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231 lines
8.4 KiB
231 lines
8.4 KiB
16 years ago
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OpenIdAuthentication
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====================
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Provides a thin wrapper around the excellent ruby-openid gem from JanRan. Be sure to install that first:
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gem install ruby-openid
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To understand what OpenID is about and how it works, it helps to read the documentation for lib/openid/consumer.rb
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from that gem.
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The specification used is http://openid.net/specs/openid-authentication-2_0.html.
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Prerequisites
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=============
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OpenID authentication uses the session, so be sure that you haven't turned that off. It also relies on a number of
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database tables to store the authentication keys. So you'll have to run the migration to create these before you get started:
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rake open_id_authentication:db:create
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Or, use the included generators to install or upgrade:
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./script/generate open_id_authentication_tables MigrationName
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./script/generate upgrade_open_id_authentication_tables MigrationName
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Alternatively, you can use the file-based store, which just relies on on tmp/openids being present in RAILS_ROOT. But be aware that this store only works if you have a single application server. And it's not safe to use across NFS. It's recommended that you use the database store if at all possible. To use the file-based store, you'll also have to add this line to your config/environment.rb:
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OpenIdAuthentication.store = :file
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This particular plugin also relies on the fact that the authentication action allows for both POST and GET operations.
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If you're using RESTful authentication, you'll need to explicitly allow for this in your routes.rb.
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The plugin also expects to find a root_url method that points to the home page of your site. You can accomplish this by using a root route in config/routes.rb:
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map.root :controller => 'articles'
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This plugin relies on Rails Edge revision 6317 or newer.
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Example
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=======
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This example is just to meant to demonstrate how you could use OpenID authentication. You might well want to add
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salted hash logins instead of plain text passwords and other requirements on top of this. Treat it as a starting point,
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not a destination.
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Note that the User model referenced in the simple example below has an 'identity_url' attribute. You will want to add the same or similar field to whatever
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model you are using for authentication.
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Also of note is the following code block used in the example below:
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authenticate_with_open_id do |result, identity_url|
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...
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end
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In the above code block, 'identity_url' will need to match user.identity_url exactly. 'identity_url' will be a string in the form of 'http://example.com' -
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If you are storing just 'example.com' with your user, the lookup will fail.
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There is a handy method in this plugin called 'normalize_url' that will help with validating OpenID URLs.
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OpenIdAuthentication.normalize_url(user.identity_url)
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The above will return a standardized version of the OpenID URL - the above called with 'example.com' will return 'http://example.com/'
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It will also raise an InvalidOpenId exception if the URL is determined to not be valid.
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Use the above code in your User model and validate OpenID URLs before saving them.
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config/routes.rb
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map.root :controller => 'articles'
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map.resource :session
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app/views/sessions/new.erb
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<% form_tag(session_url) do %>
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<p>
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<label for="name">Username:</label>
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<%= text_field_tag "name" %>
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</p>
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<p>
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<label for="password">Password:</label>
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<%= password_field_tag %>
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</p>
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<p>
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...or use:
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</p>
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<p>
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<label for="openid_identifier">OpenID:</label>
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<%= text_field_tag "openid_identifier" %>
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</p>
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<p>
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<%= submit_tag 'Sign in', :disable_with => "Signing in…" %>
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</p>
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<% end %>
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app/controllers/sessions_controller.rb
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class SessionsController < ApplicationController
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def create
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if using_open_id?
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open_id_authentication
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else
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password_authentication(params[:name], params[:password])
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end
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end
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protected
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def password_authentication(name, password)
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if @current_user = @account.users.authenticate(params[:name], params[:password])
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successful_login
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else
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failed_login "Sorry, that username/password doesn't work"
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end
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end
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def open_id_authentication
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authenticate_with_open_id do |result, identity_url|
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if result.successful?
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if @current_user = @account.users.find_by_identity_url(identity_url)
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successful_login
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else
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failed_login "Sorry, no user by that identity URL exists (#{identity_url})"
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end
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else
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failed_login result.message
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end
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end
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end
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private
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def successful_login
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session[:user_id] = @current_user.id
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redirect_to(root_url)
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end
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def failed_login(message)
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flash[:error] = message
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redirect_to(new_session_url)
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end
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end
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If you're fine with the result messages above and don't need individual logic on a per-failure basis,
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you can collapse the case into a mere boolean:
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def open_id_authentication
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authenticate_with_open_id do |result, identity_url|
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if result.successful? && @current_user = @account.users.find_by_identity_url(identity_url)
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successful_login
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else
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failed_login(result.message || "Sorry, no user by that identity URL exists (#{identity_url})")
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end
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end
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end
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Simple Registration OpenID Extension
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====================================
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Some OpenID Providers support this lightweight profile exchange protocol. See more: http://www.openidenabled.com/openid/simple-registration-extension
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You can support it in your app by changing #open_id_authentication
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def open_id_authentication(identity_url)
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# Pass optional :required and :optional keys to specify what sreg fields you want.
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# Be sure to yield registration, a third argument in the #authenticate_with_open_id block.
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authenticate_with_open_id(identity_url,
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:required => [ :nickname, :email ],
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:optional => :fullname) do |result, identity_url, registration|
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case result.status
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when :missing
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failed_login "Sorry, the OpenID server couldn't be found"
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when :invalid
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failed_login "Sorry, but this does not appear to be a valid OpenID"
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when :canceled
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failed_login "OpenID verification was canceled"
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when :failed
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failed_login "Sorry, the OpenID verification failed"
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when :successful
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if @current_user = @account.users.find_by_identity_url(identity_url)
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assign_registration_attributes!(registration)
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if current_user.save
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successful_login
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else
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failed_login "Your OpenID profile registration failed: " +
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@current_user.errors.full_messages.to_sentence
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end
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else
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failed_login "Sorry, no user by that identity URL exists"
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end
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end
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end
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end
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# registration is a hash containing the valid sreg keys given above
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# use this to map them to fields of your user model
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def assign_registration_attributes!(registration)
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model_to_registration_mapping.each do |model_attribute, registration_attribute|
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unless registration[registration_attribute].blank?
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@current_user.send("#{model_attribute}=", registration[registration_attribute])
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end
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end
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end
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def model_to_registration_mapping
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{ :login => 'nickname', :email => 'email', :display_name => 'fullname' }
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end
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Attribute Exchange OpenID Extension
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===================================
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Some OpenID providers also support the OpenID AX (attribute exchange) protocol for exchanging identity information between endpoints. See more: http://openid.net/specs/openid-attribute-exchange-1_0.html
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Accessing AX data is very similar to the Simple Registration process, described above -- just add the URI identifier for the AX field to your :optional or :required parameters. For example:
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authenticate_with_open_id(identity_url,
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:required => [ :email, 'http://schema.openid.net/birthDate' ]) do |result, identity_url, registration|
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This would provide the sreg data for :email, and the AX data for 'http://schema.openid.net/birthDate'
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Copyright (c) 2007 David Heinemeier Hansson, released under the MIT license
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