laminas-api-tools / api-tools-oauth2
Laminas module for implementing an OAuth2 server
Fund package maintenance!
Community Bridge
Installs: 1 420 595
Dependents: 5
Suggesters: 0
Security: 0
Stars: 11
Watchers: 12
Forks: 16
Open Issues: 18
Requires
- php: ~8.0.0 || ~8.1.0 || ~8.2.0
- bshaffer/oauth2-server-php: ^1.14.1
- laminas-api-tools/api-tools-api-problem: ^1.5
- laminas-api-tools/api-tools-content-negotiation: ^1.8.0
- laminas/laminas-crypt: ^3.4
- laminas/laminas-http: ^2.13
- laminas/laminas-mvc: ^2.7.15 || ^3.0.2
- laminas/laminas-mvc-i18n: ^1.2
- laminas/laminas-servicemanager: ^3.11
- webmozart/assert: ^1.10
Requires (Dev)
- laminas/laminas-authentication: ^2.8
- laminas/laminas-coding-standard: ~2.3.0
- laminas/laminas-db: ^2.12
- laminas/laminas-i18n: ^2.11.1
- laminas/laminas-log: ^2.13
- laminas/laminas-modulemanager: ^2.10
- laminas/laminas-serializer: ^2.10
- laminas/laminas-test: ^4.0.0
- mockery/mockery: ^1.3.2
- phpspec/prophecy-phpunit: ^2.0
- phpunit/phpunit: ^9.5.10
- psalm/plugin-phpunit: ^0.16
- vimeo/psalm: ^4.23
Suggests
- alcaeus/mongo-php-adapter: ^1.0.5, if you are using ext/mongodb and wish to use the MongoAdapter for OAuth2 credential storage.
Replaces
- zfcampus/zf-oauth2: ^1.5.0
- 1.10.x-dev
- 1.9.x-dev
- 1.9.0
- 1.8.x-dev
- 1.8.0
- 1.7.x-dev
- 1.7.2
- 1.7.1
- 1.7.0
- 1.6.x-dev
- 1.6.0
- 1.5.2
- 1.5.1
- 1.5.0p2
- 1.5.0p1
- 1.5.0
- 1.4.0p2
- 1.4.0p1
- 1.4.0
- 1.3.3p2
- 1.3.3p1
- 1.3.3
- 1.3.2p2
- 1.3.2p1
- 1.3.2
- 1.3.1p2
- 1.3.1p1
- 1.3.1
- 1.3.0p2
- 1.3.0p1
- 1.3.0
- 1.2.1p2
- 1.2.1p1
- 1.2.1
- 1.2.0p2
- 1.2.0p1
- 1.2.0
- 1.1.3p2
- 1.1.3p1
- 1.1.3
- 1.1.2p2
- 1.1.2p1
- 1.1.2
- 1.1.1p2
- 1.1.1p1
- 1.1.1
- 1.1.0p2
- 1.1.0p1
- 1.1.0
- 1.0.3p2
- 1.0.3p1
- 1.0.3
- 1.0.2p2
- 1.0.2p1
- 1.0.2
- 1.0.1p2
- 1.0.1p1
- 1.0.1
- 1.0.0p2
- 1.0.0p1
- 1.0.0
- 1.0.0beta3
- 1.0.0beta2
- 1.0.0beta1
- 0.9.1p2
- 0.9.1p1
- 0.9.1
- 0.9.0p2
- 0.9.0p1
- 0.9.0
- 0.8.0p2
- 0.8.0p1
- 0.8.0
- 0.7.0p2
- 0.7.0p1
- 0.7.0
This package is auto-updated.
Last update: 2024-12-11 18:39:13 UTC
README
π·πΊ Π ΡΡΡΠΊΠΈΠΌ Π³ΡΠ°ΠΆΠ΄Π°Π½Π°ΠΌ
ΠΡ, ΡΡΠ°ΡΡΠ½ΠΈΠΊΠΈ Laminas, ΡΠΎΠ΄ΠΈΠ»ΠΈΡΡ ΠΈ ΠΆΠΈΠ²Π΅ΠΌ Π² ΡΠ°Π·Π½ΡΡ ΡΡΡΠ°Π½Π°Ρ . Π£ ΠΌΠ½ΠΎΠ³ΠΈΡ ΠΈΠ· Π½Π°Ρ Π΅ΡΡΡ Π΄ΡΡΠ·ΡΡ, ΡΠΎΠ΄ΡΡΠ²Π΅Π½Π½ΠΈΠΊΠΈ ΠΈ ΠΊΠΎΠ»Π»Π΅Π³ΠΈ ΠΊΠ°ΠΊ Π² Π ΠΎΡΡΠΈΠΈ, ΡΠ°ΠΊ ΠΈ Π² Π£ΠΊΡΠ°ΠΈΠ½Π΅. ΠΠ΅ΠΊΠΎΡΠΎΡΡΠ΅ ΠΈΠ· Π½Π°Ρ ΡΠΎΠ΄ΠΈΠ»ΠΈΡΡ Π² Π ΠΎΡΡΠΈΠΈ. ΠΠ΅ΠΊΠΎΡΠΎΡΡΠ΅ ΠΈΠ· Π½Π°Ρ ΠΆΠΈΠ²ΡΡ Π² Π ΠΎΡΡΠΈΠΈ. Π£ Π½Π΅ΠΊΠΎΡΠΎΡΡΡ Π±Π°Π±ΡΡΠΊΠΈ ΠΈ Π΄Π΅Π΄ΡΡΠΊΠΈ ΡΡΠ°ΠΆΠ°Π»ΠΈΡΡ Ρ ΡΠ°ΡΠΈΡΡΠ°ΠΌΠΈ Π²ΠΎ ΠΡΠΎΡΠΎΠΉ ΠΌΠΈΡΠΎΠ²ΠΎΠΉ Π²ΠΎΠΉΠ½Π΅. ΠΠ΄Π΅ΡΡ Π½ΠΈΠΊΡΠΎ Π½Π΅ ΠΏΠΎΠ΄Π΄Π΅ΡΠΆΠΈΠ²Π°Π΅Ρ ΡΠ°ΡΠΈΠ·ΠΌ.
Π£ ΠΎΠ΄Π½ΠΎΠ³ΠΎ ΠΈΠ· Π½Π°Ρ Π΅ΡΡΡ ΡΠΊΡΠ°ΠΈΠ½ΡΠΊΠ°Ρ ΡΠΎΠ΄ΡΡΠ²Π΅Π½Π½ΠΈΡΠ°, ΠΊΠΎΡΠΎΡΠ°Ρ ΡΠΏΠ°ΡΠ»Π°ΡΡ ΠΈΠ· Π΄ΠΎΠΌΠ° Π²ΠΌΠ΅ΡΡΠ΅ Ρ ΡΡΠ½ΠΎΠΌ. ΠΠΎΠ΅Π·Π΄ Π·Π°Π΄Π΅ΡΠΆΠ°Π»ΡΡ ΠΈΠ·-Π·Π° Π±ΠΎΠΌΠ±Π΅ΠΆΠΊΠΈ Π½Π° Π΄ΠΎΡΠΎΠ³Π΅ Π²ΠΏΠ΅ΡΠ΅Π΄ΠΈ. Π£ Π½Π°Ρ Π΅ΡΡΡ Π΄ΡΡΠ·ΡΡ, ΠΊΠΎΡΠΎΡΡΠ΅ ΠΏΡΡΡΡΡΡΡ Π² Π±ΠΎΠΌΠ±ΠΎΡΠ±Π΅ΠΆΠΈΡΠ°Ρ . ΠΡ Ρ ΡΡΠ΅Π²ΠΎΠ³ΠΎΠΉ ΠΆΠ΄Π΅ΠΌ Π²Π΅ΡΡΠΎΡΠΊΠΈ ΠΎΡ Π½ΠΈΡ ΠΏΠΎΡΠ»Π΅ Π²ΠΎΠ·Π΄ΡΡΠ½ΡΡ Π½Π°Π»Π΅ΡΠΎΠ², ΠΊΠΎΡΠΎΡΡΠ΅ Π±Π΅ΡΠΏΠΎΡΡΠ΄ΠΎΡΠ½ΠΎ Π½Π°Π½ΠΎΡΡΡ ΡΠ΄Π°ΡΡ ΠΈ ΠΏΠΎΠΏΠ°Π΄Π°ΡΡ ΠΏΠΎ Π±ΠΎΠ»ΡΠ½ΠΈΡΠ°ΠΌ, ΡΠΊΠΎΠ»Π°ΠΌ, Π΄Π΅ΡΡΠΊΠΈΠΌ ΡΠ°Π΄Π°ΠΌ ΠΈ Π΄ΠΎΠΌΠ°ΠΌ. ΠΡ Π½Π΅ Π±Π΅ΡΠ΅ΠΌ ΡΡΠΎ ΠΈΠ· ΠΊΠ°ΠΊΠΈΡ -Π»ΠΈΠ±ΠΎ Π‘ΠΠ. ΠΡ Π½Π°Π±Π»ΡΠ΄Π°Π΅ΠΌ ΡΡΠΎ Π½Π°ΠΏΡΡΠΌΡΡ.
ΠΡ Π΄ΠΎΠ²Π΅ΡΡΠ΅ΡΠ΅ Π½Π°ΠΌ Π΄ΠΎΡΡΠ°ΡΠΎΡΠ½ΠΎ, ΡΡΠΎΠ± ΠΈΡΠΏΠΎΠ»ΡΠ·ΠΎΠ²Π°ΡΡ Π½Π°ΡΠΈ ΠΏΡΠΎΠ³ΡΠ°ΠΌΠΌΡ, ΠΈ ΠΌΡ ΠΏΡΠΎΡΠΈΠΌ Π²Π°Ρ Π΄ΠΎΠ²Π΅ΡΠΈΡΡΡΡ Π½Π°ΠΌ Π²Π½ΠΎΠ²Ρ. ΠΡ Π½ΡΠΆΠ΄Π°Π΅ΠΌΡΡ Π² ΠΏΠΎΠΌΠΎΡΠΈ. ΠΡΡ ΠΎΠ΄ΠΈΡΠ΅ ΠΈ ΠΏΡΠΎΡΠ΅ΡΡΡΠΉΡΠ΅ ΠΏΡΠΎΡΠΈΠ² ΡΡΠΎΠΉ Π±Π΅ΡΠΏΠΎΠ»Π΅Π·Π½ΠΎΠΉ Π²ΠΎΠΉΠ½Ρ. ΠΡΡΠ°Π½ΠΎΠ²ΠΈΡΠ΅ ΠΊΡΠΎΠ²ΠΎΠΏΡΠΎΠ»ΠΈΡΠΈΠ΅. Π‘ΠΊΠ°ΠΆΠΈΡΠ΅ "ΠΠ΅Ρ Π²ΠΎΠΉΠ½Π΅!"
πΊπΈ To Citizens of Russia
We at Laminas come from all over the world. Many of us have friends, family and colleagues in both Russia and Ukraine. Some of us were born in Russia. Some of us currently live in Russia. Some have grandparents who fought Nazis in World War II. Nobody here supports fascism.
One team member has a Ukrainian relative who fled her home with her son. The train was delayed due to bombing on the road ahead. We have friends who are hiding in bomb shelters. We anxiously follow up on them after the air raids, which indiscriminately fire at hospitals, schools, kindergartens and houses. We're not taking this from any media. These are our actual experiences.
You trust us enough to use our software. We ask that you trust us to say the truth on this. We need your help. Go out and protest this unnecessary war. Stop the bloodshed. Say "stop the war!"
Laminas module for OAuth2 authentication.
This module uses the oauth2-server-php library by Brent Shaffer to provide OAuth2 support.
Requirements
Please see the composer.json file.
Installation
You can install using:
$ composer require laminas-api-tools/api-tools-oauth2
If you are using ext/mongodb, you will also need to install a compatibility package:
$ composer require alcaeus/mongo-php-adapter
Finally, you will need to add the following modules to your application's configuration:
'modules' => [ /* ... */ 'Laminas\ApiTools\ApiProblem', 'Laminas\ApiTools\ContentNegotiation', 'Laminas\ApiTools\OAuth2', ],
laminas-component-installer
If you use laminas-component-installer, that plugin will install api-tools-oauth2 and its other Laminas API Tools dependencies as modules for you.
Configuration
This module uses any PDO-suported database to manage the OAuth2 information
(users, client, token, etc). The database structure is stored in
data/db_oauth2.sql
.
CREATE TABLE oauth_clients ( client_id VARCHAR(80) NOT NULL, client_secret VARCHAR(80) NOT NULL, redirect_uri VARCHAR(2000) NOT NULL, grant_types VARCHAR(80), scope VARCHAR(2000), user_id VARCHAR(255), CONSTRAINT clients_client_id_pk PRIMARY KEY (client_id) ); CREATE TABLE oauth_access_tokens ( access_token VARCHAR(40) NOT NULL, client_id VARCHAR(80) NOT NULL, user_id VARCHAR(255), expires TIMESTAMP NOT NULL, scope VARCHAR(2000), CONSTRAINT access_token_pk PRIMARY KEY (access_token) ); CREATE TABLE oauth_authorization_codes ( authorization_code VARCHAR(40) NOT NULL, client_id VARCHAR(80) NOT NULL, user_id VARCHAR(255), redirect_uri VARCHAR(2000), expires TIMESTAMP NOT NULL, scope VARCHAR(2000), id_token VARCHAR(2000), CONSTRAINT auth_code_pk PRIMARY KEY (authorization_code) ); CREATE TABLE oauth_refresh_tokens ( refresh_token VARCHAR(40) NOT NULL, client_id VARCHAR(80) NOT NULL, user_id VARCHAR(255), expires TIMESTAMP NOT NULL, scope VARCHAR(2000), CONSTRAINT refresh_token_pk PRIMARY KEY (refresh_token) ); CREATE TABLE oauth_users ( username VARCHAR(255) NOT NULL, password VARCHAR(2000), first_name VARCHAR(255), last_name VARCHAR(255), CONSTRAINT username_pk PRIMARY KEY (username) ); CREATE TABLE oauth_scopes ( type VARCHAR(255) NOT NULL DEFAULT "supported", scope VARCHAR(2000), client_id VARCHAR (80), is_default SMALLINT DEFAULT NULL ); CREATE TABLE oauth_jwt ( client_id VARCHAR(80) NOT NULL, subject VARCHAR(80), public_key VARCHAR(2000), CONSTRAINT jwt_client_id_pk PRIMARY KEY (client_id) );
PostgreSQL
We also have a PostgreSQL-specific DDL in
data/db_oauth2_postgresql.sql
.
For security reasons, we encrypt the fields client_secret
(table
oauth_clients
) and password
(table oauth_users
) using the
bcrypt algorithm (via the class
Laminas\Crypt\Password\Bcrypt).
In order to configure the api-tools-oauth2 module for database access, you need to copy
the file config/oauth2.local.php.dist
to config/autoload/oauth2.local.php
in
your Laminas application, and edit it to provide your DB credentials (DNS, username,
password).
We also include a SQLite database in data/dbtest.sqlite
that you can use in a
test environment. In this database, you will find a test client account with
the client_id
"testclient" and the client_secret
"testpass". If you want to
use this database, you can configure your config/autoload/oauth2.local.php
file as follow:
return array( 'api-tools-oauth2' => array( 'db' => array( 'dsn' => 'sqlite:<path to api-tools-oauth2 module>/data/dbtest.sqlite', ), ), );
Mongo Configuration
The Mongo OAuth2 adapter wraps the bshaffer adapter by adding the same password encryption as the rest of api-tools. The collections needed are the same as above in the PDO adapter. To create an OAuth2 client, insert a document like the following into the oauth_clients collection:
{ "client_id": "testclient", "client_secret": "$2y$14$f3qml4G2hG6sxM26VMq.geDYbsS089IBtVJ7DlD05BoViS9PFykE2", "redirect_uri": "/oauth/receivecode", "grant_types": null }
User ID Provider
When a user requests an authorization code they may provide their user_id as a request parameter to
the /oauth/authorize
route. This will store the user_id
in the access_token
, refresh_token
,
and authorization_code
tables as the user goes throught the oauth2 process.
A user may be authenticated through Laminas\Authentication\AuthenticationService
or another
authentication means. When a user must provide authentication before they may access the
/oauth/authorize
route, the authenticated user ID should be used. This is done with the service
manager alias Laminas\ApiTools\OAuth2\Provider\UserId
.
The default User ID Provider uses the request query parameter user_id
and is handled via the class
Laminas\ApiTools\OAuth2\Provider\UserId\Request
.
Provided with this repository is an alternative provider,
Laminas\ApiTools\OAuth2\Provider\UserId\AuthorizationService
, which uses
Laminas\Authentication\AuthenticationService
to fetch the identity. To change the User ID Provider
to use this service, change the Laminas\ApiTools\OAuth2\Provider\UserId
service alias to point at it:
return array( 'service_manager' => 'aliases' => array( 'Laminas\ApiTools\OAuth2\Provider\UserId' => 'Laminas\ApiTools\OAuth2\Provider\UserId\AuthenticationService', ), ), );
How to test OAuth2
To test the OAuth2 module, you have to add a client_id
and a client_secret
into the oauth2 database. If you are using the SQLite test database, you don't
need to add a client_id
; just use the default "testclient"/"testpass" account.
Because we encrypt the password using the bcrypt
algorithm, you need to
encrypt the password using the Laminas\Crypt\Password\Bcrypt
class from Laminas. We provided a simple script in /bin/bcrypt.php
to
generate the hash value of a user's password. You can use this tool from the
command line, with the following syntax:
php bin/bcrypt.php testpass
where "testpass" is the user's password that you want to encrypt. The output of the previous command will be the hash value of the user's password, a string of 60 bytes like the following:
$2y$14$f3qml4G2hG6sxM26VMq.geDYbsS089IBtVJ7DlD05BoViS9PFykE2
After the generation of the hash value of the password (client_secret
), you can
add a new client_id
in the database using the following SQL statement:
INSERT INTO oauth_clients ( client_id, client_secret, redirect_uri) VALUES ( "testclient", "$2y$14$f3qml4G2hG6sxM26VMq.geDYbsS089IBtVJ7DlD05BoViS9PFykE2", "/oauth/receivecode" );
To test the OAuth2 module, you can use an HTTP client like HTTPie or CURL. The examples below use HTTPie and the test account "testclient"/"testpass".
REQUEST TOKEN (client_credentials)
You can request an OAuth2 token using the following HTTPie command:
http --auth testclient:testpass -f POST http://<URL of your Laminas app>/oauth grant_type=client_credentials
This POST requests a new token to the OAuth2 server using the client_credentials mode. This is typical in machine-to-machine interaction for application access. If everything works fine, you should receive a response like this:
{ "access_token":"03807cb390319329bdf6c777d4dfae9c0d3b3c35", "expires_in":3600, "token_type":"bearer", "scope":null }
Security note: because this POST uses basic HTTP authentication, the
client_secret
is exposed in plaintext in the HTTP request. To protect this
call, a TLS/SSL
connection is required.
AUTHORIZE (code)
If you have to integrate an OAuth2 service with a web application, you need to use the Authorization Code grant type. This grant requires an approval step to authorize the web application. This step is implemented using a simple form that requests the user approve access to the resource (account). This module provides a simple form to authorize a specific client. This form can be accessed by a browser using the following URL:
http://<URL of your Laminas app>/oauth/authorize?response_type=code&client_id=testclient&redirect_uri=/oauth/receivecode&state=xyz
This page will render the form asking the user to authorize or deny the access for the client. If they authorize the access, the OAuth2 module will reply with an Authorization code. This code must be used to request an OAuth2 token; the following HTTPie command provides an example of how to do that:
http --auth testclient:testpass -f POST http://<URL of your Laminas app>/oauth grant_type=authorization_code&code=YOUR_CODE&redirect_uri=/oauth/receivecode
In client-side scenarios (i.e mobile) where you cannot store the Client Credentials in a secure way, you cannot use the previous workflow. In this case we can use an implicit grant. This is similar to the authorization code, but rather than an authorization code being returned from the authorization request, a token is returned.
To enable the module to accept the implicit grant type, you need to change the
configuration of allow_implicit
to true
in the
config/autoload/oauth2.local.php
file:
return array( 'api-tools-oauth2' => array( // ... 'allow_implicit' => true, // ... ), );
To request a token from the client side, you need to request authorization via the OAuth2 server:
http://<URL of your Laminas app>/oauth/authorize?response_type=token&client_id=testclient&redirect_uri=/oauth/receivecode&state=xyz
This request will render the authorization form as in the previous example. If
you authorize the access, the request will be redirected to /oauth/receivecode
(as provided in the redirect_uri
parameter in the above example), with the
access_token
specified in the URI fragment, per the following sample:
/oauth/receivecode#access_token=559d8f9b6bedd8d94c8e8d708f87475f4838c514&expires_in=3600&token_type=Bearer&state=xyz
To get the access_token
, you can parse the URI. We used the URI fragment to
pass the access_token
because in this way the token is not transmitted to the
server; it will available only to the client.
In JavaScript, you can easily parse the URI with this snippet of code:
// function to parse fragment parameters var parseQueryString = function( queryString ) { var params = {}, queries, temp, i, l; // Split into key/value pairs queries = queryString.split("&"); // Convert the array of strings into an object for ( i = 0, l = queries.length; i < l; i++ ) { temp = queries[i].split('='); params[temp[0]] = temp[1]; } return params; }; // get token params from URL fragment var tokenParams = parseQueryString(window.location.hash.substr(1));
REVOKE (code)
Starting with version 1.4.0, you can revoke access tokens. By default, revocation
happens via a POST request to the path /oauth/revoke
, which expects a payload
with:
token
, the OAuth2 access token to revoke.token_type_hint => 'access_token'
, indicating that an access token is being revoked.
The payload may be delivered as application/x-www-form-urlencoded
or as JSON.
Access a test resource
When you obtain a valid token, you can access a restricted API resource. The
OAuth2 module is shipped with a test resource that is accessible with the URL
/oauth/resource
. This is a simple resource that returns JSON data.
To access the test resource, you can use the following HTTPie command:
http -f POST http://<URL of your Laminas app>/oauth/resource access_token=000ab5afab4cbbbda803fb9e50e7943f5e766748 # or http http://<<URL of your Laminas app>/oauth/resource "Authorization:Bearer 000ab5afab4cbbbda803fb9e50e7943f5e766748"
As you can see, the OAuth2 module supports the data either via POST, using the
access_token
value, or using the Bearer
authorization header.
How to protect your API using OAuth2
You can protect your API using the following code (for instance, at the top of a controller):
if (!$this->server->verifyResourceRequest(OAuth2Request::createFromGlobals())) { // Not authorized return 401 error $this->getResponse()->setStatusCode(401); return; }
where $this->server
is an instance of OAuth2\Server
(see the
AuthController.php).