I am a bit confused about the implementation of access token in FB graph api.
According to the docs I can pass the access token to client and initialize the session using this access token
https://developers.facebook.com/docs/facebook-login/access-tokens
So if I have a long lived access token on server side and pass it to the javascript sdk on client side...is it possible to make graph api calls from client? How?
Facebooks's JS SDK .api() method always accepts a parameter called access_token, that can be a User access_token or a Page access_token depending on the calls you are making. See the following example using Angular's SDK:
Get a
this.fb.api(pageId + '?fields=picture,fan_count,name', 'get', { 'access_token': <USER_ACCESS_TOKEN> })
Where <USER_ACCESS_TOKEN> is given to you by your backend without exposing your API secret ever. So, in summary.
See Generating Long-Lived User Tokens from Server-Side Long-Lived Tokens for more info.
Related
I would like to send an email on behalf of a user using Postman (Office 365). I have the email id and password of that account. After doing some research, I have found that I need to login, using a browser, to get the authorization code and then I can perform the next steps from Postman (getting the access token and using the Microsoft Graph Explorer) to send the email.
I would like to get the authorization code using Postman (not browser). I tried and got the following error (which is what should come the way I have requested the API)-
In short, I want to send email from Graph API using a REST client like Postman (right from authorization to sending email). Is this possible?
(I have already read these documents but did not help me get there-
https://developer.microsoft.com/en-us/graph/docs/concepts/rest
Accessing Microsoft Graph API without using login page
Automatically Log-In To Office 365
)
Yes, it is very possible, in fact, you can use all of the Microsoft Graph API from Postman or any other program which can make HTTP requests.
All you need to do is to get access token to use in your requests to the Graph API, and there at least 4 ways which allow you to do so without user interaction. But the process requires some preparation since you need to create an OAuth App in order to be able to use the Graph API.
Since I had to do the same myself and it wasn't easy to collect all the bits of information necessary, I've written a full guide on this subject including Postman examples:
Getting Access Token for Microsoft Graph Using OAuth REST API
In large you need to do the following steps:
Register OAuth App
Configuring App Permission
Use one of the following flows, depending on the information you have:
Flow 1: Get Access Token from Client Credentials (Client credentials Grant)
Flow 2 – Get Access Token From Client & User Credentials (Resource Owner Credentials Grant)
Flow 3 – Get Access Token From Refresh Token (Refresh Token Grant)
Flow 4 – Get Access Token From Another Access Token (On-Behalf-Of Grant)
Use the access token in requests to Microsoft Graph API
All of those steps are explained in the article.
This page claims that you can access the Places Graph functionality without having a logged-in user:
You make your calls using a Client Token (from the client), and an App Access Token (from the server).
The documentation regarding Client Tokens says:
The client token is an identifier that you can embed into native mobile binaries or desktop apps to identify your app. The client token isn't meant to be a secret identifier because it's embedded in apps.
This sounds like exactly what I want--I am trying to build a website that allows users to search for Facebook places. I need to be able to build the list using an AJAX request from the client side.
I can't for the life of me find any documentation on using the Client Token to make such a request.
Please note that I cannot use an App Token because this will be deployed to a website, and Facebook specifically says not to use App Tokens in that context.
I've tried using the Client Token directly as the access_token, but then I get Invalid OAuth access token.
How can I use the Client Token to make a Places Graph API call directly to Facebook's API from the client's browser?
Note: I realize that I could send the request to my own server, then relay that request from my server to Facebook, but that is not an optimal solution for me.
In case anyone is still struggling with this like I was. You just need to use the appId and client token joined with a pipe. So "appId|clientToken".
I'm building a manual login flow for my App which is integrating some facebook functionality.
I need to check when the current access_token of the user will expire.
The API documentary says I should do this call:
GET graph.facebook.com/debug_token?
input_token={token-to-inspect} &access_token={app-token-or-admin-token}
So I did this in C#:
Uri inspectAccessTokenUri = new Uri("http://graph.facebook.com/debug_token?input_token="+access_token+"&"); //IDK which value should have the last parameter
HttpWebRequest checkToken = (HttpWebRequest)WebRequest.Create(inspectAccessTokenUri);
var response = await checkToken.GetResponseAsync();
Stream stream = response.GetResponseStream();
StreamReader reader = new StreamReader(stream);
string data = reader.ReadToEnd();
Debug.WriteLine(data);
The last parameter should be the app-token:
BUT: Of course I looked up how to get the app-token and facebook says:
Note that because this request uses your app secret, it must never be
made in client-side code or in an app binary that could be decompiled.
It is important that your app secret is never shared with anyone.
Therefore, this API call should only be made using server-side code.
(Facebook Graph API Documentation 1.1.16)
So my question: Can I check the token without the app-token or hardcoding the app-secret?
App secret is usually used by the server-side app, we don't use it in our UWP app, it could be decompiled.
Read the official doc about FB Graph Debug-Token, this can only be used when you debug your app, for example if you want to check the metadata about a given access token, after you publish your app, your code will not relay on it.
In an UWP app, we use WebAuthenticationBroker class to connect to OAuth providers such as Facebook, Flickr, Google, and Twitter. Maintenance is need during using OAuth connections. For example, expires information is included in the access token, when we use OAuth protocol for authentication and authorization, we need to refresh the access token after it expired.
Due to these conditions, you may reconsider what you can do in an UWP app and which API you should choose.
If the app-token is expired you will get a facebook response error. And you can catch this exception to deal with the situation you want. In this way you don't need to make a request with your app secret.
You can also use fb-uwp sdk that contains AccessTokenData for authenticated users
Could some one show me example or explain how to use Facebook client token in a native mobile client to make Graph API requests?
From https://developers.facebook.com/docs/places/android:
The Places Graph SDK automatically selects the access token when a new request is created. If a user access token is available, it will be used; otherwise, the client token is used.
The following code example demonstrates how to set the Client Token.
// Get your client token from the developer portal.
String CLIENT_TOKEN = "{your_client_token}";
FacebookSdk.setClientToken(CLIENT_TOKEN);
// At this point, requests on PlaceManager can be invoked.
// Users do not have to log in Facebook.
The Twitter OAuth 1.0a flow requires authenticated request token to be exchanged with access token at consumer or client side after user has authenticated.
The problem that I'm facing is that generating access token needs authenticated request token, request token secret and verifier but the response from the oauth/authentication api doesn't have request token secret. So how do I temporarily save request token secret from oauth/request_token api call so that I can use it in oauth/access_token api call.
I found some solutions from my explorations like Running a Cache server (Memcached, Redis) or using django session feature. But they all seem to be overkill for this task.
I hope to find a simpler solution.
I'm sure you long ago figured this out, but just for future goolers: I decided to a go a more low tech route and create an OAuth token class which includes fields for the fetched and access token. Basically I take the fetched token, store it, then recall it when accessing (as it's in a different view) and then save the access token. Once (if) that's successful than I delete the fetched token.
There's likely a more glamorous way to do this, but if you're clever with your naming convention you can easily keep them straight (i.e. add a CharField for provider and just save the fetched token as twitter_fetched, and the access token as just twitter).
This has the added benefit of allowing you to create an OAuth1 or OAuth1Session from the stored access token.