132 lines
5 KiB
Python
132 lines
5 KiB
Python
# Copyright 2020 Google LLC
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#
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# Licensed under the Apache License, Version 2.0 (the "License");
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# you may not use this file except in compliance with the License.
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# You may obtain a copy of the License at
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#
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# http://www.apache.org/licenses/LICENSE-2.0
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#
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# Unless required by applicable law or agreed to in writing, software
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# distributed under the License is distributed on an "AS IS" BASIS,
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# WITHOUT WARRANTIES OR CONDITIONS OF ANY KIND, either express or implied.
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# See the License for the specific language governing permissions and
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# limitations under the License.
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"""Service Accounts: JSON Web Token (JWT) Profile for OAuth 2.0
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NOTE: This file adds asynchronous refresh methods to both credentials
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classes, and therefore async/await syntax is required when calling this
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method when using service account credentials with asynchronous functionality.
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Otherwise, all other methods are inherited from the regular service account
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credentials file google.oauth2.service_account
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"""
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from google.auth import _credentials_async as credentials_async
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from google.auth import _helpers
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from google.oauth2 import _client_async
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from google.oauth2 import service_account
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class Credentials(
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service_account.Credentials, credentials_async.Scoped, credentials_async.Credentials
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):
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"""Service account credentials
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Usually, you'll create these credentials with one of the helper
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constructors. To create credentials using a Google service account
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private key JSON file::
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credentials = _service_account_async.Credentials.from_service_account_file(
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'service-account.json')
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Or if you already have the service account file loaded::
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service_account_info = json.load(open('service_account.json'))
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credentials = _service_account_async.Credentials.from_service_account_info(
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service_account_info)
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Both helper methods pass on arguments to the constructor, so you can
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specify additional scopes and a subject if necessary::
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credentials = _service_account_async.Credentials.from_service_account_file(
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'service-account.json',
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scopes=['email'],
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subject='user@example.com')
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The credentials are considered immutable. If you want to modify the scopes
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or the subject used for delegation, use :meth:`with_scopes` or
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:meth:`with_subject`::
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scoped_credentials = credentials.with_scopes(['email'])
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delegated_credentials = credentials.with_subject(subject)
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To add a quota project, use :meth:`with_quota_project`::
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credentials = credentials.with_quota_project('myproject-123')
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"""
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@_helpers.copy_docstring(credentials_async.Credentials)
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async def refresh(self, request):
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assertion = self._make_authorization_grant_assertion()
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access_token, expiry, _ = await _client_async.jwt_grant(
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request, self._token_uri, assertion
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)
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self.token = access_token
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self.expiry = expiry
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class IDTokenCredentials(
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service_account.IDTokenCredentials,
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credentials_async.Signing,
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credentials_async.Credentials,
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):
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"""Open ID Connect ID Token-based service account credentials.
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These credentials are largely similar to :class:`.Credentials`, but instead
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of using an OAuth 2.0 Access Token as the bearer token, they use an Open
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ID Connect ID Token as the bearer token. These credentials are useful when
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communicating to services that require ID Tokens and can not accept access
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tokens.
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Usually, you'll create these credentials with one of the helper
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constructors. To create credentials using a Google service account
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private key JSON file::
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credentials = (
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_service_account_async.IDTokenCredentials.from_service_account_file(
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'service-account.json'))
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Or if you already have the service account file loaded::
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service_account_info = json.load(open('service_account.json'))
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credentials = (
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_service_account_async.IDTokenCredentials.from_service_account_info(
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service_account_info))
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Both helper methods pass on arguments to the constructor, so you can
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specify additional scopes and a subject if necessary::
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credentials = (
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_service_account_async.IDTokenCredentials.from_service_account_file(
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'service-account.json',
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scopes=['email'],
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subject='user@example.com'))
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`
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The credentials are considered immutable. If you want to modify the scopes
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or the subject used for delegation, use :meth:`with_scopes` or
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:meth:`with_subject`::
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scoped_credentials = credentials.with_scopes(['email'])
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delegated_credentials = credentials.with_subject(subject)
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"""
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@_helpers.copy_docstring(credentials_async.Credentials)
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async def refresh(self, request):
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assertion = self._make_authorization_grant_assertion()
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access_token, expiry, _ = await _client_async.id_token_jwt_grant(
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request, self._token_uri, assertion
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)
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self.token = access_token
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self.expiry = expiry
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