View Source Goth.Token (Goth v1.4.3)
Functions for retrieving the token from the Google API.
Summary
Functions
Fetch the token from the Google API using the given config
.
Types
Functions
@spec fetch(keyword() | map()) :: {:ok, t()} | {:error, Exception.t()}
Fetch the token from the Google API using the given config
.
Config may contain the following keys:
:source
- the source to retrieve the token from.Supported values include:
{:service_account, credentials}
- for fetching token using service account credentials{:refresh_token, credentials}
- for fetching token using refresh token:metadata
- for fetching token using Google internal metadata service
If
:source
is not set, Goth will:Check application environment. You can set it with:
config :goth, json: File.read!("credentials.json")
.Check
GOOGLE_APPLICATION_CREDENTIALS
env variable that contains path to credentials file.Check
GOOGLE_APPLICATION_CREDENTIALS_JSON
env variable that contains credentials JSON.Check
~/.config/gcloud/application_default_credentials.json
file.Check Google internal metadata service
Otherwise, raise an error.
See "Source" section below for more information.
:http_client
- a function that makes the HTTP request.Can be one of the following:
fun
- same as{fun, []}
{fun, opts}
-fun
must be a 1-arity function that receives a keyword list with fields:method
,:url
,:headers
, and:body
along with any passedopts
. The function must return{:ok, %{status: status, headers: headers, body: body}}
or{:error, exception}
.See "Custom HTTP Client" section below for more information.
fun
can also be an atom:finch
to use the built-in Finch-based client.Defaults to
{:finch, []}
.
Source
Source can be one of:
Service account - {:service_account, credentials}
Same as {:service_account, credentials, []}
Service account - {:service_account, credentials, options}
The credentials
is a map and can contain the following keys:
"private_key"
"client_email"
The options
is a keywords list and can contain the following keys:
:url
- the URL of the authentication service, defaults to:"https://www.googleapis.com/oauth2/v4/token"
:scopes
- the list of token scopes, defaults to["https://www.googleapis.com/auth/cloud-platform"]
(ignored if:claims
present):claims
- self-signed JWT extra claims. Should be a map with string keys only. A self-signed JWT will be exchanged for a Google-signed ID token
Refresh token - {:refresh_token, credentials}
Same as {:refresh_token, credentials, []}
Refresh token - {:refresh_token, credentials, options}
The credentials
is a map and can contain the following keys:
"refresh_token"
"client_id"
"client_secret"
The options
is a keywords list and can contain the following keys:
:url
- the URL of the authentication service, defaults to:"https://www.googleapis.com/oauth2/v4/token"
Google metadata server - :metadata
Same as {:metadata, []}
Google metadata server - {:metadata, options}
The options
is a keywords list and can contain the following keys:
:account
- the name of the account to generate the token for, defaults to"default"
:url
- the URL of the metadata server, defaults to"http://metadata.google.internal"
:audience
- the audience you want an identity token for, default tonil
If this parameter is provided, an identity token is returned instead of an access token
Custom HTTP Client
To use a custom HTTP client, define a function that receives a keyword list with fields
:method
, :url
, :headers
, and :body
. The function must return
{:ok, %{status: status, headers: headers, body: body}}
or {:error, exception}
.
Here's an example with Finch:
defmodule MyApp do
def request_with_finch(options) do
{method, options} = Keyword.pop!(options, :method)
{url, options} = Keyword.pop!(options, :url)
{headers, options} = Keyword.pop!(options, :headers)
{body, options} = Keyword.pop!(options, :body)
Finch.build(method, url, headers, body)
|> Finch.request(Goth.Finch, options)
end
end
And here is how it can be used:
iex> Goth.Token.fetch(source: source, http_client: &MyApp.request_with_finch/1)
{:ok, %Goth.Token{...}}
iex> Goth.Token.fetch(source: source, http_client: {&MyApp.request_with_finch/1, receive_timeout: 5000})
{:ok, %Goth.Token{...}}
Examples
Generate a token using a service account credentials file:
iex> credentials = "credentials.json" |> File.read!() |> Jason.decode!()
iex> Goth.Token.fetch(source: {:service_account, credentials})
{:ok, %Goth.Token{...}}
You can generate a credentials file containing service account using gcloud
utility like this:
$ gcloud iam service-accounts keys create --key-file-type=json --iam-account=... credentials.json
Generate a cloud function invocation token using a service account credentials file:
iex> credentials = "credentials.json" |> File.read!() |> Jason.decode!()
...> claims = %{"target_audience" => "https://<GCP_REGION>-<PROJECT_ID>.cloudfunctions.net/<CLOUD_FUNCTION_NAME>"}
...> Goth.Token.fetch(source: {:service_account, credentials, [claims: claims]})
{:ok, %Goth.Token{...}}
Generate an impersonated token using a service account credentials file:
iex> credentials = "credentials.json" |> File.read!() |> Jason.decode!()
...> claims = %{"sub" => "<IMPERSONATED_ACCOUNT_EMAIL>"}
...> Goth.Token.fetch(source: {:service_account, credentials, [claims: claims]})
{:ok, %Goth.Token{...}}
Retrieve the token using a refresh token:
iex> credentials = "credentials.json" |> File.read!() |> Jason.decode!()
iex> Goth.Token.fetch(source: {:refresh_token, credentials})
{:ok, %Goth.Token{...}}
You can generate a credentials file containing refresh token using gcloud
utility like this:
$ gcloud auth application-default login
Retrieve the token using the Google metadata server:
iex> Goth.Token.fetch(source: :metadata)
{:ok, %Goth.Token{...}}
See Storing and retrieving instance metadata for more information on metadata server.
Passing custom Finch options
iex> Goth.Token.fetch(source: source, http_client: {:finch, pool_timeout: 5000})
{:ok, %Goth.Token{...}}