I've been trying to get the GetClientAccessToken
flow to work with the latest release 4.1.0 (via nuget), where I'm in control of all three parties: client, authorization server and resource server.
The situation I have started to prototype is that of a Windows client app (my client - eventually it will be WinRT but its just a seperate MVC 4 app right now to keep it simple), and a set of resources in a WebAPI project. I'm exposing a partial authorization server as a controller in the same WebAPI project right now.
Every time (and it seems regardless of the client type e.g. UserAgentClient or WebServerClient) I try GetClientAccessToken, by the time the request makes it to the auth server there is no clientIdentifier as part of the request, and so the request fails with:
2012-10-15 13:40:16,333 [41 ] INFO {Channel} Prepared outgoing AccessTokenFailedResponse (2.0) message for <response>:
error: invalid_client
error_description: The client secret was incorrect.
I've debugged through the source into DNOA and essentially the credentials I'm establishing on the client are getting wiped out by NetworkCredential.ApplyClientCredential
inside ClientBase.RequestAccessToken
. If I modify clientIdentifier to something reasonable, I can track through the rest of my code and see the correct lookups/checks being made, so I'm fairly confident the auth server code is ok.
My test client currently looks like this:
public class AuthTestController : Controller
{
public static AuthorizationServerDescription AuthenticationServerDescription
{
get
{
return new AuthorizationServerDescription()
{
TokenEndpoint = new Uri("http://api.leave-now.com/OAuth/Token"),
AuthorizationEndpoint = new Uri("http://api.leave-now.com/OAuth/Authorise")
};
}
}
public async Task<ActionResult> Index()
{
var wsclient = new WebServerClient(AuthenticationServerDescription, "KieranBenton.LeaveNow.Metro", "testsecret");
var appclient = new DotNetOpenAuth.OAuth2.UserAgentClient(AuthenticationServerDescription, "KieranBenton.LeaveNow.Metro", "testsecret");
var cat = appclient.GetClientAccessToken(new[] { "https://api.leave-now.com/journeys/" });
// Acting as the Leave Now client we have access to the users credentials anyway
// TODO: CANNOT do this without SSL (turn off the bits in web.config on BOTH sides)
/*var state = client.ExchangeUserCredentialForToken("kieranbenton", "password", new[] { "https://api.leave-now.com/journeys/" });
// Attempt to talk to the APIs WITH the access token
var resourceclient = new OAuthHttpClient(state.AccessToken);
var response = await resourceclient.GetAsync("https://api.leave-now.com/journeys/");
string sresponse = await response.Content.ReadAsStringAsync();*/
// A wrong one
/*var wresourceclient = new OAuthHttpClient("blah blah");
var wresponse = await wresourceclient.GetAsync("https://api.leave-now.com/journeys/");
string wsresponse = await wresponse.Content.ReadAsStringAsync();
// And none
var nresourceclient = new HttpClient();
var nresponse = await nresourceclient.GetAsync("https://api.leave-now.com/journeys/");
string nsresponse = await nresponse.Content.ReadAsStringAsync();*/
return Content("");
}
}
I can't figure out how to prevent this or if its by design what I'm doing incorrectly.
Any help appreciated.