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Mastering OAuth 2.0

You're reading from   Mastering OAuth 2.0 Create powerful applications to interact with popular service providers such as Facebook, Google, Twitter, and more by leveraging the OAuth 2.0 Authorization Framework

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Product type Paperback
Published in Dec 2015
Publisher Packt
ISBN-13 9781784395407
Length 238 pages
Edition 1st Edition
Languages
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Toc

Table of Contents (17) Chapters Close

Preface 1. Why Should I Care About OAuth 2.0? 2. A Bird's Eye View of OAuth 2.0 FREE CHAPTER 3. Four Easy Steps 4. Register Your Application 5. Get an Access Token with the Client-Side Flow 6. Get an Access Token with the Server-Side Flow 7. Use Your Access Token 8. Refresh Your Access Token 9. Security Considerations 10. What About Mobile? 11. Tooling and Troubleshooting 12. Extensions to OAuth 2.0 A. Resource Owner Password Credentials Grant B. Client Credentials Grant C. Reference Specifications Index

Authentication versus authorization

Before we dive into our discussion of OAuth 2.0, it is important to first define some terms. There are two terms in particular that are pivotal to our understanding of OAuth 2.0 and its uses: authentication and authorization. These terms are often conflated and sometimes interchanged, but they actually represent two distinct concepts, and their distinction is important to understand before continuing our discussion of OAuth 2.0.

Authentication

Authentication is the process of validating whether a person (or system) is actually who they say they are.

An example of this is when you go to the bank to withdraw money, and you provide your bank card and PIN to the teller. In some cases, the teller may ask for additional identification, such as your driver's license, to verify your identity. You may recognize this in other instances when you provide your username and password to a website, say, to view a document.

Authorization

Authorization is the process of determining what actions you are allowed to perform once you have been authenticated.

Referring to our previous bank example, once the teller has verified who you are, they can then proceed to fulfill your request to withdraw money. In order to do this, they must check whether you are allowed to withdraw money from the account that you are requesting (that is, you are actually the owner of the account). Relating to our website example, once you have authenticated by providing your username and password, the website will then check to see whether you are indeed allowed to see the document that you are requesting. This is usually done by looking up your permissions in some access control list.

Now that we have established the distinction between these two important concepts, we can look at what OAuth 2.0 actually is and the problems it solves.

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