I feel like this might be answered in another OAuth question here, but I couldn't find it...
I have implemented an OAuth provider on a web service I'm writing. OAuth consumers of my provider ("applications") have consumer keys, and get user access tokens in the typical OAuth way (get a request token, redirect to my producer to have the user authorize, get an access token, store that, etc). This all works fine.
My question is about how these OAuth consumers can authenticate someone on visiting them using my application's login credentials. Basically, when someone visits a consumer application, I would like:
- User clicks login on consumer site.
- User is redirected to my application and presented a login form.
- After login, my application (OAuth provider), realizes that this user has already authorized this consumer, and redirects them back to the consumer.
- Consumer is somehow told this user's username (or access token) in this request.
This is similar to the typical OAuth flow, except that the OAuth consumer does not need to exchange an authorized request token for an access token. Instead, as soon as the user has authenticated, the consumer now knows which user was authenticated, and can immediately begin making requests using their already-stored stored token/secret.
What are some security conditions I need to take into account when implementing this? Is this even possible to implement securely? Naïvely, this could be implemented by having the producer return some GET parameter to the consumer callback, with the user's username (or something else unique). However, an attacker could exploit this by making requests to the consumer's callback with the username of the user they want to attack.
Thoughts? Is this a solved problem that I'm trying to re-invent and re-implement? My platform is Java, if there are libraries that already do all of this. Thank you!