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      1 <div id="pageData-name" class="pageData">Tutorial: OAuth</div>
      2 <div id="pageData-showTOC" class="pageData">true</div>
      3 
      4 <p>
      5 <a href="http://oauth.net/">OAuth</a> is an open protocol that aims to standardize the way desktop and web applications access a user's private data. OAuth provides a mechanism for users to grant access to private data without sharing their private credentials (username/password). Many sites have started enabling APIs to use OAuth because of its security and standard set of libraries.
      6 </p>
      7 <p>
      8 This tutorial will walk you through the necessary steps for creating a Google Chrome Extension that uses OAuth to access an API. It leverages a library that you can reuse in your extensions.
      9 </p>
     10 <p>
     11 This tutorial uses the <a href="http://code.google.com/apis/documents/">Google Documents List Data API</a> as an example OAuth-enabled API endpoint.
     12 </p>
     13 
     14 <h2 id="requirements">Requirements</h2>
     15 
     16 <p>
     17 This tutorial expects that you have some experience writing extensions for Google Chrome and some familiarity with the <a href="http://code.google.com/apis/accounts/docs/OAuth.html">3-legged OAuth</a> flow. Although you dont need a background in the <a href="http://code.google.com/apis/documents/">Google Documents List Data API</a> (or the other <a href="http://code.google.com/apis/gdata/">Google Data APIs</a> for that matter), having a understanding of the protocol may be helpful.
     18 </p>
     19 
     20 <h2 id="getting-started">Getting started</h2>
     21 
     22 <p>
     23 First, copy over the three library files from the Chromium source tree at <a href="http://src.chromium.org/viewvc/chrome/trunk/src/chrome/common/extensions/docs/examples/extensions/oauth_contacts/">.../examples/extensions/oauth_contacts/</a>:
     24 </p>
     25 <ul>
     26 <li><strong><a href="http://src.chromium.org/viewvc/chrome/trunk/src/chrome/common/extensions/docs/examples/extensions/oauth_contacts/chrome_ex_oauth.html?revision=34725&content-type=text/plain">chrome_ex_oauth.html</a></strong> - interstitial page for the oauth_callback URL</li>
     27 <li><strong><a href="http://src.chromium.org/viewvc/chrome/trunk/src/chrome/common/extensions/docs/examples/extensions/oauth_contacts/chrome_ex_oauth.js?content-type=text/plain">chrome_ex_oauth.js</a></strong> - core OAuth library</li>
     28 <li><strong><a href="http://src.chromium.org/viewvc/chrome/trunk/src/chrome/common/extensions/docs/examples/extensions/oauth_contacts/chrome_ex_oauthsimple.js?content-type=text/plain">chrome_ex_oauthsimple.js</a></strong> - helpful wrapper for chrome_ex_oauth.js</li>
     29 </ul>
     30 
     31 <p>Place the three library files in the root of your extension directory (or wherever your JavaScript is stored). Then include both .js files in your background page in the following order:</p>
     32 
     33 <pre>
     34 &lt;script type="text/javascript" src="chrome_ex_oauthsimple.js"&gt;&lt;/script&gt;
     35 &lt;script type="text/javascript" src="chrome_ex_oauth.js"&gt;&lt;/script&gt;
     36 </pre>
     37 
     38 <p>Your background page will manage the OAuth flow.</p>
     39 
     40 <h2 id="oauth-dance">The OAuth dance in an extension</h2>
     41 
     42 <p>
     43 If you are familiar with the OAuth protocol, you'll recall that the OAuth dance consists of three steps:
     44 </p>
     45 
     46 <ol>
     47 <li>fetching an initial request token</li>
     48 <li>having the user authorize the request token</li>
     49 <li>fetching an access token</li>
     50 </ol>
     51 
     52 <p>In the context of an extension, this flow gets a bit tricky. Namely, there is no established consumer key/secret between the service provider and the application. That is, there is no web application URL for the user to be redirected to after the approval process.
     53 </p>
     54 
     55 <p>
     56 Luckily, Google and a few other companies have been working on an <a href="http://code.google.com/apis/accounts/docs/OAuthForInstalledApps.html">OAuth for installed applications</a> solution that you can use from an extension environment. In the installed applications OAuth dance, the consumer key/secret are anonymous/anonymous and you provide an <em>application name</em> for the user to grant access to (instead of an application URL). The end result is the same: your background page requests the initial token, opens a new tab to the approval page, and finally makes the asynchronous call for the access token.
     57 </p>
     58 
     59 <h3 id="set-code">Setup code</h3>
     60 
     61 <p>To initialize the library, create a <code>ChromeExOAuth</code> object in the background page:</p>
     62 
     63 <pre>
     64 var oauth = ChromeExOAuth.initBackgroundPage({
     65   'request_url': &lt;OAuth request URL&gt;,
     66   'authorize_url': &lt;OAuth authorize URL&gt;,
     67   'access_url': &lt;OAuth access token URL&gt;,
     68   'consumer_key': &lt;OAuth consumer key&gt;,
     69   'consumer_secret': &lt;OAuth consumer secret&gt;,
     70   'scope': &lt;scope of data access, not used by all OAuth providers&gt;,
     71   'app_name': &lt;application name, not used by all OAuth providers&gt;
     72 });
     73 </pre>
     74 
     75 <p>In the case of the Documents List API and Googles OAuth endpoints, a possible initialization may be:</p>
     76 
     77 <pre>
     78 var oauth = ChromeExOAuth.initBackgroundPage({
     79   'request_url': 'https://www.google.com/accounts/OAuthGetRequestToken',
     80   'authorize_url': 'https://www.google.com/accounts/OAuthAuthorizeToken',
     81   'access_url': 'https://www.google.com/accounts/OAuthGetAccessToken',
     82   'consumer_key': 'anonymous',
     83   'consumer_secret': 'anonymous',
     84   'scope': 'https://docs.google.com/feeds/',
     85   'app_name': 'My Google Docs Extension'
     86 });
     87 </pre>
     88 
     89 <h3 id="request-token">Fetching and authorizing a request token</h3>
     90 
     91 <p>
     92 Once you have your background page set up, call the <code>authorize()</code> function to begin the OAuth dance and redirect the user to the OAuth provider. The client library abstracts most of this process, so all you need to do is pass a callback to the <code>authorize()</code> function, and a new tab will open and redirect the user.
     93 </p>
     94 
     95 <pre>
     96 oauth.authorize(function() {
     97   // ... Ready to fetch private data ...
     98 });
     99 </pre>
    100 
    101 <p>
    102 You don't need to provide any additional logic for storing the token and secret, as this library already stores these values in the browsers <code>localStorage</code>. If the library already has an access token stored for the current scope, then no tab will be opened. In either case, the callback will be called.
    103 </p>
    104 
    105 <h3 id="signed-requests">Sending signed API requests</h3>
    106 
    107 <p>
    108 Once your specified callback is executed, call the <code>sendSignedRequest()</code> function to send signed requests to your API endpoint(s). <code>sendSignedRequest()</code> takes three arguments: a URI, a callback function, and an optional parameter object. The callback is passed two arguments: the response text and the <code>XMLHttpRequest</code> object that was used to make the request.
    109 </p>
    110 
    111 <p>This example sends an HTTP <code>GET</code>:</p>
    112 
    113 <pre>
    114 function callback(resp, xhr) {
    115   // ... Process text response ...
    116 };
    117 
    118 function onAuthorized() {
    119   var url = 'https://docs.google.com/feeds/default/private/full';
    120   var request = {
    121     'method': 'GET',
    122     'parameters': {'alt': 'json'}
    123   };
    124 
    125   // Send: GET https://docs.google.com/feeds/default/private/full?alt=json
    126   oauth.sendSignedRequest(url, callback, request);
    127 };
    128 
    129 oauth.authorize(onAuthorized);
    130 </pre>
    131 
    132 <p>A more complex example using an HTTP <code>POST</code> might look like this:</p>
    133 
    134 <pre>
    135 function onAuthorized() {
    136   var url = 'https://docs.google.com/feeds/default/private/full';
    137   var request = {
    138     'method': 'POST',
    139     'headers': {
    140       'GData-Version': '3.0',
    141       'Content-Type': 'application/atom+xml'
    142     },
    143     'parameters': {
    144       'alt': 'json'
    145     },
    146     'body': 'Data to send'
    147   };
    148 
    149   // Send: POST https://docs.google.com/feeds/default/private/full?alt=json
    150   oauth.sendSignedRequest(url, callback, request);
    151 };
    152 </pre>
    153 
    154 <p>
    155 By default, the <code>sendSignedRequest()</code> function sends the <code>oauth_*</code> parameters in the URL (by calling <code>oauth.signURL()</code>). If you prefer to send the <code>oauth_*</code> parameters in the <code>Authorization</code> header (or need direct access to the generated header), use <code>getAuthorizationHeader()</code>. Its arguments are a URI, an HTTP method, and an optional object of URL query parameters as key/value pairs.
    156 </p>
    157 
    158 <p>Here is the example above using <code>getAuthorizationHeader()</code> and an <code>XMLHttpRequest</code> object:</p>
    159 
    160 <pre>
    161 function stringify(parameters) {
    162   var params = [];
    163   for(var p in parameters) {
    164     params.push(encodeURIComponent(p) + '=' +
    165                 encodeURIComponent(parameters[p]));
    166   }
    167   return params.join('&');
    168 };
    169 
    170 function onAuthorized() {
    171   var method = 'POST';
    172   var url = 'https://docs.google.com/feeds/default/private/full';
    173   var params = {'alt': 'json'};
    174 
    175   var xhr = new XMLHttpRequest();
    176   xhr.onreadystatechange = function(data) {
    177     callback(xhr, data);
    178   };
    179   xhr.setRequestHeader('GData-Version', '3.0');
    180   xhr.setRequestHeader('Content-Type', 'application/atom+xml');
    181   xhr.setRequestHeader('Authorization', oauth.getAuthorizationHeader(url, method, params));
    182   xhr.open(method, url + '?' + stringify(params), true);
    183 
    184   xhr.send('Data to send');
    185 };
    186 </pre>
    187 
    188 <h2 id="sample-code">Sample code</h2>
    189 
    190 <p>
    191 Sample extensions that use these techniques are available in the Chromium source tree:
    192 </p>
    193 
    194 <ul>
    195 <li><a href="http://src.chromium.org/viewvc/chrome/trunk/src/chrome/common/extensions/docs/examples/extensions/gdocs/">.../examples/extensions/gdocs/</a></li>
    196 <li><a href="http://src.chromium.org/viewvc/chrome/trunk/src/chrome/common/extensions/docs/examples/extensions/oauth_contacts/">.../examples/extensions/oauth_contacts/</a></li>
    197 </ul>
    198 
    199