Sunday, June 19, 2016

Easier Auth for Google Cloud APIs Introducing the Application Default Credentials feature

Originally posted to the Google Cloud Platform blog

When you write applications that run on Google Compute Engine instances, you might want to connect them to Google Cloud Storage, Google BigQuery, and other Google Cloud Platform services. Those services use OAuth2, the global standard for authorization, to help ensure that only the right callers can make the right calls. Unfortunately, OAuth2 has traditionally been hard to use. It often requires specialized knowledge and a lot of boilerplate auth setup code just to make an initial API call.

Today, with Application Default Credentials (ADC), were making things easier. In many cases, all you need is a single line of auth code in your app:

Credential credential = GoogleCredential.getApplicationDefault();

If youre not already familiar with auth concepts, including 2LO, 3LO, and service accounts, you may find this introduction useful.

ADC takes all that complexity and packages it behind a single API call. Under the hood, it makes use of:

  • 2-legged vs. 3-legged OAuth (2LO vs. 3LO) -- OAuth2 includes support for user-owned data, where the user, the API provider, and the application developer all need to participate in the authorization dance. Most Cloud APIs dont deal with user-owned data, and therefore can use much simpler two-party flows between the API provider and the application developer.
  • gcloud CLI -- while youre developing and debugging your app, you probably already use the gcloud command-line tool to explore and manage Cloud Platform resources. ADC lets your application piggyback on the auth flows in gcloud, so you only have to set up your credentials once.
  • service accounts -- if your application runs on Google App Engine or Google Compute Engine, it automatically has access to the built-in "service account", that helps the API provider to trust that the API calls are coming from a trusted source. ADC lets your application benefit from that trust.

You can find more about Google Application Default Credentials here. This is available for Java, Python, Node.js, Ruby, and Go. Libraries for PHP and .Net are in development.

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