/shortcode-oauth

Reference implementations of Mixer shortcode OAuth

Primary LanguageC#MIT LicenseMIT

shortcode-oauth

This repository contains several clients for the Mixer shortcode OAuth flow. This is an alternative OAuth-based flow for applications to avoid the need for opening or embedding browsers, or requiring keyboard input on the client device.

Several implementations are available:

Quickstart

  1. Register an OAuth application on the Mixer Lab. If you're developing an integration which will run on users' computers, you should not request a client secret.
  2. Find the client for your language above.
  3. Follow the instructions/example code on its readme to get going!

Specification

Shortcode OAuth was first described in the Interactive protocol specification. The relevant sections are below.

         │
         ▼
┌─────────────────┐             ┌─────────────────────────────┐
│  Have existing  │             │ Call POST /oauth/shortcode  │
│  access_token?  │────no──────▶│ with desired permissions +  │─────┐
└─────────────────┘             │       client details        │     │
         │                      └─────────────────────────────┘     ▼
        yes                                    ▲   ┌────────────────────────────────┐
         │                                     │   │ Direct user to beam.pro/go to  │
         │                                     │   │     enter six-digit `code`     │
         │                                     │   └────────────────────────────────┘
         ▼                                404 status                │          ┌───────┐
┌─────────────────┐                     (code expired)              ▼          │       204 status
│ Is it close to  │                            │    ┌──────────────────────────▼────┐ (not entered
│    expiring?    │──────yes────┐              │    │           Poll GET            │  │  yet)
└─────────────────┘             │              └────│/oauth/shortcode/check/{handle}│──┘
         │                      ▼                   └─────────────────────────────┬─┘
         │           ┌─────────────────────┐               │                      │
        no           │Use the refresh_token│          200 status             403 status
         │           │  to get new tokens  │               │               (denied access)
         ▼           └─────────────────────┘               ▼                      │
┌─────────────────┐             │            ┌──────────────────────────┐         ▼
│     Use the     │             │            │Exchange for access_token,│  ┌─────────────┐
│ access_token to │◀────────────┴────────────│      refresh_token       │  │ Show Error  │
│    handshake    │                          └──────────────────────────┘  └─────────────┘
└─────────────────┘

In order to build an OAuth shortcode-based application without using one of these ready-made clients, you should follow these steps:

  1. Register an OAuth application on the Mixer Lab. If you're developing an integration which will run on users' computers, you should not request a client secret.

  2. Call POST /oauth/shortcode with your client_id, client_secret (if any) and space-delimited scope you want in the request body. This will typically look something like this::

    POST /api/v1/oauth/shortcode HTTP/1.1
    Accept: application/json, */*
    Host: mixer.com
    
    {
        "client_id": "fooclient",
        "scope": "interactive:robot:self"
    }
    
    HTTP/1.1 200 OK
    Content-Type: application/json; charset=utf-8
    
    {
        "code": "8WPVHT",
        "expires_in": 120,
        "handle": "Lc7eBcB78d5gZmqHOajMH3QnmFPrxLGr"
    }
  3. Display the short six-digit code to the user and prompt them to enter it on mixer.com/go. You can view a user's perspective of this process here.

  4. Continuously poll GET /oauth/shortcode/check/{handle}. It will give you one of a few statuses back:

    • 204 No Content indicates we're still waiting on the user to enter the code.
    • 403 Forbidden indicates the user denied your requested permissions.
    • 404 Not Found indicates that the handle is invalid or expired.
    • 200 OK is returned once the user has granted your application access. The response body will contain an code.

    A poll which results in a 200 response might look something like this::

    GET /api/v1/oauth/shortcode/check/Lc7eBcB78d5gZ... HTTP/1.1
    Accept: application/json, */*
    Host: mixer.com
    
    HTTP/1.1 200 OK
    Content-Type: application/json; charset=utf-8
    
    {
        "code": "r2BTMKCZJJyIuoNE"
    }
  5. The client app should use this code as an OAuth Authorization Code which it can exchange for access and refresh tokens. The redirect_uri in the exchange request is not required and will be ignored, but you must present a valid client_id. A request to exchange the tokens might look something like this::

    POST /api/v1/oauth/token HTTP/1.1
    Accept: application/json, */*
    Content-Type: application/json
    Host: mixer.com
    
    {
        "client_id": "fooclient",
        "code": "r2BTMKCZJJyIuoNE",
        "grant_type": "authorization_code"
    }
    
    HTTP/1.1 200 OK
    Content-Type: application/json; charset=utf-8
    
    {
        "access_token": "pHktaORPcQGejnz48rJQdDWh1AJpevs \
            TWnvKrZW5z2HP3lgEqhp9gzje1YfblIO2",
        "expires_in": 21599,
        "refresh_token": "HzCZSviiueoWsfcT6kh6d4n7SHUnfK \
            cFTRIOyHkgykjaCSIT5ctTqUKNTXfWsxfg",
        "token_type": "Bearer"
    }
  6. The response will include an access_token, which you should send in the Authorization header when you connect to Interactive, prefixed with Bearer per standard OAuth behavior. In the above example, the client would then connect to Interactive and present the header Authorization: Bearer pHktaORPcQGejnz48rJQdDWh1AJpevsTWnvKrZW5z2...