I'm implementing an OAuth2 provider, and I would like to have an area somewhere in my web site where developers log on and register third party apps. But I'm having doubts on how to generate the apps's client identifier and client secret. Should they be unique random codes, or do they have to have some meaningful information to the client? I guess they could be random.

Well I've been looking for best practices on how to do this, but haven't found that much. So any answers will be appreciated.

PD: Im developing on .NET MVC3 with a library called DotNetOpenAuth.

link|improve this question

feedback

2 Answers

up vote 1 down vote accepted

The client identifier can be anything you want. It can be their choice or any random string.

The client secret should be a cryptographically strong random string. Here is how you can generate one:

RandomNumberGenerator cryptoRandomDataGenerator = new RNGCryptoServiceProvider();
byte[] buffer = new byte[length];
cryptoRandomDataGenerator.GetBytes(buffer);
string uniq = Convert.ToBase64String(buffer);
return uniq;
link|improve this answer
but does this code guarantees that the string would be unique??? – Daniel Jan 23 at 15:25
No. But the client secret doesn't have to be unique. Only the client id has to be. Also, given a sufficiently long length in the above code sample (say, 32+) it's statistically very improbable that two identical codes will be generated. – Andrew Arnott Jan 29 at 0:08
feedback

The specs are not clear about how you should generate them, but they say that you they should be random strings and unique.

In the section #2.2, about the client identifier:

The authorization server issues the registered client a client identifier - a unique string representing the registration information provided by the client.

link|improve this answer
feedback

Your Answer

 
or
required, but never shown

Not the answer you're looking for? Browse other questions tagged or ask your own question.