Facebook OAuth2 Strategy for OmniAuth 1.0.
Supports the OAuth 2.0 server-side and client-side flows. Read the Facebook docs for more details: http://developers.facebook.com/docs/authentication
Edge: Also supports authentication for Facebook app pages/canvas, via parsing the signed request. Take a look at the example Sinatra app for how to integrate with a canvas page.
Add to your Gemfile
:
gem 'omniauth-facebook'
Then bundle install
.
OmniAuth::Strategies::Facebook
is simply a Rack middleware. Read the OmniAuth 1.0 docs for detailed instructions: https://github.com/intridea/omniauth.
Here's a quick example, adding the middleware to a Rails app in config/initializers/omniauth.rb
:
Rails.application.config.middleware.use OmniAuth::Builder do
provider :facebook, ENV['FACEBOOK_KEY'], ENV['FACEBOOK_SECRET']
end
See the example Sinatra app for full examples of both the server and client-side flows (including using the Facebook Javascript SDK).
You can configure several options, which you pass in to the provider
method via a Hash
:
scope
: A comma-separated list of permissions you want to request from the user. See the Facebook docs for a full list of available permissions: http://developers.facebook.com/docs/reference/api/permissions. Default:email,offline_access
display
: The display context to show the authentication page. Options are:page
,popup
,iframe
,touch
andwap
. Read the Facebook docs for more details: http://developers.facebook.com/docs/reference/dialogs#display. Default:page
secure_image_url
: Set totrue
to use https for the avatar image url returned in the authentication hash. Default isfalse
.
For example, to request email
, offline_access
and read_stream
permissions and display the authentication page in a popup window:
Rails.application.config.middleware.use OmniAuth::Builder do
provider :facebook, ENV['FACEBOOK_KEY'], ENV['FACEBOOK_SECRET'],
:scope => 'email,offline_access,read_stream', :display => 'popup'
end
If you want to set the display
format or scope
on a per-request basis, you can just pass it to the OmniAuth request phase URL, for example: /auth/facebook?display=popup
or /auth/facebook?scope=email
.
You can also pass through a state
param which will be passed along to the callback url.
You can set a custom callback_url
or callback_path
option to override the default value. See OmniAuth::Strategy#callback_url for more details on the default.
Here's an example Authentication Hash available in request.env['omniauth.auth']
:
{
:provider => 'facebook',
:uid => '1234567',
:info => {
:nickname => 'jbloggs',
:email => 'joe@bloggs.com',
:name => 'Joe Bloggs',
:first_name => 'Joe',
:last_name => 'Bloggs',
:image => 'http://graph.facebook.com/1234567/picture?type=square',
:urls => { :Facebook => 'http://www.facebook.com/jbloggs' },
:location => 'Palo Alto, California',
:verified => true
},
:credentials => {
:token => 'ABCDEF...', # OAuth 2.0 access_token, which you may wish to store
:expires_at => 1321747205, # when the access token expires (if it expires)
:expires => true # if you request `offline_access` this will be false
},
:extra => {
:raw_info => {
:id => '1234567',
:name => 'Joe Bloggs',
:first_name => 'Joe',
:last_name => 'Bloggs',
:link => 'http://www.facebook.com/jbloggs',
:username => 'jbloggs',
:location => { :id => '123456789', :name => 'Palo Alto, California' },
:gender => 'male',
:email => 'joe@bloggs.com',
:timezone => -8,
:locale => 'en_US',
:verified => true,
:updated_time => '2011-11-11T06:21:03+0000'
}
}
}
The precise information available may depend on the permissions which you request.
The client-side flow supports parsing the authorization code from the signed request which Facebook puts into a cookie. This means you can to use the Facebook Javascript SDK as you would normally, and you just hit the callback endpoint (/auth/facebook/callback
by default) once the user has authenticated in the FB.login
success callback.
See the example Sinatra app under example/
for more details.
Actively tested with the following Ruby versions:
- MRI 1.9.3
- MRI 1.9.2
- MRI 1.8.7
- JRuby 1.6.5
NB. For JRuby, you'll need to install the jruby-openssl
gem. There's no way to automatically specify this in a Rubygem gemspec, so you need to manually add it your project's own Gemfile:
gem 'jruby-openssl', :platform => :jruby
Copyright (c) 2011 by Mark Dodwell
Permission is hereby granted, free of charge, to any person obtaining a copy of this software and associated documentation files (the "Software"), to deal in the Software without restriction, including without limitation the rights to use, copy, modify, merge, publish, distribute, sublicense, and/or sell copies of the Software, and to permit persons to whom the Software is furnished to do so, subject to the following conditions:
The above copyright notice and this permission notice shall be included in all copies or substantial portions of the Software.
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