Connect applications to your WordPress site without ever giving away your password.
This plugin uses the OAuth 1.0a protocol to allow delegated authorization; that is, to allow applications to access a site using a set of secondary credentials. This allows server administrators to control which applications can access the site, as well as allowing users to control which applications have access to their data.
This plugin only supports WordPress >= 4.4.
The latest stable version is also available from the WordPress Plugin Directory.
We strongly recommend you use an existing OAuth library. You'll be best off if you understand the authorization process, but leave the actual implementation to well-tested libraries, as there are a lot of edge cases.
Start reading from the Introduction to get started!
If you already know how to use OAuth, here's the lowdown:
- The plugin uses OAuth 1.0a in
- We use the three-legged flow
- To find the REST API index, apply the API autodiscovery process
- The endpoints for the OAuth process are available in the REST API index: check for
$.authentication.oauth1
in the index data.- The temporary credentials (request token) endpoint is
$.authentication.oauth1.request
(typically/oauth1/request
) - The authorization endpoint is
$.authentication.oauth1.authorize
(typically/oauth1/authorize
) - The token exchange (access token) endpoint is
$.authentication.oauth1.access
(typically/oauth1/access
)
- The temporary credentials (request token) endpoint is
- Your callback URL must match the registered callback URL for the application in the scheme, authority (user/password) host, port, and path sections. (Subpaths are not allowed.)
- The only signature method supported is HMAC-SHA1.
- OAuth parameters are supported in the Authorization header, query (GET) parameters, or request body (POST) parameters (if encoded as
application/x-www-form-urlencoded
). OAuth parameters are not supported in JSON data.