_exchange(
subject_token="your_token_value",
subject_token_type="urn:ietf:params:oauth:token-type:access_token",
)
As with the other grant-type specific methods, you may specify additional keyword parameters, that will be passed to the
token endpoint, including any standardised attribute like actor_token
or actor_token_type
, or any custom parameter.
There are short names for token types, that will be automatically translated to standardised types:
token = client.token_exchange(
subject_token="your_token_value",
subject_token_type="access_token", # will be automatically replaced by "urn:ietf:params:oauth:token-type:access_token"
actor_token="your_actor_token",
actor_token_type="id_token", # will be automatically replaced by "urn:ietf:params:oauth:token-type:id_token"
)
Or to make it even easier, types can be guessed based on the supplied subject or actor token:
from requests_oauth2client import BearerToken, ClientSecretJwt, IdToken, OAuth2Client
client = OAuth2Client(
"https://url.to.the/token_endpoint",
auth=ClientSecretJwt("client_id", "client_secret"),
)
token = client.token_exchange(
subject_token=BearerToken(
"your_token_value"
), # subject_token_type will be "urn:ietf:params:oauth:token-type:access_token"
actor_token=IdToken(
"your_actor_token"
), # actor_token_type will be "urn:ietf:params:oauth:token-type:id_token"
)
requests_oauth2client
supports several client authentication methods, as defined in multiple OAuth2.x standards. You
select the appropriate method to use when initializing your OAuth2Client, with the auth
parameter. Once initialized,
a client will automatically use the configured authentication method every time it sends a requested to an endpoint that
requires client authentication. You don't have anything else to do afterwards.
With client_secret_basic, client_id
and client_secret
are included in clear-text in the Authorization
header
when sending requests to the Token Endpoint. To use it, just pass a
ClientSecretBasic(client_id, client_secret)
as auth
parameter:
from requests_oauth2client import OAuth2Client, ClientSecretBasic
client = OAuth2Client(
"https://url.to.the/token_endpoint",
auth=ClientSecretBasic("client_id", "client_secret"),
)
With client_secret_post, client_id
and client_secret
are included as part of the body form data. To use it, pass
a
ClientSecretPost(client_id, client_secret)
as auth
parameter. This is the default when you pass a tuple (client_id, client_secret)
as auth
when initializing
an OAuth2Client
:
from requests_oauth2client import OAuth2Client, ClientSecretPost
client = OAuth2Client(
"https://url.to.the/token_endpoint",
auth=ClientSecretPost("client_id", "client_secret"),
)
# or
client = OAuth2Client(
"https://url.to.the/token_endpoint", auth=("client_id", "client_secret")
)
# or
oauth2client = OAuth2Client(
token_endpoint="https://url.to.the/token_endpoint",
client_id="my_client_id",
client_secret="my_client_secret",
)
With client_secret_jwt, the client generates an ephemeral JWT assertion including information about itself
(client_id), the AS (url of the endpoint), and an expiration date a few seconds in the future. To use it, pass a
ClientSecretJwt(client_id, client_secret)
as auth
parameter. Assertion generation is entirely automatic, you don't have anything to do:
from requests_oauth2client import OAuth2Client, ClientSecretJwt
client = OAuth2Client(
"https://url.to.the/token_endpoint",
auth=ClientSecretJwt("client_id", "client_secret"),
)
This method is more secure than the 2 previous, because only ephemeral credentials are transmitted, which limits the possibility for interception and replay of the Client Secret. But that Client Secret still needs to be shared between the AS and Client owner(s).
With private_key_jwt, client uses a JWT assertion that is just like the one for client_secret_jwt, but it is
signed with an asymmetric key. To use it, you need a private signing key, in a dict
that matches the JWK format, or
as an instance of jwskate.Jwk
. The matching public key must be registered for your client on AS side. Once you have
that, using this auth method is simple with the
PrivateKeyJwt(client_id, private_jwk)
auth handler:
from requests_oauth2client import OAuth2Client, PrivateKeyJwt
private_jwk = {
"kid": "mykid",
"kty": "RSA",
"e": "AQAB",
"n": "...",
"d": "...",
"p": "...",
"q": "...",
"dp": "...",
"dq": "...",
"qi": "...",
}
client = OAuth2Client(
"https://url.to.the/token_endpoint", auth=PrivateKeyJwt("client_id", private_jwk)
)
# or
client = OAuth2Client(
"https://url.to.the/token_endpoint", auth=("client_id", private_jwk)
)
# or
client = OAuth2Client(
"https://url.to.the/token_endpoint", client_id="client_id", private_jwk=private_jwk
)
This method can be considered more secure than those relying on a client secret, because only ephemeral credentials are sent over the wire, and it uses asymmetric cryptography: the signing key is generated by the client, and only the public key is known by the AS. Transmitting that public key between owner(s) of the client and of the AS is much easier than transmitting the Client Secret, which is a shared key that must be considered as confidential.
The latest Client Authentication Method, none, is for Public Clients which do not authenticate to the Token
Endpoint. Those clients only include their client_id
in body form data, without any authentication credentials. Use
PublicApp(client_id)
:
from requests_oauth2client import OAuth2Client, PublicApp
client = OAuth2Client(
"https://url.to.the/token_endpoint", auth=PublicApp("app_client_id")
)
The OAuth2Client class provides methods for sending revocation requests to a Revocation Endpoint. To use this feature, you need to provide the Revocation Endpoint URI when creating an instance of OAuth2Client. The available methods for revoking tokens are:
- revoke_token(): Revokes a token by providing the token value and an optional token_type_hint.
- revoke_access_token(): Revokes an access token by providing the token value.
- revoke_refresh_token(): Revokes a refresh token by providing the token value.
Here is an example of how to use these methods:
from requests_oauth2client import OAuth2Client, ClientSecretJwt
oauth2client = OAuth2Client(
token_endpoint="https://url.to.the/token_endpoint",
revocation_endpoint="https://url.to.the/revocation_endpoint",
auth=ClientSecretJwt("client_id", "client_secret"),
)
oauth2client.revoke_token("mytoken", token_type_hint="access_token")
oauth2client.revoke_access_token("mytoken")
oauth2client.revoke_refresh_token("mytoken")
These methods return a boolean value indicating whether the revocation request was successfully sent and no error was
returned. If the Authorization Server returns a non-successful HTTP code without a standard error message, it will
return False
. If the Authorization Server returns a standard error, an exception will be raised.
The OAuth2Client class also supports sending requests to a Token Introspection Endpoint. To use this feature, you need to provide the Introspection Endpoint URI when creating an instance of OAuth2Client. The introspect_token() method is then available for introspecting tokens:
from requests_oauth2client import OAuth2Client, ClientSecretJwt
oauth2client = OAuth2Client(
token_endpoint="https://url.to.the/token_endpoint",
introspection_endpoint="https://url.to.the/introspection_endpoint",
auth=ClientSecretJwt("client_id", "client_secret"),
)
resp = oauth2client.introspect_token("mytoken", token_type_hint="access_token")
The introspect_token()
method returns the data returned by the introspection endpoint, decoded if it is in JSON format.
The OAuth2Client class also supports sending requests to a UserInfo Endpoint. To use this feature, you need to provide the UserInfo Endpoint URI when creating an instance of OAuth2Client The userinfo() method is then available for retrieving user information:
from requests_oauth2client import OAuth2Client, ClientSecretJwt
oauth2client = OAuth2Client(
token_endpoint="https://url.to.the/token_endpoint",
userinfo_endpoint="https://url.to.the/userinfo_endpoint",
auth=ClientSecretJwt("client_id", "client_secret"),
)
resp = oauth2client.userinfo("mytoken")
The userinfo()
method returns the data returned by the userinfo endpoint, decoded if it is in JSON format.
You can initialize an OAuth2Client with the endpoint URIs mentioned in a standardised discovery document using the OAuth2Client.from_discovery_endpoint() class method:
from requests_oauth2client import OAuth2Client, ClientSecretJwt
oauth2client = OAuth2Client.from_discovery_endpoint(
"https://url.to.the.as/.well-known/openid-configuration",
auth=ClientSecretJwt("client_id", "client_secret"),
)
# OR, if you know the issuer value
oauth2client = OAuth2Client.from_discovery_endpoint(
issuer="https://url.to.the.as",
auth=ClientSecretJwt("client_id", "client_secret"),
)
This will fetch the document from the specified URI, decode it, and initialize an OAuth2Client pointing to the appropriate endpoint URIs.
If you use the issuer
keyword argument, the URI to the discovery endpoint will be deduced from that identifier, and a
check will be made to ensure that the issuer
from the retrieved metadata document matches that value.
DPoP
(Demonstrating Proof of Possession) is supported out-of-the-box. To obtain a DPoP token, you can either:
- pass
dpop=True
when using anyOAuth2Client
method that sends a token request, - or enable
DPoP
by default by passingdpop_bound_access_tokens=True
when initializing your client.
from requests_oauth2client import DPoPToken, OAuth2Client
oauth2client = OAuth2Client.from_discovery_endpoint(
"https://url.to.the.as/.well-known/openid-configuration",
client_id="client_id", client_secret="client_secret",
)
token = oauth2client.client_credentials(scope="my_scope", dpop=True)
assert isinstance(token, DPoPToken)
# or, to enable DPoP by default for every token request
oauth2client = OAuth2Client.from_discovery_endpoint(
"https://url.to.the.as/.well-known/openid-configuration",
client_id="client_id", client_secret="client_secret",
dpop_bound_access_tokens=True,
)
token = oauth2client.client_credentials(scope="my_scope")
assert isinstance(token, DPoPToken)
DPoPToken
is actually a BearerToken
subclass. If you use it as a requests
Auth Handler, it will take care of
adding a DPoP
proof to the request headers, in addition to the access token.
Since it is a BearerToken
subclass, it is fully compatible with the requests
compatible auth handlers provided by
requests_oauth2client
, such as OAuth2ClientCredentialsAuth
, OAuth2AccessTokenAuth
, etc. So you may use DPoP with
those auth handlers like this:
import requests
from requests_oauth2client import OAuth2Client, OAuth2ClientCredentialsAuth, PrivateKeyJwt
client = OAuth2Client.from_discovery_endpoint(
issuer="https://my.issuer.local",
auth=PrivateKeyJwt("client_id", "client_secret"),
dpop_bound_access_tokens=True, # enable DPoP by default
)
session = requests.Session()
session.auth = OAuth2ClientCredentialsAuth(
client=client,
scope="my_scope"
)
resp = session.get("https://my.api.local/endpoint") # this will automatically obtain a DPoP token and use it
assert "DPoP" in resp.requests.headers # the appropriate DPoP proof will be included in the request
Since DPoP is enabled by default with dpop_bound_access_tokens=True
, then the OAuth2ClientCredentialsAuth
will
obtain and use DPoPToken
instances. You could also leave it disabled by default and pass dpop=True
when initializing
you auth handler instance: OAuth2ClientCredentialsAuth(client=client, scope="my_scope", dpop=True)
.
By default, the private key used for signing DPoP
proofs is auto-generated by OAuth2Client
whenever a new token is
obtained. By default, generated keys are of type Elliptic Curve (EC
), and use the ES256
signature alg (as in
Elliptic-Curve with a SHA256 hash). Should you, for testing purposes, wish to generate or use your own key, you may
use the parameter dpop_key
to provide a key of your choice. It takes a DPoPKey
instance, which you can generate
using DPoPKey.generate()
, or by initializing an instance with a key that you previously generated:
from cryptography.hazmat.primitives.asymmetric import rsa
import jwskate
from requests_oauth2client import DPoPKey, DPoPToken, OAuth2Client
oauth2client = OAuth2Client.from_discovery_endpoint(
"https://url.to.the.as/.well-known/openid-configuration",
client_id="client_id", client_secret="client_secret",
dpop_bound_access_tokens=True,
)
dpop_key = DPoPKey.generate(alg="RS512") # generate a new DPoP key with an alg of your choice
# or, for testing purposes only, your can load your own key
dpop_key = DPoPKey(private_key=jwskate.Jwk({"kty": "EC", "crv": "P-256", "alg": "ES256", "x": "...", "y": "...", "d": "..."}))
# or, any key material supported by `jwskate` is supported, so you can also use `cryptography` keys directly,
# but you need to specify the signature `alg` since it is not part of the key itself
dpop_key = DPoPKey(private_key=rsa.generate_private_key(public_exponent=65537, key_size=2048), alg="RS256")
token = oauth2client.client_credentials(scope="my_scope", dpop_key=dpop_key)
assert isinstance(token, DPoPToken)
assert token.dpop_key == dpop_key
Instead of generating your own keys everytime, you may also control how DPoPKey
s are automatically generated. This can
be useful for fuzz-testing, pen-testing or feature-testing the Authorization Server. To choose the signing alg, use the
parameter dpop_alg
when initializing your client. This will accordingly determine the key type to generate. You may
also pass a custom dpop_key_generator
, which is a callable that accepts a signature alg as parameter, and generates
DPoPKey
instances. You may use DPoPKey.generate
as a helper method for that, or implement your own generator:
import secrets
from requests_oauth2client import DPoPKey, DPoPToken, OAuth2Client
class CustomDPoPToken(DPoPToken):
"""A custom DPoP token class that places the DPoP proof and token inta a non-standard header"""
AUTHORIZATION_HEADER = "X-Custom-Auth"
DPOP_HEADER = "X-DPoP"
oauth2client = OAuth2Client.from_discovery_endpoint(
"https://url.to.the.as/.well-known/openid-configuration",
client_id="client_id", client_secret="client_secret",
dpop_bound_access_tokens=True, # enable DPoP by default
dpop_alg="RS256", # choose the signing alg to use, and it will automatically determine the key type to generate.
dpop_key_generator=lambda alg: DPoPKey.generate(
alg=alg,
# those other parameters are for feature testing the AS, or for workarounding AS bugs:
jwt_typ="jwt+custom", # you can customize the `typ` that is included in DPoP proof headers
jti_generator=lambda: secrets.token_urlsafe(24), # generate unique jti differently than the default UUIDs
iat_generator=lambda: 12532424, # override `iat` generation in DPoP proofs, here it will return a static value
dpop_token_class=CustomDPoPToken, # override the class that represents DPoP tokens
)
)
Using APIs usually involves multiple endpoints under the same root url, with a common authentication method. To make it
easier, requests_oauth2client
includes a requests.Session wrapper called ApiClient, which takes the root API url
as parameter on initialization. You can then send requests to different endpoints by passing their relative path instead
of the full url. ApiClient also accepts an auth
parameter with an AuthHandler. You can pass any of the OAuth2 Auth
Handler from this module, or any requests-compatible
Authentication Handler. Which makes it
very easy to call APIs that are protected with an OAuth2 Client Credentials Grant:
from requests_oauth2client import OAuth2Client, ApiClient, OAuth2ClientCredentialsAuth
oauth2client = OAuth2Client(
"https://url.to.the/token_endpoint", client_id="client_id", client_secret="client_secret"
)
api = ApiClient(
"https://myapi.local/root", auth=OAuth2ClientCredentialsAuth(oauth2client)
)
# will actually send a GET to https://myapi.local/root/resource/foo
resp = api.get("/resource/foo")
Note that ApiClient will never send requests "outside" its configured root url. The leading /
in /resource
above
is optional. A leading /
will not "reset" the url path to root, which means that you can also write the relative path
without the /
and it will automatically be included:
api.get("resource/foo") # will also send a GET to https://myapi.local/root/resource/foo
You may also pass the path as an iterable of strings (or string-able objects), in which case they will be joined with a
/
and appended to the url path:
# will send a GET to https://myapi.local/root/resource/foo
api.get(["resource", "foo"])
# will send a GET to https://myapi.local/root/users/1234/details
api.get(["users", 1234, "details"])
You can also use a syntax based on __getattr__
or __getitem__
:
api.resource.get() # will send a GET to https://myapi.local/root/resource
api["my-resource"].get() # will send a GET to https://myapi.local/root/my-resource
Both __getattr__
and __getitem__
return a new ApiClient
initialised on the new base_url. So you can easily call
multiple sub-resources on the same API this way:
from requests_oauth2client import ApiClient
api = ApiClient("https://myapi.local")
users_api = api.users
user = users_api.get("userid") # GET https://myapi.local/users/userid
other_user = users_api.get("other_userid") # GET https://myapi.local/users/other_userid
resources_api = api.resources
resources = resources_api.get() # GET https://myapi.local/resources
ApiClient will, by default, raise exceptions whenever a request returns an error status. You can disable that by
passing raise_for_status=False
when initializing your ApiClient:
from requests_oauth2client import ApiClient
api = ApiClient(
"http://httpstat.us", raise_for_status=False
) # raise_for_status defaults to True
resp = api.get("500")
assert resp is not None
# without raise_for_status=False, a requests.exceptions.HTTPError exception would be raised instead
You may override this at request time:
# raise_for_status at request-time overrides the value defined at init-time
resp = api.get("500", raise_for_status=True)
You can access the underlying requests.Session
with the session attribute, and you can provide an already existing and
configured Session
instance at init time:
import requests
from requests_oauth2client import ApiClient
session = requests.Session()
session.proxies = {"https": "http://localhost:3128"}
api = ApiClient("https://myapi.local/resource", session=session)
assert api.session == session
requests_oauth2client
is flexible enough to handle most use cases, so you should be able to use any AS by any vendor
as long as it supports OAuth 2.0.
You can however create a subclass of OAuth2Client or ApiClient to make it easier to use with specific Authorization
Servers or APIs. OAuth2Client has several extensibility points in the form of methods like
OAuth2Client.parse_token_response()
, OAuth2Client.on_token_error()
that implement response parsing, error handling,
etc.
from requests_oauth2client.vendor_specific import Auth0
a0client = Auth0.client(
"mytenant.eu", client_id="client_id", client_secret="client_secret"
)
# this will automatically initialize the token endpoint to https://mytenant.eu.auth0.com/oauth/token
# and other endpoints accordingly
token = a0client.client_credentials(audience="audience")
# this is a wrapper around Auth0 Management API
a0mgmt = Auth0.management_api_client(
"mytenant.eu", client_id="client_id", client_secret="client_secret"
)
myusers = a0mgmt.get("users")