Awesome
erlang-oauth
An Erlang implementation of The OAuth 1.0 Protocol.
There are functions for
- generating signatures (client side),
- verifying signatures (server side),
- some convenience functions for making OAuth HTTP requests (client side).
Usage
Erlang-oauth is on Hex, you can use the package by adding it into your rebar.config:
{deps, [
{oauth, "2.1.0"}
]}.
Erlang/OTP compatibility
Erlang/OTP 21 or greater.
Quick start (client usage)
$ erl -make
Recompile: src/oauth
$ erl -pa ebin -s crypto -s inets
...
1> Consumer = {"key", "secret", hmac_sha1}.
...
2> RequestTokenURL = "http://term.ie/oauth/example/request_token.php".
...
3> {ok, RequestTokenResponse} = oauth:get(RequestTokenURL, [], Consumer).
...
4> RequestTokenParams = oauth:params_decode(RequestTokenResponse).
...
5> RequestToken = oauth:token(RequestTokenParams).
...
6> RequestTokenSecret = oauth:token_secret(RequestTokenParams).
...
7> AccessTokenURL = "http://term.ie/oauth/example/access_token.php".
...
8> {ok, AccessTokenResponse} = oauth:get(AccessTokenURL, [], Consumer, RequestToken, RequestTokenSecret).
...
9> AccessTokenParams = oauth:params_decode(AccessTokenResponse).
...
10> AccessToken = oauth:token(AccessTokenParams).
...
11> AccessTokenSecret = oauth:token_secret(AccessTokenParams).
...
12> URL = "http://term.ie/oauth/example/echo_api.php".
...
13> {ok, Response} = oauth:get(URL, [{"hello", "world"}], Consumer, AccessToken, AccessTokenSecret).
...
14> oauth:params_decode(Response).
...
OAuth consumer representation
Consumers are represented using tuples:
{Key::string(), Secret::string(), plaintext}
{Key::string(), Secret::string(), hmac_sha1}
{Key::string(), RSAPrivateKeyPath::string(), rsa_sha1} % client side
{Key::string(), RSACertificatePath::string(), rsa_sha1} % server side
Other notes
This implementation should be compatible with the signature algorithms presented in RFC5849 - The OAuth 1.0 Protocol, and OAuth Core 1.0 Revision A. It is not intended to cover OAuth 2.0.
This is not a "plug and play" server implementation. In order to implement OAuth correctly as a provider you have more work to do: token storage, nonce and timestamp verification etc.
This is not a "bells and whistles" HTTP client. If you need fine grained control
over your HTTP requests or you prefer to use something other than inets/httpc then you
will need to assemble the requests yourself. Use oauth:sign/6
to generate a list of
signed OAuth parameters, and then either oauth:uri_params_encode/1
or oauth:header_params_encode/1
to encode the signed parameters.
The percent encoding/decoding implementations are based on ibrowse
License
This project is licensed under the terms of the MIT license.
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