# (c) 2005 Ben Bangert # This module is part of the Python Paste Project and is released under # the MIT License: http://www.opensource.org/licenses/mit-license.php """ OpenID Authentication (Consumer) OpenID is a distributed authentication system for single sign-on originally developed at/for LiveJournal.com. http://openid.net/ URL. You can have multiple identities in the same way you can have multiple URLs. All OpenID does is provide a way to prove that you own a URL (identity). And it does this without passing around your password, your email address, or anything you don't want it to. There's no profile exchange component at all: your profiile is your identity URL, but recipients of your identity can then learn more about you from any public, semantically interesting documents linked thereunder (FOAF, RSS, Atom, vCARD, etc.). ``Note``: paste.auth.openid requires installation of the Python-OpenID libraries:: http://www.openidenabled.com/ This module is based highly off the consumer.py that Python OpenID comes with. Using the OpenID Middleware =========================== Using the OpenID middleware is fairly easy, the most minimal example using the basic login form thats included:: # Add to your wsgi app creation from paste.auth import open_id wsgi_app = open_id.middleware(wsgi_app, '/somewhere/to/store/openid/data') You will now have the OpenID form available at /oid on your site. Logging in will verify that the login worked. A more complete login should involve having the OpenID middleware load your own login page after verifying the OpenID URL so that you can retain the login information in your webapp (session, cookies, etc.):: wsgi_app = open_id.middleware(wsgi_app, '/somewhere/to/store/openid/data', login_redirect='/your/login/code') Your login code should then be configured to retrieve 'paste.auth.open_id' for the users OpenID URL. If this key does not exist, the user has not logged in. Once the login is retrieved, it should be saved in your webapp, and the user should be redirected to wherever they would normally go after a successful login. """ __all__ = ['AuthOpenIDHandler'] import cgi import urlparse import re import six import paste.request from paste import httpexceptions def quoteattr(s): qs = cgi.escape(s, 1) return '"%s"' % (qs,) # You may need to manually add the openid package into your # python path if you don't have it installed with your system python. # If so, uncomment the line below, and change the path where you have # Python-OpenID. # sys.path.append('/path/to/openid/') from openid.store import filestore from openid.consumer import consumer from openid.oidutil import appendArgs class AuthOpenIDHandler(object): """ This middleware implements OpenID Consumer behavior to authenticate a URL against an OpenID Server. """ def __init__(self, app, data_store_path, auth_prefix='/oid', login_redirect=None, catch_401=False, url_to_username=None): """ Initialize the OpenID middleware ``app`` Your WSGI app to call ``data_store_path`` Directory to store crypto data in for use with OpenID servers. ``auth_prefix`` Location for authentication process/verification ``login_redirect`` Location to load after successful process of login ``catch_401`` If true, then any 401 responses will turn into open ID login requirements. ``url_to_username`` A function called like ``url_to_username(environ, url)``, which should return a string username. If not given, the URL will be the username. """ store = filestore.FileOpenIDStore(data_store_path) self.oidconsumer = consumer.OpenIDConsumer(store) self.app = app self.auth_prefix = auth_prefix self.data_store_path = data_store_path self.login_redirect = login_redirect self.catch_401 = catch_401 self.url_to_username = url_to_username def __call__(self, environ, start_response): if environ['PATH_INFO'].startswith(self.auth_prefix): # Let's load everything into a request dict to pass around easier request = dict(environ=environ, start=start_response, body=[]) request['base_url'] = paste.request.construct_url(environ, with_path_info=False, with_query_string=False) path = re.sub(self.auth_prefix, '', environ['PATH_INFO']) request['parsed_uri'] = urlparse.urlparse(path) request['query'] = dict(paste.request.parse_querystring(environ)) path = request['parsed_uri'][2] if path == '/' or not path: return self.render(request) elif path == '/verify': return self.do_verify(request) elif path == '/process': return self.do_process(request) else: return self.not_found(request) else: if self.catch_401: return self.catch_401_app_call(environ, start_response) return self.app(environ, start_response) def catch_401_app_call(self, environ, start_response): """ Call the application, and redirect if the app returns a 401 response """ was_401 = [] def replacement_start_response(status, headers, exc_info=None): if int(status.split(None, 1)) == 401: # @@: Do I need to append something to go back to where we # came from? was_401.append(1) def dummy_writer(v): pass return dummy_writer else: return start_response(status, headers, exc_info) app_iter = self.app(environ, replacement_start_response) if was_401: try: list(app_iter) finally: if hasattr(app_iter, 'close'): app_iter.close() redir_url = paste.request.construct_url(environ, with_path_info=False, with_query_string=False) exc = httpexceptions.HTTPTemporaryRedirect(redir_url) return exc.wsgi_application(environ, start_response) else: return app_iter def do_verify(self, request): """Process the form submission, initating OpenID verification. """ # First, make sure that the user entered something openid_url = request['query'].get('openid_url') if not openid_url: return self.render(request, 'Enter an identity URL to verify.', css_class='error', form_contents=openid_url) oidconsumer = self.oidconsumer # Then, ask the library to begin the authorization. # Here we find out the identity server that will verify the # user's identity, and get a token that allows us to # communicate securely with the identity server. status, info = oidconsumer.beginAuth(openid_url) # If the URL was unusable (either because of network # conditions, a server error, or that the response returned # was not an OpenID identity page), the library will return # an error code. Let the user know that that URL is unusable. if status in [consumer.HTTP_FAILURE, consumer.PARSE_ERROR]: if status == consumer.HTTP_FAILURE: fmt = 'Failed to retrieve %s' else: fmt = 'Could not find OpenID information in %s' message = fmt % (cgi.escape(openid_url),) return self.render(request, message, css_class='error', form_contents=openid_url) elif status == consumer.SUCCESS: # The URL was a valid identity URL. Now we construct a URL # that will get us to process the server response. We will # need the token from the beginAuth call when processing # the response. A cookie or a session object could be used # to accomplish this, but for simplicity here we just add # it as a query parameter of the return-to URL. return_to = self.build_url(request, 'process', token=info.token) # Now ask the library for the URL to redirect the user to # his OpenID server. It is required for security that the # return_to URL must be under the specified trust_root. We # just use the base_url for this server as a trust root. redirect_url = oidconsumer.constructRedirect( info, return_to, trust_root=request['base_url']) # Send the redirect response return self.redirect(request, redirect_url) else: assert False, 'Not reached' def do_process(self, request): """Handle the redirect from the OpenID server. """ oidconsumer = self.oidconsumer # retrieve the token from the environment (in this case, the URL) token = request['query'].get('token', '') # Ask the library to check the response that the server sent # us. Status is a code indicating the response type. info is # either None or a string containing more information about # the return type. status, info = oidconsumer.completeAuth(token, request['query']) css_class = 'error' openid_url = None if status == consumer.FAILURE and info: # In the case of failure, if info is non-None, it is the # URL that we were verifying. We include it in the error # message to help the user figure out what happened. openid_url = info fmt = "Verification of %s failed." message = fmt % (cgi.escape(openid_url),) elif status == consumer.SUCCESS: # Success means that the transaction completed without # error. If info is None, it means that the user cancelled # the verification. css_class = 'alert' if info: # This is a successful verification attempt. If this # was a real application, we would do our login, # comment posting, etc. here. openid_url = info if self.url_to_username: username = self.url_to_username(request['environ'], openid_url) else: username = openid_url if 'paste.auth_tkt.set_user' in request['environ']: request['environ']['paste.auth_tkt.set_user'](username) if not self.login_redirect: fmt = ("If you had supplied a login redirect path, you would have " "been redirected there. " "You have successfully verified %s as your identity.") message = fmt % (cgi.escape(openid_url),) else: # @@: This stuff doesn't make sense to me; why not a remote redirect? request['environ']['paste.auth.open_id'] = openid_url request['environ']['PATH_INFO'] = self.login_redirect return self.app(request['environ'], request['start']) #exc = httpexceptions.HTTPTemporaryRedirect(self.login_redirect) #return exc.wsgi_application(request['environ'], request['start']) else: # cancelled message = 'Verification cancelled' else: # Either we don't understand the code or there is no # openid_url included with the error. Give a generic # failure message. The library should supply debug # information in a log. message = 'Verification failed.' return self.render(request, message, css_class, openid_url) def build_url(self, request, action, **query): """Build a URL relative to the server base_url, with the given query parameters added.""" base = urlparse.urljoin(request['base_url'], self.auth_prefix + '/' + action) return appendArgs(base, query) def redirect(self, request, redirect_url): """Send a redirect response to the given URL to the browser.""" response_headers = [('Content-type', 'text/plain'), ('Location', redirect_url)] request['start']('302 REDIRECT', response_headers) return ["Redirecting to %s" % redirect_url] def not_found(self, request): """Render a page with a 404 return code and a message.""" fmt = 'The path %s was not understood by this server.' msg = fmt % (request['parsed_uri'],) openid_url = request['query'].get('openid_url') return self.render(request, msg, 'error', openid_url, status='404 Not Found') def render(self, request, message=None, css_class='alert', form_contents=None, status='200 OK', title="Python OpenID Consumer"): """Render a page.""" response_headers = [('Content-type', 'text/html')] request['start'](str(status), response_headers) self.page_header(request, title) if message: request['body'].append("
" % (css_class,)) request['body'].append(message) request['body'].append("
") self.page_footer(request, form_contents) return request['body'] def page_header(self, request, title): """Render the page header""" request['body'].append('''\ %s

%s

This example consumer uses the Python OpenID library. It just verifies that the URL that you enter is your identity URL.

''' % (title, title)) def page_footer(self, request, form_contents): """Render the page footer""" if not form_contents: form_contents = '' request['body'].append('''\
Identity URL:
''' % (quoteattr(self.build_url(request, 'verify')), quoteattr(form_contents))) middleware = AuthOpenIDHandler def make_open_id_middleware( app, global_conf, # Should this default to something, or inherit something from global_conf?: data_store_path, auth_prefix='/oid', login_redirect=None, catch_401=False, url_to_username=None, apply_auth_tkt=False, auth_tkt_logout_path=None): from paste.deploy.converters import asbool from paste.util import import_string catch_401 = asbool(catch_401) if url_to_username and isinstance(url_to_username, six.string_types): url_to_username = import_string.eval_import(url_to_username) apply_auth_tkt = asbool(apply_auth_tkt) new_app = AuthOpenIDHandler( app, data_store_path=data_store_path, auth_prefix=auth_prefix, login_redirect=login_redirect, catch_401=catch_401, url_to_username=url_to_username or None) if apply_auth_tkt: from paste.auth import auth_tkt new_app = auth_tkt.make_auth_tkt_middleware( new_app, global_conf, logout_path=auth_tkt_logout_path) return new_app