Documentation

You are viewing the documentation for the 2.2.1 release in the 2.2.x series of releases. The latest stable release series is 3.0.x.

§OAuth

OAuth is a simple way to publish and interact with protected data. It’s also a safer and more secure way for people to give you access. For example, it can be used to access your users’ data on Twitter.

There are 2 very different versions of OAuth: OAuth 1.0 and OAuth 2.0. Version 2 is simple enough to be implemented easily without library or helpers, so Play only provides support for OAuth 1.0.

§Required Information

OAuth requires you to register your application to the service provider. Make sure to check the callback URL that you provide, because the service provider may reject your calls if they don’t match. When working locally, you can use /etc/hosts to fake a domain on your local machine.

The service provider will give you:

§Authentication Flow

Most of the flow will be done by the Play library.

  1. Get a request token from the server (in a server-to-server call)
  2. Redirect the user to the service provider, where he will grant your application rights to use his data
  3. The service provider will redirect the user back, giving you a /verifier/
  4. With that verifier, exchange the /request token/ for an /access token/ (server-to-server call)

Now the /access token/ can be passed to any call to access protected data.

§Example

object Twitter extends Controller {

  val KEY = ConsumerKey("xxxxx", "xxxxx")

  val TWITTER = OAuth(ServiceInfo(
    "https://api.twitter.com/oauth/request_token",
    "https://api.twitter.com/oauth/access_token",
    "https://api.twitter.com/oauth/authorize", KEY),
    true)

  def authenticate = Action { request =>
    request.getQueryString("oauth_verifier").map { verifier =>
      val tokenPair = sessionTokenPair(request).get
      // We got the verifier; now get the access token, store it and back to index
      TWITTER.retrieveAccessToken(tokenPair, verifier) match {
        case Right(t) => {
          // We received the authorized tokens in the OAuth object - store it before we proceed
          Redirect(routes.Application.index).withSession("token" -> t.token, "secret" -> t.secret)
        }
        case Left(e) => throw e
      }
    }.getOrElse(
      TWITTER.retrieveRequestToken("http://localhost:9000/auth") match {
        case Right(t) => {
          // We received the unauthorized tokens in the OAuth object - store it before we proceed
          Redirect(TWITTER.redirectUrl(t.token)).withSession("token" -> t.token, "secret" -> t.secret)
        }
        case Left(e) => throw e
      })
  }

  def sessionTokenPair(implicit request: RequestHeader): Option[RequestToken] = {
    for {
      token <- request.session.get("token")
      secret <- request.session.get("secret")
    } yield {
      RequestToken(token, secret)
    }
  }
}
object Application extends Controller {

  def timeline = Action { implicit request =>
    Twitter.sessionTokenPair match {
      case Some(credentials) =>
        Async {
          WS.url("https://api.twitter.com/1.1/statuses/home_timeline.json")
            .sign(OAuthCalculator(Twitter.KEY, credentials))
            .get
            .map(result => Ok(result.json))
        }
      
      case _ => Redirect(routes.Twitter.authenticate)
    }
  }
}

Next: Integrating with Akka