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Seo Master present to you:

Cheers to the 100 Code Jammers who made it to the Code Jam finals in Mountain View today! We hope you enjoyed the competition as much as we enjoyed seeing you type furiously, solve ridiculously challenging puzzles, and meet other programming pros. Speaking of pros, a team that included past Code Jam winners used their 20% time to create a new platform that allowed everyone to program in the language of their choice. It was, as you know, a long road to the last round of Code Jam. More than 11,000 of you participated in online rounds, 500 semi-finalists reached the regional stage and 100 finalists from 23 different countries competed this morning. We're pleased to finally announce the day's results: Tiancheng Lou of China took home the $10,000 Grand Prize. Zeyuan Zhu from China won second place, Bruce Merry from United Kingdom came in third and cash prizes went to the other finalists.

Congrats to all and see you at the next Jam!2013, By: Seo Master
Seo Master present to you: Author Photo
By Justin Smith, Senior Product Manager

UPDATE 11/14: After considering the feedback and timing, we have decided to delay the launch of the changes described in this post. The new date for these changes is December 7th, 2011. Once again, we expect these changes to have minimal impact. If you have any questions or comments, please post on the OAuth 2.0 Group. We will be actively monitoring that group and will work to respond quickly.


Original post:

In the coming weeks we will be making three changes to the experimental OAuth 2.0 endpoint. We expect the impact to be minimal, and we’re emailing developers who are most likely to be affected.

We will be releasing these changes on December 7, 2011. This post describes the changes, their impact, and how they can be mitigated.

Change #1: Error responses for client-side web applications

The first change relates to the way errors are returned in OAuth 2.0 client-side web applications. It does not impact server-side, native, or device flows.

The current behavior of the OAuth 2.0 endpoint in certain error conditions is to return the error to the application as a query string parameter, for example:

https://www.example.com/back?error=access_denied.

The OAuth 2.0 specification indicates that the error should be returned in the fragment of the response. We are updating our OAuth 2.0 implementation to support the most recent draft of the specification. As a result, we will be changing the way we return errors to applications in the client-side flow.

As an example, today an error returns to your application as

https://www.example.com/back?error=access_denied. After this change, it will be returned as

https://www.example.com/back#error=access_denied.

There is no mitigation for this change, so your application will have to handle these types of errors in client-side script.

Change #2: Offline access as a separate parameter

The second change impacts the OAuth 2.0 server-side flow only. It does not impact client-side, native, or device flows. For context, this flow consists of the following steps:
  1. Redirect the browser to the Google OAuth 2.0 endpoint.
  2. The user will be shown a consent page.
  3. If the user consents, parse the authorization code from the query string of the response.
  4. Exchange the authorization code for a short-lived access token and a long-lived refresh token.
Once your application has obtained a long-lived refresh token (step 4), it may access a Google API at any time. This means server-side applications do not require the end-user to be present when obtaining new access tokens. We’re calling this type of access offline.

The client-side flow, in contrast, requires the user to be present when obtaining an access token. This type of access is called online.

With this change, we will be exposing online and offline access as a separate parameter that’s available only in the server-side flow.

When your application requests offline access, the consent page shown to a user will reflect that your application requests offline access and your application will receive an access and a refresh token. Once your application has a refresh token, it may obtain a new access token at any time.

When your application requests online access, your application will only receive an access token. No refresh token will be returned. This means that a user must be present in order for your application to obtain a new access token.

If unspecified in the request, online is the default.

A mitigation for this change is described at the end of this post.

Change #3: Server-side auto-approval

This change also impacts the OAuth 2.0 server-side flow only.

In the current implementation of OAuth2, every time your application redirects a user to Google, that user must give explicit consent before an authorization code is given to your application. As a result, sending a user through the flow another time requires them to see the consent screen again. Most applications don’t do this, but rather use the existing server-side flow as it was intended: a one-time association (import contacts, calendar operations, etc.) where the result is a refresh token which may be used to obtain new access tokens.

The behavior is changing to the following:
  • Users will only see the consent screen on their first time through the sequence.
  • If the application requests offline access, only the first authorization code exchange results in a refresh token.
To put it another way, consent will be auto-approved for returning users unless the user has revoked access. Refresh tokens are not returned for responses that were auto-approved.

The next section describes how to mitigate this change.

Mitigation of offline access (#2) and auto-approval (#3) changes

If you want to keep the existing behavior in your server-side applications, include the approval_prompt=force and access_type=offline parameters in an authorization code request.

For example, if the following is a target URL for obtaining an authorization code today:
https://accounts.google.com/o/oauth2/auth?
client_id=21302922996.apps.googleusercontent.com&
redirect_uri=https://www.example.com/back&
scope=https://www.google.com/m8/feeds/&
response_type=code
You can maintain the current behavior by changing the target URL to:
https://accounts.google.com/o/oauth2/auth?
client_id=21302922996.apps.googleusercontent.com&
redirect_uri=https://www.example.com/back&
scope=https://www.google.com/m8/feeds/&
response_type=code&
access_type=offline&
approval_prompt=force
You may start including these parameters in authorization code requests today.

Questions?

If you have any questions or comments, please post on the OAuth 2.0 Group (https://groups.google.com/forum/#!forum/OAuth 2.0-dev). We will be actively monitoring that group and will work to respond quickly.


Justin Smith is a Product Manager who works on authentication and authorization technologies at Google. He enjoys woodworking, cycling, country music, and the company of his wife (not necessarily in that order).

Posted by Scott Knaster, Editor
2013, By: Seo Master
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