0.07
No commit activity in last 3 years
No release in over 3 years
There's a lot of open issues
An authlogic extension for authenticating via OAuth. This can be helpful for adding support for login/registration with Twitter credentials.
2005
2006
2007
2008
2009
2010
2011
2012
2013
2014
2015
2016
2017
2018
2019
2020
2021
2022
2023
2024
 Dependencies

Development

>= 1.12.2

Runtime

 Project Readme

Authlogic OAuth¶ ↑

Authlogic OAuth is an extension of the Authlogic library to add OAuth support. One use case for authentication with OAuth is allowing users to log in with their Twitter credentials.

* Authlogic: github.com/binarylogic/authlogic * OAuth Example Project: github.com/jrallison/authlogic_example/tree/with-oauth * Live example with Twitter: authlogic-oauth.heroku.com

Install and use¶ ↑

1. Install Authlogic and setup your application¶ ↑

2. Install OAuth and Authlogic_Oauth¶ ↑

$ sudo gem install oauth
$ sudo gem install authlogic-oauth

Now add the gem dependencies in your config:

config.gem "oauth"
config.gem "authlogic-oauth", :lib => "authlogic_oauth"

Or for older version of rails, install it as a plugin:

$ script/plugin install git://github.com/jrallison/authlogic_oauth.git

3. Make some simple changes to your database:¶ ↑

class AddUsersOauthFields < ActiveRecord::Migration
  def self.up
    add_column :users, :oauth_token, :string
    add_column :users, :oauth_secret, :string
    add_index :users, :oauth_token

    change_column :users, :login, :string, :default => nil, :null => true
    change_column :users, :crypted_password, :string, :default => nil, :null => true
    change_column :users, :password_salt, :string, :default => nil, :null => true
  end

  def self.down
    remove_column :users, :oauth_token
    remove_column :users, :oauth_secret

    [:login, :crypted_password, :password_salt].each do |field|
      User.all(:conditions => "#{field} is NULL").each { |user| user.update_attribute(field, "") if user.send(field).nil? }
      change_column :users, field, :string, :default => "", :null => false
    end
  end
end

4. Make sure you save your objects properly¶ ↑

You only need to save your objects this way if you want the user to authenticate with their OAuth provider.

That being said, you probably want to do this in your controllers. You should do this for BOTH your User objects and UserSession objects (assuming you are authenticating users). It should look something like this:

@user_session.save do |result|
  if result
    flash[:notice] = "Login successful!"
    redirect_back_or_default account_url
  else
    render :action => :new
  end
end

You should save your @user objects this way as well, because you also want the user to authenticate with OAuth.

Notice we are saving with a block. Why? Because we need to redirect the user to their OAuth provider so that they can authenticate. When we do this, we don’t want to execute that block of code, because if we do, we will get a DoubleRender error. This lets us skip that entire block and send the user along their way without any problems.

5. Define the oauth_consumer class method on your UserSession model¶ ↑

The oauth_consumer should return an OAuth::Consumer which is configured for your OAuth provider. Here’s an example for Twitter:

class UserSession < Authlogic::Session::Base

  def self.oauth_consumer
    OAuth::Consumer.new("TOKEN", "SECRET",
    { :site=>"http://twitter.com",
      :authorize_url => "http://twitter.com/oauth/authenticate" })
  end

end

6. Add login and register buttons to your views¶ ↑

<%= oauth_register_button :value => "Register with Twitter" %>
<%= oauth_login_button :value => "Login with Twitter" %>

That’s it! The rest is taken care of for you.

Here are some next steps for the plugin.¶ ↑

  1. Safe OAuth error handling.

  2. Remove oauth request from the Rails request cycle.