google

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Published: Nov 28, 2022 License: BSD-3-Clause Imports: 26 Imported by: 0

Documentation

Overview

Package google provides support for making OAuth2 authorized and authenticated HTTP requests to Google APIs. It supports the Web server flow, client-side credentials, service accounts, Google Compute Engine service accounts, Google App Engine service accounts and workload identity federation from non-Google cloud platforms.

A brief overview of the package follows. For more information, please read https://developers.google.com/accounts/docs/OAuth2 and https://developers.google.com/accounts/docs/application-default-credentials. For more information on using workload identity federation, refer to https://cloud.google.com/iam/docs/how-to#using-workload-identity-federation.

OAuth2 Configs

Two functions in this package return golang.org/x/oauth2.Config values from Google credential data. Google supports two JSON formats for OAuth2 credentials: one is handled by ConfigFromJSON, the other by JWTConfigFromJSON. The returned Config can be used to obtain a TokenSource or create an http.Client.

Workload Identity Federation

Using workload identity federation, your application can access Google Cloud resources from Amazon Web Services (AWS), Microsoft Azure or any identity provider that supports OpenID Connect (OIDC). Traditionally, applications running outside Google Cloud have used service account keys to access Google Cloud resources. Using identity federation, you can allow your workload to impersonate a service account. This lets you access Google Cloud resources directly, eliminating the maintenance and security burden associated with service account keys.

Follow the detailed instructions on how to configure Workload Identity Federation in various platforms:

Amazon Web Services (AWS): https://cloud.google.com/iam/docs/access-resources-aws
Microsoft Azure: https://cloud.google.com/iam/docs/access-resources-azure
OIDC identity provider: https://cloud.google.com/iam/docs/access-resources-oidc

For OIDC and SAML providers, the library can retrieve tokens in three ways: from a local file location (file-sourced credentials), from a server (URL-sourced credentials), or from a local executable (executable-sourced credentials). For file-sourced credentials, a background process needs to be continuously refreshing the file location with a new OIDC token prior to expiration. For tokens with one hour lifetimes, the token needs to be updated in the file every hour. The token can be stored directly as plain text or in JSON format. For URL-sourced credentials, a local server needs to host a GET endpoint to return the OIDC token. The response can be in plain text or JSON. Additional required request headers can also be specified. For executable-sourced credentials, an application needs to be available to output the OIDC token and other information in a JSON format. For more information on how these work (and how to implement executable-sourced credentials), please check out: https://cloud.google.com/iam/docs/using-workload-identity-federation#oidc

Credentials

The Credentials type represents Google credentials, including Application Default Credentials.

Use FindDefaultCredentials to obtain Application Default Credentials. FindDefaultCredentials looks in some well-known places for a credentials file, and will call AppEngineTokenSource or ComputeTokenSource as needed.

Application Default Credentials also support workload identity federation to access Google Cloud resources from non-Google Cloud platforms including Amazon Web Services (AWS), Microsoft Azure or any identity provider that supports OpenID Connect (OIDC). Workload identity federation is recommended for non-Google Cloud environments as it avoids the need to download, manage and store service account private keys locally.

DefaultClient and DefaultTokenSource are convenience methods. They first call FindDefaultCredentials, then use the credentials to construct an http.Client or an oauth2.TokenSource.

Use CredentialsFromJSON to obtain credentials from either of the two JSON formats described in OAuth2 Configs, above. The TokenSource in the returned value is the same as the one obtained from the oauth2.Config returned from ConfigFromJSON or JWTConfigFromJSON, but the Credentials may contain additional information that is useful is some circumstances.

Example (ServiceAccount)
package main

import (
	"golang.org/x/oauth2"
	"golang.org/x/oauth2/google"
	"golang.org/x/oauth2/jwt"
)

func main() {
	// Your credentials should be obtained from the Google
	// Developer Console (https://console.developers.google.com).
	conf := &jwt.Config{
		Email: "xxx@developer.gserviceaccount.com",
		// The contents of your RSA private key or your PEM file
		// that contains a private key.
		// If you have a p12 file instead, you
		// can use `openssl` to export the private key into a pem file.
		//
		//    $ openssl pkcs12 -in key.p12 -passin pass:notasecret -out key.pem -nodes
		//
		// The field only supports PEM containers with no passphrase.
		// The openssl command will convert p12 keys to passphrase-less PEM containers.
		PrivateKey: []byte("-----BEGIN RSA PRIVATE KEY-----..."),
		Scopes: []string{
			"https://www.googleapis.com/auth/bigquery",
			"https://www.googleapis.com/auth/blogger",
		},
		TokenURL: google.JWTTokenURL,
		// If you would like to impersonate a user, you can
		// create a transport with a subject. The following GET
		// request will be made on the behalf of user@example.com.
		// Optional.
		Subject: "user@example.com",
	}
	// Initiate an http.Client, the following GET request will be
	// authorized and authenticated on the behalf of user@example.com.
	client := conf.Client(oauth2.NoContext)
	client.Get("...")
}
Output:

Example (WebServer)
package main

import (
	"fmt"
	"log"

	"golang.org/x/oauth2"
	"golang.org/x/oauth2/google"
)

func main() {
	// Your credentials should be obtained from the Google
	// Developer Console (https://console.developers.google.com).
	conf := &oauth2.Config{
		ClientID:     "YOUR_CLIENT_ID",
		ClientSecret: "YOUR_CLIENT_SECRET",
		RedirectURL:  "YOUR_REDIRECT_URL",
		Scopes: []string{
			"https://www.googleapis.com/auth/bigquery",
			"https://www.googleapis.com/auth/blogger",
		},
		Endpoint: google.Endpoint,
	}
	// Redirect user to Google's consent page to ask for permission
	// for the scopes specified above.
	url := conf.AuthCodeURL("state")
	fmt.Printf("Visit the URL for the auth dialog: %v", url)

	// Handle the exchange code to initiate a transport.
	tok, err := conf.Exchange(oauth2.NoContext, "authorization-code")
	if err != nil {
		log.Fatal(err)
	}
	client := conf.Client(oauth2.NoContext, tok)
	client.Get("...")
}
Output:

Index

Examples

Constants

View Source
const JWTTokenURL = "https://oauth2.googleapis.com/token"

JWTTokenURL is Google's OAuth 2.0 token URL to use with the JWT flow.

Variables

View Source
var Endpoint = oauth2.Endpoint{
	AuthURL:   "https://accounts.google.com/o/oauth2/auth",
	TokenURL:  "https://oauth2.googleapis.com/token",
	AuthStyle: oauth2.AuthStyleInParams,
}

Endpoint is Google's OAuth 2.0 default endpoint.

Functions

func AppEngineTokenSource

func AppEngineTokenSource(ctx context.Context, scope ...string) oauth2.TokenSource

AppEngineTokenSource returns a token source that fetches tokens from either the current application's service account or from the metadata server, depending on the App Engine environment. See below for environment-specific details. If you are implementing a 3-legged OAuth 2.0 flow on App Engine that involves user accounts, see oauth2.Config instead.

First generation App Engine runtimes (<= Go 1.9): AppEngineTokenSource returns a token source that fetches tokens issued to the current App Engine application's service account. The provided context must have come from appengine.NewContext.

Second generation App Engine runtimes (>= Go 1.11) and App Engine flexible: AppEngineTokenSource is DEPRECATED on second generation runtimes and on the flexible environment. It delegates to ComputeTokenSource, and the provided context and scopes are not used. Please use DefaultTokenSource (or ComputeTokenSource, which DefaultTokenSource will use in this case) instead.

func ComputeTokenSource

func ComputeTokenSource(account string, scope ...string) oauth2.TokenSource

ComputeTokenSource returns a token source that fetches access tokens from Google Compute Engine (GCE)'s metadata server. It's only valid to use this token source if your program is running on a GCE instance. If no account is specified, "default" is used. If no scopes are specified, a set of default scopes are automatically granted. Further information about retrieving access tokens from the GCE metadata server can be found at https://cloud.google.com/compute/docs/authentication.

Example
package main

import (
	"net/http"

	"golang.org/x/oauth2"
	"golang.org/x/oauth2/google"
)

func main() {
	client := &http.Client{
		Transport: &oauth2.Transport{
			// Fetch from Google Compute Engine's metadata server to retrieve
			// an access token for the provided account.
			// If no account is specified, "default" is used.
			// If no scopes are specified, a set of default scopes
			// are automatically granted.
			Source: google.ComputeTokenSource("", "https://www.googleapis.com/auth/bigquery"),
		},
	}
	client.Get("...")
}
Output:

func ConfigFromJSON

func ConfigFromJSON(jsonKey []byte, scope ...string) (*oauth2.Config, error)

ConfigFromJSON uses a Google Developers Console client_credentials.json file to construct a config. client_credentials.json can be downloaded from https://console.developers.google.com, under "Credentials". Download the Web application credentials in the JSON format and provide the contents of the file as jsonKey.

func DefaultClient

func DefaultClient(ctx context.Context, scope ...string) (*http.Client, error)

DefaultClient returns an HTTP Client that uses the DefaultTokenSource to obtain authentication credentials.

Example
package main

import (
	"log"

	"golang.org/x/oauth2"
	"golang.org/x/oauth2/google"
)

func main() {
	client, err := google.DefaultClient(oauth2.NoContext,
		"https://www.googleapis.com/auth/devstorage.full_control")
	if err != nil {
		log.Fatal(err)
	}
	client.Get("...")
}
Output:

func DefaultTokenSource

func DefaultTokenSource(ctx context.Context, scope ...string) (oauth2.TokenSource, error)

DefaultTokenSource returns the token source for "Application Default Credentials". It is a shortcut for FindDefaultCredentials(ctx, scope).TokenSource.

func JWTAccessTokenSourceFromJSON

func JWTAccessTokenSourceFromJSON(jsonKey []byte, audience string) (oauth2.TokenSource, error)

JWTAccessTokenSourceFromJSON uses a Google Developers service account JSON key file to read the credentials that authorize and authenticate the requests, and returns a TokenSource that does not use any OAuth2 flow but instead creates a JWT and sends that as the access token. The audience is typically a URL that specifies the scope of the credentials.

Note that this is not a standard OAuth flow, but rather an optimization supported by a few Google services. Unless you know otherwise, you should use JWTConfigFromJSON instead.

func JWTAccessTokenSourceWithScope

func JWTAccessTokenSourceWithScope(jsonKey []byte, scope ...string) (oauth2.TokenSource, error)

JWTAccessTokenSourceWithScope uses a Google Developers service account JSON key file to read the credentials that authorize and authenticate the requests, and returns a TokenSource that does not use any OAuth2 flow but instead creates a JWT and sends that as the access token. The scope is typically a list of URLs that specifies the scope of the credentials.

Note that this is not a standard OAuth flow, but rather an optimization supported by a few Google services. Unless you know otherwise, you should use JWTConfigFromJSON instead.

func JWTConfigFromJSON

func JWTConfigFromJSON(jsonKey []byte, scope ...string) (*jwt.Config, error)

JWTConfigFromJSON uses a Google Developers service account JSON key file to read the credentials that authorize and authenticate the requests. Create a service account on "Credentials" for your project at https://console.developers.google.com to download a JSON key file.

Example
package main

import (
	"io/ioutil"
	"log"

	"golang.org/x/oauth2"
	"golang.org/x/oauth2/google"
)

func main() {
	// Your credentials should be obtained from the Google
	// Developer Console (https://console.developers.google.com).
	// Navigate to your project, then see the "Credentials" page
	// under "APIs & Auth".
	// To create a service account client, click "Create new Client ID",
	// select "Service Account", and click "Create Client ID". A JSON
	// key file will then be downloaded to your computer.
	data, err := ioutil.ReadFile("/path/to/your-project-key.json")
	if err != nil {
		log.Fatal(err)
	}
	conf, err := google.JWTConfigFromJSON(data, "https://www.googleapis.com/auth/bigquery")
	if err != nil {
		log.Fatal(err)
	}
	// Initiate an http.Client. The following GET request will be
	// authorized and authenticated on the behalf of
	// your service account.
	client := conf.Client(oauth2.NoContext)
	client.Get("...")
}
Output:

Types

type AuthenticationError

type AuthenticationError struct {
	// contains filtered or unexported fields
}

AuthenticationError indicates there was an error in the authentication flow.

Use (*AuthenticationError).Temporary to check if the error can be retried.

func (*AuthenticationError) Error

func (e *AuthenticationError) Error() string

func (*AuthenticationError) Temporary

func (e *AuthenticationError) Temporary() bool

Temporary indicates that the network error has one of the following status codes and may be retried: 500, 503, 408, or 429.

func (*AuthenticationError) Unwrap

func (e *AuthenticationError) Unwrap() error

type Credentials

type Credentials struct {
	ProjectID   string // may be empty
	TokenSource oauth2.TokenSource

	// JSON contains the raw bytes from a JSON credentials file.
	// This field may be nil if authentication is provided by the
	// environment and not with a credentials file, e.g. when code is
	// running on Google Cloud Platform.
	JSON []byte
}

Credentials holds Google credentials, including "Application Default Credentials". For more details, see: https://developers.google.com/accounts/docs/application-default-credentials Credentials from external accounts (workload identity federation) are used to identify a particular application from an on-prem or non-Google Cloud platform including Amazon Web Services (AWS), Microsoft Azure or any identity provider that supports OpenID Connect (OIDC).

func CredentialsFromJSON

func CredentialsFromJSON(ctx context.Context, jsonData []byte, scopes ...string) (*Credentials, error)

CredentialsFromJSON invokes CredentialsFromJSONWithParams with the specified scopes.

Example
package main

import (
	"context"
	"io/ioutil"
	"log"

	"golang.org/x/oauth2/google"
)

func main() {
	ctx := context.Background()
	data, err := ioutil.ReadFile("/path/to/key-file.json")
	if err != nil {
		log.Fatal(err)
	}
	creds, err := google.CredentialsFromJSON(ctx, data, "https://www.googleapis.com/auth/bigquery")
	if err != nil {
		log.Fatal(err)
	}
	_ = creds // TODO: Use creds.
}
Output:

func CredentialsFromJSONWithParams

func CredentialsFromJSONWithParams(ctx context.Context, jsonData []byte, params CredentialsParams) (*Credentials, error)

CredentialsFromJSONWithParams obtains Google credentials from a JSON value. The JSON can represent either a Google Developers Console client_credentials.json file (as in ConfigFromJSON), a Google Developers service account key file, a gcloud user credentials file (a.k.a. refresh token JSON), or the JSON configuration file for workload identity federation in non-Google cloud platforms (see https://cloud.google.com/iam/docs/how-to#using-workload-identity-federation).

func FindDefaultCredentials

func FindDefaultCredentials(ctx context.Context, scopes ...string) (*Credentials, error)

FindDefaultCredentials invokes FindDefaultCredentialsWithParams with the specified scopes.

func FindDefaultCredentialsWithParams

func FindDefaultCredentialsWithParams(ctx context.Context, params CredentialsParams) (*Credentials, error)

FindDefaultCredentialsWithParams searches for "Application Default Credentials".

It looks for credentials in the following places, preferring the first location found:

  1. A JSON file whose path is specified by the GOOGLE_APPLICATION_CREDENTIALS environment variable. For workload identity federation, refer to https://cloud.google.com/iam/docs/how-to#using-workload-identity-federation on how to generate the JSON configuration file for on-prem/non-Google cloud platforms.
  2. A JSON file in a location known to the gcloud command-line tool. On Windows, this is %APPDATA%/gcloud/application_default_credentials.json. On other systems, $HOME/.config/gcloud/application_default_credentials.json.
  3. On Google App Engine standard first generation runtimes (<= Go 1.9) it uses the appengine.AccessToken function.
  4. On Google Compute Engine, Google App Engine standard second generation runtimes (>= Go 1.11), and Google App Engine flexible environment, it fetches credentials from the metadata server.

type CredentialsParams

type CredentialsParams struct {
	// Scopes is the list OAuth scopes. Required.
	// Example: https://www.googleapis.com/auth/cloud-platform
	Scopes []string

	// Subject is the user email used for domain wide delegation (see
	// https://developers.google.com/identity/protocols/oauth2/service-account#delegatingauthority).
	// Optional.
	Subject string

	// AuthHandler is the AuthorizationHandler used for 3-legged OAuth flow. Required for 3LO flow.
	AuthHandler authhandler.AuthorizationHandler

	// State is a unique string used with AuthHandler. Required for 3LO flow.
	State string

	// PKCE is used to support PKCE flow. Optional for 3LO flow.
	PKCE *authhandler.PKCEParams
}

CredentialsParams holds user supplied parameters that are used together with a credentials file for building a Credentials object.

type DefaultCredentials deprecated

type DefaultCredentials = Credentials

DefaultCredentials is the old name of Credentials.

Deprecated: use Credentials instead.

type SDKConfig

type SDKConfig struct {
	// contains filtered or unexported fields
}

An SDKConfig provides access to tokens from an account already authorized via the Google Cloud SDK.

Example
package main

import (
	"log"

	"golang.org/x/oauth2"
	"golang.org/x/oauth2/google"
)

func main() {
	// The credentials will be obtained from the first account that
	// has been authorized with `gcloud auth login`.
	conf, err := google.NewSDKConfig("")
	if err != nil {
		log.Fatal(err)
	}
	// Initiate an http.Client. The following GET request will be
	// authorized and authenticated on the behalf of the SDK user.
	client := conf.Client(oauth2.NoContext)
	client.Get("...")
}
Output:

func NewSDKConfig

func NewSDKConfig(account string) (*SDKConfig, error)

NewSDKConfig creates an SDKConfig for the given Google Cloud SDK account. If account is empty, the account currently active in Google Cloud SDK properties is used. Google Cloud SDK credentials must be created by running `gcloud auth` before using this function. The Google Cloud SDK is available at https://cloud.google.com/sdk/.

func (*SDKConfig) Client

func (c *SDKConfig) Client(ctx context.Context) *http.Client

Client returns an HTTP client using Google Cloud SDK credentials to authorize requests. The token will auto-refresh as necessary. The underlying http.RoundTripper will be obtained using the provided context. The returned client and its Transport should not be modified.

func (*SDKConfig) Scopes

func (c *SDKConfig) Scopes() []string

Scopes are the OAuth 2.0 scopes the current account is authorized for.

func (*SDKConfig) TokenSource

func (c *SDKConfig) TokenSource(ctx context.Context) oauth2.TokenSource

TokenSource returns an oauth2.TokenSource that retrieve tokens from Google Cloud SDK credentials using the provided context. It will returns the current access token stored in the credentials, and refresh it when it expires, but it won't update the credentials with the new access token.

Directories

Path Synopsis
Package downscope implements the ability to downscope, or restrict, the Identity and Access Management permissions that a short-lived Token can use.
Package downscope implements the ability to downscope, or restrict, the Identity and Access Management permissions that a short-lived Token can use.
internal

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