# Copyright 2016 Google LLC # # Licensed under the Apache License, Version 2.0 (the "License"); # you may not use this file except in compliance with the License. # You may obtain a copy of the License at # # http://www.apache.org/licenses/LICENSE-2.0 # # Unless required by applicable law or agreed to in writing, software # distributed under the License is distributed on an "AS IS" BASIS, # WITHOUT WARRANTIES OR CONDITIONS OF ANY KIND, either express or implied. # See the License for the specific language governing permissions and # limitations under the License. """Service Accounts: JSON Web Token (JWT) Profile for OAuth 2.0 This module implements the JWT Profile for OAuth 2.0 Authorization Grants as defined by `RFC 7523`_ with particular support for how this RFC is implemented in Google's infrastructure. Google refers to these credentials as *Service Accounts*. Service accounts are used for server-to-server communication, such as interactions between a web application server and a Google service. The service account belongs to your application instead of to an individual end user. In contrast to other OAuth 2.0 profiles, no users are involved and your application "acts" as the service account. Typically an application uses a service account when the application uses Google APIs to work with its own data rather than a user's data. For example, an application that uses Google Cloud Datastore for data persistence would use a service account to authenticate its calls to the Google Cloud Datastore API. However, an application that needs to access a user's Drive documents would use the normal OAuth 2.0 profile. Additionally, Google Apps domain administrators can grant service accounts `domain-wide delegation`_ authority to access user data on behalf of users in the domain. This profile uses a JWT to acquire an OAuth 2.0 access token. The JWT is used in place of the usual authorization token returned during the standard OAuth 2.0 Authorization Code grant. The JWT is only used for this purpose, as the acquired access token is used as the bearer token when making requests using these credentials. This profile differs from normal OAuth 2.0 profile because no user consent step is required. The use of the private key allows this profile to assert identity directly. This profile also differs from the :mod:`google.auth.jwt` authentication because the JWT credentials use the JWT directly as the bearer token. This profile instead only uses the JWT to obtain an OAuth 2.0 access token. The obtained OAuth 2.0 access token is used as the bearer token. Domain-wide delegation ---------------------- Domain-wide delegation allows a service account to access user data on behalf of any user in a Google Apps domain without consent from the user. For example, an application that uses the Google Calendar API to add events to the calendars of all users in a Google Apps domain would use a service account to access the Google Calendar API on behalf of users. The Google Apps administrator must explicitly authorize the service account to do this. This authorization step is referred to as "delegating domain-wide authority" to a service account. You can use domain-wise delegation by creating a set of credentials with a specific subject using :meth:`~Credentials.with_subject`. .. _RFC 7523: https://tools.ietf.org/html/rfc7523 """ import copy import datetime from google.auth import _helpers from google.auth import _service_account_info from google.auth import credentials from google.auth import jwt from google.oauth2 import _client _DEFAULT_TOKEN_LIFETIME_SECS = 3600 # 1 hour in seconds class Credentials( credentials.Signing, credentials.Scoped, credentials.CredentialsWithQuotaProject ): """Service account credentials Usually, you'll create these credentials with one of the helper constructors. To create credentials using a Google service account private key JSON file:: credentials = service_account.Credentials.from_service_account_file( 'service-account.json') Or if you already have the service account file loaded:: service_account_info = json.load(open('service_account.json')) credentials = service_account.Credentials.from_service_account_info( service_account_info) Both helper methods pass on arguments to the constructor, so you can specify additional scopes and a subject if necessary:: credentials = service_account.Credentials.from_service_account_file( 'service-account.json', scopes=['email'], subject='user@example.com') The credentials are considered immutable. If you want to modify the scopes or the subject used for delegation, use :meth:`with_scopes` or :meth:`with_subject`:: scoped_credentials = credentials.with_scopes(['email']) delegated_credentials = credentials.with_subject(subject) To add a quota project, use :meth:`with_quota_project`:: credentials = credentials.with_quota_project('myproject-123') """ def __init__( self, signer, service_account_email, token_uri, scopes=None, subject=None, project_id=None, quota_project_id=None, additional_claims=None, ): """ Args: signer (google.auth.crypt.Signer): The signer used to sign JWTs. service_account_email (str): The service account's email. scopes (Sequence[str]): Scopes to request during the authorization grant. token_uri (str): The OAuth 2.0 Token URI. subject (str): For domain-wide delegation, the email address of the user to for which to request delegated access. project_id (str): Project ID associated with the service account credential. quota_project_id (Optional[str]): The project ID used for quota and billing. additional_claims (Mapping[str, str]): Any additional claims for the JWT assertion used in the authorization grant. .. note:: Typically one of the helper constructors :meth:`from_service_account_file` or :meth:`from_service_account_info` are used instead of calling the constructor directly. """ super(Credentials, self).__init__() self._scopes = scopes self._signer = signer self._service_account_email = service_account_email self._subject = subject self._project_id = project_id self._quota_project_id = quota_project_id self._token_uri = token_uri if additional_claims is not None: self._additional_claims = additional_claims else: self._additional_claims = {} @classmethod def _from_signer_and_info(cls, signer, info, **kwargs): """Creates a Credentials instance from a signer and service account info. Args: signer (google.auth.crypt.Signer): The signer used to sign JWTs. info (Mapping[str, str]): The service account info. kwargs: Additional arguments to pass to the constructor. Returns: google.auth.jwt.Credentials: The constructed credentials. Raises: ValueError: If the info is not in the expected format. """ return cls( signer, service_account_email=info["client_email"], token_uri=info["token_uri"], project_id=info.get("project_id"), **kwargs ) @classmethod def from_service_account_info(cls, info, **kwargs): """Creates a Credentials instance from parsed service account info. Args: info (Mapping[str, str]): The service account info in Google format. kwargs: Additional arguments to pass to the constructor. Returns: google.auth.service_account.Credentials: The constructed credentials. Raises: ValueError: If the info is not in the expected format. """ signer = _service_account_info.from_dict( info, require=["client_email", "token_uri"] ) return cls._from_signer_and_info(signer, info, **kwargs) @classmethod def from_service_account_file(cls, filename, **kwargs): """Creates a Credentials instance from a service account json file. Args: filename (str): The path to the service account json file. kwargs: Additional arguments to pass to the constructor. Returns: google.auth.service_account.Credentials: The constructed credentials. """ info, signer = _service_account_info.from_filename( filename, require=["client_email", "token_uri"] ) return cls._from_signer_and_info(signer, info, **kwargs) @property def service_account_email(self): """The service account email.""" return self._service_account_email @property def project_id(self): """Project ID associated with this credential.""" return self._project_id @property def requires_scopes(self): """Checks if the credentials requires scopes. Returns: bool: True if there are no scopes set otherwise False. """ return True if not self._scopes else False @_helpers.copy_docstring(credentials.Scoped) def with_scopes(self, scopes): return self.__class__( self._signer, service_account_email=self._service_account_email, scopes=scopes, token_uri=self._token_uri, subject=self._subject, project_id=self._project_id, quota_project_id=self._quota_project_id, additional_claims=self._additional_claims.copy(), ) def with_subject(self, subject): """Create a copy of these credentials with the specified subject. Args: subject (str): The subject claim. Returns: google.auth.service_account.Credentials: A new credentials instance. """ return self.__class__( self._signer, service_account_email=self._service_account_email, scopes=self._scopes, token_uri=self._token_uri, subject=subject, project_id=self._project_id, quota_project_id=self._quota_project_id, additional_claims=self._additional_claims.copy(), ) def with_claims(self, additional_claims): """Returns a copy of these credentials with modified claims. Args: additional_claims (Mapping[str, str]): Any additional claims for the JWT payload. This will be merged with the current additional claims. Returns: google.auth.service_account.Credentials: A new credentials instance. """ new_additional_claims = copy.deepcopy(self._additional_claims) new_additional_claims.update(additional_claims or {}) return self.__class__( self._signer, service_account_email=self._service_account_email, scopes=self._scopes, token_uri=self._token_uri, subject=self._subject, project_id=self._project_id, quota_project_id=self._quota_project_id, additional_claims=new_additional_claims, ) @_helpers.copy_docstring(credentials.CredentialsWithQuotaProject) def with_quota_project(self, quota_project_id): return self.__class__( self._signer, service_account_email=self._service_account_email, scopes=self._scopes, token_uri=self._token_uri, subject=self._subject, project_id=self._project_id, quota_project_id=quota_project_id, additional_claims=self._additional_claims.copy(), ) def _make_authorization_grant_assertion(self): """Create the OAuth 2.0 assertion. This assertion is used during the OAuth 2.0 grant to acquire an access token. Returns: bytes: The authorization grant assertion. """ now = _helpers.utcnow() lifetime = datetime.timedelta(seconds=_DEFAULT_TOKEN_LIFETIME_SECS) expiry = now + lifetime payload = { "iat": _helpers.datetime_to_secs(now), "exp": _helpers.datetime_to_secs(expiry), # The issuer must be the service account email. "iss": self._service_account_email, # The audience must be the auth token endpoint's URI "aud": self._token_uri, "scope": _helpers.scopes_to_string(self._scopes or ()), } payload.update(self._additional_claims) # The subject can be a user email for domain-wide delegation. if self._subject: payload.setdefault("sub", self._subject) token = jwt.encode(self._signer, payload) return token @_helpers.copy_docstring(credentials.Credentials) def refresh(self, request): assertion = self._make_authorization_grant_assertion() access_token, expiry, _ = _client.jwt_grant(request, self._token_uri, assertion) self.token = access_token self.expiry = expiry @_helpers.copy_docstring(credentials.Signing) def sign_bytes(self, message): return self._signer.sign(message) @property @_helpers.copy_docstring(credentials.Signing) def signer(self): return self._signer @property @_helpers.copy_docstring(credentials.Signing) def signer_email(self): return self._service_account_email class IDTokenCredentials(credentials.Signing, credentials.CredentialsWithQuotaProject): """Open ID Connect ID Token-based service account credentials. These credentials are largely similar to :class:`.Credentials`, but instead of using an OAuth 2.0 Access Token as the bearer token, they use an Open ID Connect ID Token as the bearer token. These credentials are useful when communicating to services that require ID Tokens and can not accept access tokens. Usually, you'll create these credentials with one of the helper constructors. To create credentials using a Google service account private key JSON file:: credentials = ( service_account.IDTokenCredentials.from_service_account_file( 'service-account.json')) Or if you already have the service account file loaded:: service_account_info = json.load(open('service_account.json')) credentials = ( service_account.IDTokenCredentials.from_service_account_info( service_account_info)) Both helper methods pass on arguments to the constructor, so you can specify additional scopes and a subject if necessary:: credentials = ( service_account.IDTokenCredentials.from_service_account_file( 'service-account.json', scopes=['email'], subject='user@example.com')) ` The credentials are considered immutable. If you want to modify the scopes or the subject used for delegation, use :meth:`with_scopes` or :meth:`with_subject`:: scoped_credentials = credentials.with_scopes(['email']) delegated_credentials = credentials.with_subject(subject) """ def __init__( self, signer, service_account_email, token_uri, target_audience, additional_claims=None, quota_project_id=None, ): """ Args: signer (google.auth.crypt.Signer): The signer used to sign JWTs. service_account_email (str): The service account's email. token_uri (str): The OAuth 2.0 Token URI. target_audience (str): The intended audience for these credentials, used when requesting the ID Token. The ID Token's ``aud`` claim will be set to this string. additional_claims (Mapping[str, str]): Any additional claims for the JWT assertion used in the authorization grant. quota_project_id (Optional[str]): The project ID used for quota and billing. .. note:: Typically one of the helper constructors :meth:`from_service_account_file` or :meth:`from_service_account_info` are used instead of calling the constructor directly. """ super(IDTokenCredentials, self).__init__() self._signer = signer self._service_account_email = service_account_email self._token_uri = token_uri self._target_audience = target_audience self._quota_project_id = quota_project_id if additional_claims is not None: self._additional_claims = additional_claims else: self._additional_claims = {} @classmethod def _from_signer_and_info(cls, signer, info, **kwargs): """Creates a credentials instance from a signer and service account info. Args: signer (google.auth.crypt.Signer): The signer used to sign JWTs. info (Mapping[str, str]): The service account info. kwargs: Additional arguments to pass to the constructor. Returns: google.auth.jwt.IDTokenCredentials: The constructed credentials. Raises: ValueError: If the info is not in the expected format. """ kwargs.setdefault("service_account_email", info["client_email"]) kwargs.setdefault("token_uri", info["token_uri"]) return cls(signer, **kwargs) @classmethod def from_service_account_info(cls, info, **kwargs): """Creates a credentials instance from parsed service account info. Args: info (Mapping[str, str]): The service account info in Google format. kwargs: Additional arguments to pass to the constructor. Returns: google.auth.service_account.IDTokenCredentials: The constructed credentials. Raises: ValueError: If the info is not in the expected format. """ signer = _service_account_info.from_dict( info, require=["client_email", "token_uri"] ) return cls._from_signer_and_info(signer, info, **kwargs) @classmethod def from_service_account_file(cls, filename, **kwargs): """Creates a credentials instance from a service account json file. Args: filename (str): The path to the service account json file. kwargs: Additional arguments to pass to the constructor. Returns: google.auth.service_account.IDTokenCredentials: The constructed credentials. """ info, signer = _service_account_info.from_filename( filename, require=["client_email", "token_uri"] ) return cls._from_signer_and_info(signer, info, **kwargs) def with_target_audience(self, target_audience): """Create a copy of these credentials with the specified target audience. Args: target_audience (str): The intended audience for these credentials, used when requesting the ID Token. Returns: google.auth.service_account.IDTokenCredentials: A new credentials instance. """ return self.__class__( self._signer, service_account_email=self._service_account_email, token_uri=self._token_uri, target_audience=target_audience, additional_claims=self._additional_claims.copy(), quota_project_id=self.quota_project_id, ) @_helpers.copy_docstring(credentials.CredentialsWithQuotaProject) def with_quota_project(self, quota_project_id): return self.__class__( self._signer, service_account_email=self._service_account_email, token_uri=self._token_uri, target_audience=self._target_audience, additional_claims=self._additional_claims.copy(), quota_project_id=quota_project_id, ) def _make_authorization_grant_assertion(self): """Create the OAuth 2.0 assertion. This assertion is used during the OAuth 2.0 grant to acquire an ID token. Returns: bytes: The authorization grant assertion. """ now = _helpers.utcnow() lifetime = datetime.timedelta(seconds=_DEFAULT_TOKEN_LIFETIME_SECS) expiry = now + lifetime payload = { "iat": _helpers.datetime_to_secs(now), "exp": _helpers.datetime_to_secs(expiry), # The issuer must be the service account email. "iss": self.service_account_email, # The audience must be the auth token endpoint's URI "aud": self._token_uri, # The target audience specifies which service the ID token is # intended for. "target_audience": self._target_audience, } payload.update(self._additional_claims) token = jwt.encode(self._signer, payload) return token @_helpers.copy_docstring(credentials.Credentials) def refresh(self, request): assertion = self._make_authorization_grant_assertion() access_token, expiry, _ = _client.id_token_jwt_grant( request, self._token_uri, assertion ) self.token = access_token self.expiry = expiry @property def service_account_email(self): """The service account email.""" return self._service_account_email @_helpers.copy_docstring(credentials.Signing) def sign_bytes(self, message): return self._signer.sign(message) @property @_helpers.copy_docstring(credentials.Signing) def signer(self): return self._signer @property @_helpers.copy_docstring(credentials.Signing) def signer_email(self): return self._service_account_email