I am trying to Post and get a cookie. I am a newbie and this is a learning project for me. My impression is that if you use 'set-cookie' one should be able to see an additional 'set-cookie' in the .toSource. (I am trying to accomplish this on Google Apps Site if that makes a difference.) Am I missing something? Here is my code:
function setGetCookies() {
var payload = {'set-cookie' : 'test'};
var opt2 = {'headers':payload, "method":"post"};
UrlFetchApp.fetch("https://sites.google.com/a/example.com/blacksmith", opt2);
var response = UrlFetchApp.fetch("https://sites.google.com/a/example.com/blacksmith")
var openId = response.getAllHeaders().toSource();
Logger.log(openId)
var AllHeaders = response.getAllHeaders();
for (var prop in AllHeaders) {
if (prop.toLowerCase() == "set-cookie") {
// if there's only one cookie, convert it into an array:
var myArray = [];
if ( Array.isArray(AllHeaders[prop]) ) {
myArray=AllHeaders[prop];
} else {
myArray[0]=AllHeaders[prop];
}
// now process the cookies
myArray.forEach(function(cookie) {
Logger.log(cookie);
});
break;
}
}
}
Thanks in advance! I referenced this to develop the code: Cookie handling in Google Apps Script - How to send cookies in header?
Open to any advice.
When you aren't logged in Google Sites won't set any cookies in the response. UrlFetchApp doesn't pass along your Google cookies, so it will behave as if you are logged out.
First the cookie you want to send whose name is 'test' does not have a value. You should send 'test=somevalue'.
Second I am wondering if you are trying to send the cookie to the googlesite server and ask it to reply with the same cookie you previously sent... ?
I am thinking you are trying to act as a HTTP server beside you are a HTTP client.
As a HTTP client your role is only to send back any cookies that the HTTP server have previously sent to you (respecting the domain, expiration... params).
Related
How do I parse a response cookie and sent back a specific value into a request header?
I'm making a request: it's sending back a token in a session cookie (token=longstrong). I need to grab that cookie, parse out token, and send back the value in a x-token: request header for following requests.
Paw is only giving me the option to send the cookie (raw).
How can I parse the response cookie to send back the value of $.token (json pseudo-code)?
A late reply, sorry!
This might help (from How do i pick specific cookies?):
Use a Custom dynamic value (right click on the field, and pick Extensions > Custom), instead, and use the following JavaScript code snippet:
function evaluate(context){
// Set here the cookies you'd like to return
var wantedCookies = ["datr", "reg_fb_ref"];
var regex = /^(\w+)\=([^;\s]+)/g;
// Request
// Uses here the current request, you can use getRequestByName("name of the request") instead
var request = context.getCurrentRequest();
// Get response cookies
var cookies = request.getLastExchange().getResponseHeaderByName("Set-Cookie").split(", ");
var filteredCookies = [];
for (var i in cookies) {
var cookie = cookies[i];
var match = regex.exec(cookie);
if (match && wantedCookies.indexOf(match[1]) >= 0) {
filteredCookies.push(match[0]);
}
}
return filteredCookies.join(",");
};
That basically parses manually the response cookies, and returns the ones you need.
This other question might help: Routes using cookie authentication from previous version of Paw no longer work on new version
Identity server is implemented and working well. Google login is working and is returning several claims including email.
Facebook login is working, and my app is live and requests email permissions when a new user logs in.
The problem is that I can't get the email back from the oauth endpoint and I can't seem to find the access_token to manually request user information. All I have is a "code" returned from the facebook login endpoint.
Here's the IdentityServer setup.
var fb = new FacebookAuthenticationOptions
{
AuthenticationType = "Facebook",
SignInAsAuthenticationType = signInAsType,
AppId = ConfigurationManager.AppSettings["Facebook:AppId"],
AppSecret = ConfigurationManager.AppSettings["Facebook:AppSecret"]
};
fb.Scope.Add("email");
app.UseFacebookAuthentication(fb);
Then of course I've customized the AuthenticateLocalAsync method, but the claims I'm receiving only include name. No email claim.
Digging through the source code for identity server, I realized that there are some claims things happening to transform facebook claims, so I extended that class to debug into it and see if it was stripping out any claims, which it's not.
I also watched the http calls with fiddler, and I only see the following (apologies as code formatting doesn't work very good on urls. I tried to format the querystring params one their own lines but it didn't take)
(facebook.com)
/dialog/oauth
?response_type=code
&client_id=xxx
&redirect_uri=https%3A%2F%2Fidentity.[site].com%2Fid%2Fsignin-facebook
&scope=email
&state=xxx
(facebook.com)
/login.php
?skip_api_login=1
&api_key=xxx
&signed_next=1
&next=https%3A%2F%2Fwww.facebook.com%2Fv2.7%2Fdialog%2Foauth%3Fredirect_uri%3Dhttps%253A%252F%252Fidentity.[site].com%252Fid%252Fsignin-facebook%26state%3Dxxx%26scope%3Demail%26response_type%3Dcode%26client_id%3Dxxx%26ret%3Dlogin%26logger_id%3Dxxx&cancel_url=https%3A%2F%2Fidentity.[site].com%2Fid%2Fsignin-facebook%3Ferror%3Daccess_denied%26error_code%3D200%26error_description%3DPermissions%2Berror%26error_reason%3Duser_denied%26state%3Dxxx%23_%3D_
&display=page
&locale=en_US
&logger_id=xxx
(facebook.com)
POST /cookie/consent/?pv=1&dpr=1 HTTP/1.1
(facebook.com)
/login.php
?login_attempt=1
&next=https%3A%2F%2Fwww.facebook.com%2Fv2.7%2Fdialog%2Foauth%3Fredirect_uri%3Dhttps%253A%252F%252Fidentity.[site].com%252Fid%252Fsignin-facebook%26state%3Dxxx%26scope%3Demail%26response_type%3Dcode%26client_id%3Dxxx%26ret%3Dlogin%26logger_id%3Dxxx
&lwv=100
(facebook.com)
/v2.7/dialog/oauth
?redirect_uri=https%3A%2F%2Fidentity.[site].com%2Fid%2Fsignin-facebook
&state=xxx
&scope=email
&response_type=code
&client_id=xxx
&ret=login
&logger_id=xxx
&hash=xxx
(identity server)
/id/signin-facebook
?code=xxx
&state=xxx
I saw the code parameter on that last call and thought that maybe I could use the code there to get the access_token from the facebook API https://developers.facebook.com/docs/facebook-login/manually-build-a-login-flow
However when I tried that I get a message from the API telling me the code has already been used.
I also tried to change the UserInformationEndpoint to the FacebookAuthenticationOptions to force it to ask for the email by appending ?fields=email to the end of the default endpoint location, but that causes identity server to spit out the error "There was an error logging into the external provider. The error message is: access_denied".
I might be able to fix this all if I can change the middleware to send the request with response_type=id_token but I can't figure out how to do that or how to extract that access token when it gets returned in the first place to be able to use the Facebook C# sdk.
So I guess any help or direction at all would be awesome. I've spent countless hours researching and trying to solve the problem. All I need to do is get the email address of the logged-in user via IdentityServer3. Doesn't sound so hard and yet I'm stuck.
I finally figured this out. The answer has something to do with Mitra's comments although neither of those answers quite seemed to fit the bill, so I'm putting another one here. First, you need to request the access_token, not code (authorization code) from Facebook's Authentication endpoint. To do that, set it up like this
var fb = new FacebookAuthenticationOptions
{
AuthenticationType = "Facebook",
SignInAsAuthenticationType = signInAsType,
AppId = ConfigurationManager.AppSettings["Facebook:AppId"],
AppSecret = ConfigurationManager.AppSettings["Facebook:AppSecret"],
Provider = new FacebookAuthenticationProvider()
{
OnAuthenticated = (context) =>
{
context.Identity.AddClaim(new System.Security.Claims.Claim("urn:facebook:access_token", context.AccessToken, ClaimValueTypes.String, "Facebook"));
return Task.FromResult(0);
}
}
};
fb.Scope.Add("email");
app.UseFacebookAuthentication(fb);
Then, you need to catch the response once it's logged in. I'm using the following file from the IdentityServer3 Samples Repository, which overrides (read, provides functionality) for the methods necessary to log a user in from external sites. From this response, I'm using the C# Facebook SDK with the newly returned access_token claim in the ExternalAuthenticationContext to request the fields I need and add them to the list of claims. Then I can use that information to create/log in the user.
public override async Task AuthenticateExternalAsync(ExternalAuthenticationContext ctx)
{
var externalUser = ctx.ExternalIdentity;
var claimsList = ctx.ExternalIdentity.Claims.ToList();
if (externalUser.Provider == "Facebook")
{
var extraClaims = GetAdditionalFacebookClaims(externalUser.Claims.First(claim => claim.Type == "urn:facebook:access_token"));
claimsList.Add(new Claim("email", extraClaims.First(k => k.Key == "email").Value.ToString()));
claimsList.Add(new Claim("given_name", extraClaims.First(k => k.Key == "first_name").Value.ToString()));
claimsList.Add(new Claim("family_name", extraClaims.First(k => k.Key == "last_name").Value.ToString()));
}
if (externalUser == null)
{
throw new ArgumentNullException("externalUser");
}
var user = await userManager.FindAsync(new Microsoft.AspNet.Identity.UserLoginInfo(externalUser.Provider, externalUser.ProviderId));
if (user == null)
{
ctx.AuthenticateResult = await ProcessNewExternalAccountAsync(externalUser.Provider, externalUser.ProviderId, claimsList);
}
else
{
ctx.AuthenticateResult = await ProcessExistingExternalAccountAsync(user.Id, externalUser.Provider, externalUser.ProviderId, claimsList);
}
}
And that's it! If you have any suggestions for simplifying this process, please let me know. I was going to modify this code to do perform the call to the API from FacebookAuthenticationOptions, but the Events property no longer exists apparently.
Edit: the GetAdditionalFacebookClaims method is simply a method that creates a new FacebookClient given the access token that was pulled out and queries the Facebook API for the other user claims you need. For example, my method looks like this:
protected static JsonObject GetAdditionalFacebookClaims(Claim accessToken)
{
var fb = new FacebookClient(accessToken.Value);
return fb.Get("me", new {fields = new[] {"email", "first_name", "last_name"}}) as JsonObject;
}
As i am either too dump to find the proper answer or it is simply not out there ... how the hek i replace the "outdated" WebRequest properly with the HttpClient "replacement"?
In the WebRequest i tendet to serialize & analyze the actual cookie as the webpage returns a partial JSON cookie ... however ... i still did not found a way to get a proper CookieContainer (or whatever form of cookie) from the frking HttpClient ... also ... every google request leads me to 20000000 years old answers or outdated documents (+ some upToDate docs which all just refer to "GET" requests without any cookies involved -.-*))
would be kindfull if somebody could lead me to the correct path ...
thx
greets
X39
Windows.Web.Http.HttpClient client = new Windows.Web.Http.HttpClient();
client.DefaultRequestHeaders.UserAgent.TryParseAdd(app.Settings.UserAgent);
var response = await client.PostAsync(new Uri(app.Settings.Pr0grammUrl.Api + "user/login"), new Windows.Web.Http.HttpStringContent(postDataBuilder.ToString()));
By default, HttpClient handles cookies by itself through the default HttpBaseProtocolFilter. You can get cookies associated with a URI through GetCookies method of the HttpCookieManager class:
Gets an HttpCookieCollection that contains the HttpCookie instances
that are associated with a specific URI.
using (var protocolFilter = new HttpBaseProtocolFilter()) {
var cookieManager = protocolFilter.CookieManager;
var cookies = cookieManager.GetCookies(uri);
foreach (var cookie in cookies) {
// Here is each cookie
}
}
You should also be able to set/get cookies through HTTP request and response headers. To disallow HttpClient from handling cookies by itself, create an instance of HttpBaseProtocolFilter and set the CookieUsageBehavior to HttpCookieUsageBehavior.NoCookies:
NoCookies: Do not handle cookies automatically.
// Create http filter
httpFilter = new HttpBaseProtocolFilter();
httpFilter.CookieUsageBehavior = HttpCookieUsageBehavior.NoCookies;
// Create http client
httpClient = new HttpClient(httpFilter);
// Handle cookies through HTTP headers
I'm doing a BrowserClient POST across domains and don't see my cookies being included.
This the response I'm getting:
When I send another POST request, I don't see the cookies being included:
Going straight to the test page, I can see the cookies being included:
The Dart code I use to make a POST:
var client = new BrowserClient();
client.post(url, body: request, headers:{"Content-Type" : "application/json", "Access-Control-Allow-Credentials":"true"}).then((res) {
if (res.statusCode == 200) {
var response = JSON.decode(res.body);
callback(response);
} else {
print(res.body);
print(res.reasonPhrase);
}
}).whenComplete(() {
client.close();
});
Not sure about the Access-Control-Allow-Credentials header I'm including, with or without it, nothing changes.
Am I missing headers on the server side that needs to be set on the response or is Dartium blocking cross-domain cookies?
More details on Information Security and the reasoning behind setting cookies via the server.
Update: Enhancement request logged: https://code.google.com/p/dart/issues/detail?id=23088
Update: Enhancement implemented, one should now be able to do var client = new BrowserClient()..withCredentials=true; based on
https://github.com/dart-lang/http/commit/9d76e5e3c08e526b12d545517860c092e089a313
For cookies being sent to CORS requests, you need to set withCredentials = true. The browser client in the http package doesn't support this argument. You can use the HttpRequest from dart:html instead.
See How to use dart-protobuf for an example.
Currently, I have an HTML page that sends a POST request to a Python server with login details. The Python server verifies the login and then sends back a cookie via headers (I'm using the Cookie class built into the Python library). I want to redirect as soon as I get a 200 OK status. The issue is that the cookies are not being set quickly enough, so the redirect happens before the cookies are set and thus the check_login page will display that I have not logged in.
I want the browser to store an HTTPOnly cookie. Is there something in the XMLHttpRequest API that will let me redirect after the cookie has been stored, or an alternative method?
Thanks!
The HTTPRequest code:
var httpRequest = new XMLHttpRequest();
var url = 'http://localhost/login/';
httpRequest.onreadystatechange = function(){
if (httpRequest.readyState == 4) {
if(httpRequest.status == 200) {
window.location = "http://localhost/check_login/";
}
};
httpRequest.open("POST", url,false);
httpRequest.setRequestHeader("Content-type","application/x-www-form-urlencoded");
httpRequest.send(/*login details*/);
This request is called by clicking a button. If I go back to the page that this button is on and then click it again, I will always be logged in because the cookie was already set from the first click.