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This document covers using the OAuth2 protocol to allow other services to access GitLab resources on user's behalf.
If you want GitLab to be an OAuth authentication service provider to sign into other services, see the OAuth2 authentication service provider documentation. This functionality is based on the doorkeeper Ruby gem.
GitLab currently supports the following authorization flows:
- Web application flow: Most secure and common type of flow, designed for applications with secure server-side.
- Implicit grant flow: This flow is designed for user-agent only apps (e.g., single page web application running on GitLab Pages).
- Resource owner password credentials flow: To be used only for securely hosted, first-party services.
Refer to the OAuth RFC to find out how all those flows work and pick the right one for your use case.
Both web application and implicit grant flows require application
to be
registered first via the /profile/applications
page in your user's account.
During registration, by enabling proper scopes, you can limit the range of
resources which the application
can access. Upon creation, you'll obtain the
application
credentials: Application ID and Client Secret - keep them secure.
To protect redirect-based flows,
the OAuth specification recommends the use of "One-time use CSRF tokens carried in the state
parameter, which are securely bound to the user agent", with each request to the
/oauth/authorize
endpoint. This can prevent
CSRF attacks.
For production, please use HTTPS for your redirect_uri
.
For development, GitLab allows insecure HTTP redirect URIs.
As OAuth2 bases its security entirely on the transport layer, you should not use unprotected
URIs. For more information, see the OAuth 2.0 RFC
and the OAuth 2.0 Threat Model RFC.
These factors are particularly important when using the
Implicit grant flow, where actual credentials are included in the redirect_uri
.
In the following sections you will find detailed instructions on how to obtain authorization with each flow.
NOTE: Note: Check the RFC spec for a detailed flow description.
The web application flow is:
-
Request authorization code. To do that, you should redirect the user to the
/oauth/authorize
endpoint with the following GET parameters:https://gitlab.example.com/oauth/authorize?client_id=APP_ID&redirect_uri=REDIRECT_URI&response_type=code&state=YOUR_UNIQUE_STATE_HASH&scope=REQUESTED_SCOPES
This will ask the user to approve the applications access to their account based on the scopes specified in
REQUESTED_SCOPES
and then redirect back to theREDIRECT_URI
you provided. The scope parameter is a space separated list of scopes you want to have access to (e.g.scope=read_user+profile
would requestread_user
andprofile
scopes). The redirect will include the GETcode
parameter, for example:https://example.com/oauth/redirect?code=1234567890&state=YOUR_UNIQUE_STATE_HASH
You should then use
code
to request an access token. -
Once you have the authorization code you can request an
access_token
using the code. You can do that by using any HTTP client. In the following example, we are using Ruby'srest-client
:parameters = 'client_id=APP_ID&client_secret=APP_SECRET&code=RETURNED_CODE&grant_type=authorization_code&redirect_uri=REDIRECT_URI' RestClient.post 'https://gitlab.example.com/oauth/token', parameters
Example response:
{ "access_token": "de6780bc506a0446309bd9362820ba8aed28aa506c71eedbe1c5c4f9dd350e54", "token_type": "bearer", "expires_in": 7200, "refresh_token": "8257e65c97202ed1726cf9571600918f3bffb2544b26e00a61df9897668c33a1" }
NOTE: Note:
The redirect_uri
must match the redirect_uri
used in the original
authorization request.
You can now make requests to the API with the access token returned.
NOTE: Note: Check the RFC spec for a detailed flow description.
CAUTION: Important:
Avoid using this flow for applications that store data outside of the GitLab
instance. If you do, make sure to verify application id
associated with the
access token before granting access to the data
(see /oauth/token/info
).
Unlike the web flow, the client receives an access token
immediately as a
result of the authorization request. The flow does not use the client secret
or the authorization code because all of the application code and storage is
easily accessible, therefore secrets can leak easily.
To request the access token, you should redirect the user to the
/oauth/authorize
endpoint using token
response type:
https://gitlab.example.com/oauth/authorize?client_id=APP_ID&redirect_uri=REDIRECT_URI&response_type=token&state=YOUR_UNIQUE_STATE_HASH&scope=REQUESTED_SCOPES
This will ask the user to approve the applications access to their account
based on the scopes specified in REQUESTED_SCOPES
and then redirect back to
the REDIRECT_URI
you provided. The scope parameter
is a space separated list of scopes you want to have access to (e.g. scope=read_user+profile
would request read_user
and profile
scopes). The redirect
will include a fragment with access_token
as well as token details in GET
parameters, for example:
https://example.com/oauth/redirect#access_token=ABCDExyz123&state=YOUR_UNIQUE_STATE_HASH&token_type=bearer&expires_in=3600
NOTE: Note: Check the RFC spec for a detailed flow description.
NOTE: Note: The Resource Owner Password Credentials is disabled for users with two-factor authentication turned on. These users can access the API using personal access tokens instead.
In this flow, a token is requested in exchange for the resource owner credentials (username and password).
The credentials should only be used when:
- There is a high degree of trust between the resource owner and the client. For example, the client is part of the device operating system or a highly privileged application.
- Other authorization grant types are not available (such as an authorization code).
CAUTION: Important: Never store the user's credentials and only use this grant type when your client is deployed to a trusted environment, in 99% of cases personal access tokens are a better choice.
Even though this grant type requires direct client access to the resource owner credentials, the resource owner credentials are used for a single request and are exchanged for an access token. This grant type can eliminate the need for the client to store the resource owner credentials for future use, by exchanging the credentials with a long-lived access token or refresh token.
To request an access token, you must make a POST request to /oauth/token
with
the following parameters:
{
"grant_type" : "password",
"username" : "[email protected]",
"password" : "secret"
}
Also you must use HTTP Basic authentication using the client_id
andclient_secret
values to authenticate the client that performs a request.
Example cURL request:
echo 'grant_type=password&username=<your_username>&password=<your_password>' > auth.txt
curl --data "@auth.txt" --user client_id:client_secret --request POST "https://gitlab.example.com/oauth/token"
Then, you'll receive the access token back in the response:
{
"access_token": "1f0af717251950dbd4d73154fdf0a474a5c5119adad999683f5b450c460726aa",
"token_type": "bearer",
"expires_in": 7200
}
By default, the scope of the access token is api
, which provides complete read/write access.
For testing, you can use the oauth2
Ruby gem:
client = OAuth2::Client.new('the_client_id', 'the_client_secret', :site => "https://example.com")
access_token = client.password.get_token('[email protected]', 'secret')
puts access_token.token
The access token
allows you to make requests to the API on behalf of a user.
You can pass the token either as GET parameter:
GET https://gitlab.example.com/api/v4/user?access_token=OAUTH-TOKEN
or you can put the token to the Authorization header:
curl --header "Authorization: Bearer OAUTH-TOKEN" "https://gitlab.example.com/api/v4/user"
To verify the details of a token, use the token/info
endpoint provided by the Doorkeeper gem.
For more information, see /oauth/token/info
.
You must supply the access token, either:
-
As a parameter:
GET https://gitlab.example.com/oauth/token/info?access_token=<OAUTH-TOKEN>
-
In the Authorization header:
curl --header "Authorization: Bearer <OAUTH-TOKEN>" "https://gitlab.example.com/oauth/token/info"
The following is an example response:
{
"resource_owner_id": 1,
"scope": ["api"],
"expires_in": null,
"application": {"uid": "1cb242f495280beb4291e64bee2a17f330902e499882fe8e1e2aa875519cab33"},
"created_at": 1575890427
}
The fields scopes
and expires_in_seconds
are included in the response.
These are aliases for scope
and expires_in
respectively, and have been included to
prevent breaking changes introduced in doorkeeper 5.0.2.
Don't rely on these fields as they will be removed in a later release.