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I have made an Android app where items can be purchased using in-app-billing. When an item is purchased the transaction can easily be synced between Android Market and the phone - to be used in the app. But, I need MY server to be aware of the purchase. The decision to deliver app-specific data should be made on my server, not in the client app.

E.g.

  1. User buys item X from Android Market.
  2. Transaction data Y is sent to the client.
  3. Client sends Y to my server.
  4. Client asks the server to deliver content for X.
  5. Server delivers content if Y is valid. How can this be accomplished?

Q: How do I verify that transaction data coming from the Android client (presumably originating from Google servers) is not fake? I.e. a hacker didn't generate the data.

Google Server -> Android client -> My server -> Android client

Perhaps this is more of a PHP question than anything else. Exactly what should my server script (PHP) do in order to verify that the retrieved data is real?

1

3 Answers 3

20
+50

Use openssl_verify ($data, $signature, $key)

The variables $data and $signature should be sent from the android client to your php server using https. The transaction contains both of these items. Send that to your servers before you acknowledge the transaction on the client.(see documentation here - http://developer.android.com/guide/market/billing/billing_integrate.html)

The variable $key is your google public key available from your publisher account from the Licensing & In-app Billing panel. Copy the public key and use that in your php code, preferably using a config file you install on your servers rather than in your actual php code.

If the openssl_verify call succeeds you should store the order numbers on your servers and ensure they are unique so they cannot be replayed. Be aware that a single data receipt and signature pair could contain many order numbers though its usually one order.

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  • This is a very large document. I have questions. What is $data? What is $signature? How do we know we're getting a request from Google's servers? Where do we send the response back?
    – Agamemnus
    Oct 11, 2014 at 19:55
  • openssl_verify is a PHP function call to its openssl library - php.net/manual/en/function.openssl-verify.php. In terms of checking google's servers - I don't think google supports mutual authentication (en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mutual_authentication) otherwise you just check the SSL certs similar to a browser when you connect to google's servers.
    – abdollar
    Oct 13, 2014 at 22:03
  • @Agamemnus - Note that you don't need to call google's servers - you only need to call your server using SSL. You do need to fetch the public key from google's servers but you could do that out-of-band
    – abdollar
    Oct 13, 2014 at 23:31
  • I'm very confused. If I were to authenticate a purchase using Paypal's systems, for example, Paypal sends a message to my server authenticating the transaction. If it is a Google Play in-app purchase, and my server sends something to the user, how does my server know that there was a purchase, and who made it? WAIT.. are you saying that Google sends a $signature string that decodes to $data, and I can use their public key (where?) to decode and verify? Google's example is starting to make sense but it still seems really abstract.
    – Agamemnus
    Oct 14, 2014 at 2:27
  • 1
    @Agamemnus - Google sends the signature and data to the phone/device. The phone sends this payload to your server. You are verifying this payload was actually sent by google - signed by google. You still need to check the payload isn't being replayed and the payload could have more than one order.
    – abdollar
    Oct 14, 2014 at 3:43
11

We used AndroidBillingLibrary.

Install that as a project in Eclipse and let your project import it as a library.

We implemented BillingController.IConfiguration, something like

import net.robotmedia.billing.BillingController;

public class PhoneBillingConfiguration implements BillingController.IConfiguration{
    @Override
    public byte[] getObfuscationSalt() {
        return new byte[] {1,-2,3,4,-5,6,-7,theseshouldallberandombyteshere,8,-9,0};
    }

    @Override
    public String getPublicKey() {
        return "superlongstringhereIforgothowwemadethis";
    }
}

Then for our application, we extended Application:

public class LocalizedApplication extends Application {

    @Override
    public void onCreate() {
        super.onCreate();

//      BillingController.setDebug(true);
        BillingController.setConfiguration(new PhoneBillingConfiguration());
    }
}

AndroidManifest includes this (and all the other stuff)

<application
    android:icon="@drawable/icon"
    android:label="@string/app_name"
    android:name=".LocalizedApplication"   <!-- use your specific Application  -->
    android:largeHeap="true"
    android:hardwareAccelerated="true"
    >

    <!-- For billing -->
    <service android:name="net.robotmedia.billing.BillingService" />
        <receiver android:name="net.robotmedia.billing.BillingReceiver">
        <intent-filter>
            <action android:name="com.android.vending.billing.IN_APP_NOTIFY" />
            <action android:name="com.android.vending.billing.RESPONSE_CODE" />
            <action android:name="com.android.vending.billing.PURCHASE_STATE_CHANGED" />
        </intent-filter>
    </receiver>

We implemented ISignatureValidator

public class PhoneSignatureValidator implements ISignatureValidator {
    private final String TAG = this.getClass().getSimpleName();
    private PhoneServerLink mServerLink;


    private BillingController.IConfiguration configuration;

    public PhoneSignatureValidator(Context context, BillingController.IConfiguration configuration, String our_product_sku) {
        this.configuration = configuration;
        mServerLink = new PhoneServerLink(context);
        mServerLink.setSku(our_product_sku);
    }


    @Override
    public boolean validate(String signedData, String signature) {
        final String publicKey;
        if (configuration == null || TextUtils.isEmpty(publicKey = configuration.getPublicKey())) {
            Log.w(BillingController.LOG_TAG, "Please set the public key or turn on debug mode");
            return false;
        }
        if (signedData == null) {
            Log.e(BillingController.LOG_TAG, "Data is null");
            return false;
        }
        // mServerLink will talk to your server
        boolean bool = mServerLink.validateSignature(signedData, signature);
        return bool;
    }

}

It's the last few lines above that call your class that will actually talk to your server.

Our PhoneServerLink starts out something like this:

public class PhoneServerLink implements GetJSONListener {

    public PhoneServerLink(Context context) {
        mContext = context;
    }

    public boolean validateSignature(String signedData, String signature) {
        return getPurchaseResultFromServer(signedData, signature, false);
    }

    private boolean getPurchaseResultFromServer(String signedData, String signature,  boolean async) {  
            // send request to server using whatever protocols you like 
    }

}
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  • 3
    The code looks nice, but I believe this is more of a server-side issue. Exactly how can my server code determine if a request (transaction info) is valid?
    – l33t
    Dec 8, 2011 at 12:28
  • 1
    ah crap; I answered everything except your question! Well, maybe it will be good for someone who has the opposite issue. ;-) Dec 9, 2011 at 7:11
  • fixed. (really surprising that github didn't account for that when they changed it!) Dec 17, 2011 at 7:12
  • @ThunderRabbit I want to write a code for In app purchase in which i want to provide facility to buy video inside my app and videos are stored in my own server..So do you have any Tutorial for this and "Android Billing Library" Secure to use in our project?? Apr 4, 2013 at 12:33
4

Transaction data is signed with a private key specific to your app. There is also a nonce to prevent replays (i.e, sending the same, valid, data multiple times). If you verify that the nonce is unique and the signature is valid at your server, you can be reasonably sure that it's not fake. Check the part about IAB of this Google IO presentation for a discussion.

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  • Hm. Sounds like the right approach. But how do you check if the signature is valid? I'm using PHP.
    – l33t
    Dec 5, 2011 at 9:12
  • Use PHP's OpenSSl functions. You can get the public key from the development console. Exact code can be found on SO, there is even a project that does this on Google Code, IIRC. Dec 5, 2011 at 9:15
  • Will check IIRC, but I doubt the public key will help here. It's stored in client app, so an attacker could extract it and use it to generate a fake transaction.
    – l33t
    Dec 5, 2011 at 9:33
  • 1
    You need to read the docs again. The private key is in Google servers. It signs the transactions. Unless someone hacks those, there is no way they could generate a 'fake transaction'. The public key is normally stored in the client app, and is used for verification only. If you have a verification server, it doesn't have to be in the app, it stays on the server. Study the slides I linked for more details. Dec 5, 2011 at 13:10
  • 1
    Not that hard to find: code.google.com/p/android-market-license-verification. It doesn't seem very active, but you should get the idea. Dec 12, 2011 at 13:53

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