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I don't understand how google achieve the following mechanism of single sign on:

  1. I login in gmail for example (I suppose this creates a cookie withmy authorization)
  2. I open a new tab and direct type the url of "youtube"
  3. Then I enter youtube logged in.

How can this second site detect that I've already been logged in. They are different domains. Youtube can't read the cookie of Gmail.

All the solutions I've read about Single sign on don't allow this. The client always ask permission to a central login app. In my example YouTube doesn't know I am the same user logged in Gmail (actually it does know, but I don't understand how)

Note that I type the url of "youtube" by hand. I don't clic the youtube icon from the upper toolbar of gmail (In that case gmail may pass some auth params through the url for example).

5
  • Maybe the answer is in this SO question? stackoverflow.com/questions/44509/…
    – mxro
    Oct 23, 2012 at 1:58
  • 1
    Were you able to find out how they do this? I am stumped because I have been looking at firebug and if I am signed in at google.com, going to youtube.com never redirects to something like sso.google.com. It somehow magically knows that you are logged on.
    – F21
    Nov 29, 2013 at 10:48
  • Did you find it how it works? Jun 1, 2016 at 5:05
  • I have been looking for the answer to this for over a year, I get some pointers to SAML, but it is basically the same thing you explained, the IDP stores the cookies and users have to be at least redirected to the IDP web page for the cookie to be read. In youtube there is no redirection happening.
    – George
    Apr 21, 2020 at 7:59
  • @James Okpe George you can not see the redirection with your eyes . You need to use web debugger
    – Hichem
    Jan 25, 2021 at 10:59

5 Answers 5

21

The cookies are set on specific domains. Ex:

setcookie(name,value,expire,path,domain) 

When you log in on gmail, before "mail.google.com", you have been redirected to "accounts.google.com" then to "mail.google.com" so the cookies are on "accounts.google.com" too.

In this case, the domain is "accounts.google.com" and the path is "/" (the home path).

When you request "www.youtube.com" then you click on "connection" it requests "accounts.google.com" fast so you can't see this redirection and checks if you have cookies on "accounts.google.com". If so, it checks if the cookies are valid and not expired, or user not banned... Then it redirects you to "www.youtube.com/signin?loginthisSession=Sessionid". This request contains the value of the of sessionid cookie catched from the cookies of "accounts.google.com".

In the last step, "www.youtube.com" logs you and set its own cookie on the domain "www.youtube.com" and saves them.

So the trick is on the 302 HTTP redirect.

Update

i do not know why people keep mentioning iframe take a look at the date whene this questions was posted on 2016 google was not using then iframe as i mentioned the capture of web traffic as you can see SetSID wich means set the cookie of SESSION_ID from accounts.google.dz(com) then redirects to youtube.com it can not be used trought iframe differant domains security measure you can not be redirected from domain to domain trought iframe neither please read this before posting

enter image description here

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  • 1
    How the redirection is implemented without we see on Firebug? Jun 1, 2016 at 5:06
  • Is that how it actually works? Including the session ID in the URL is usually considered insecure (yes it is encrypted if HTTPS is used, but it can be logged by servers, proxies, browser history or leaked by the HTTP referrer header). Jun 2, 2016 at 9:39
  • @chanchal118 please open your eyes on this screenshot or just do it via proxy/httpfox and you will see i.imgur.com/aDIcYJb.png
    – Hichem
    Jun 2, 2016 at 18:01
  • @SilverlightFox please open your eyes on this screenshot or just do it via proxy/httpfox and you will see i.imgur.com/aDIcYJb.png
    – Hichem
    Jun 2, 2016 at 18:01
  • 1
    @K3rnel31 Is this screen shot taken while logging into youtube? Jun 3, 2016 at 13:29
5

Cookies and localStorage can be shared between domains using an intermediate domain. On the home page is embedded an "iframe ', which accesses cookies and sends messages to the main.

mail.google.com and youtube.com can share the cookies using accounts.google.es. Open Chrome->Inspect->Resources->Local storage and you will see in accounts.google.com the authentication token in JWT format.

I have detailed the technical steps in this answer: https://stackoverflow.com/a/37565692/6371459. Also take a look at https://github.com/Aralink/ssojwt to see an implementation of a Single Sign On using JWT in a central domain

2
  • 2
    Note that adding iframe to share cookie between domain are called 3rd party cookie and are being obsolete moving forward in new browser, check this: blog.chromium.org/2020/01/… Jun 20, 2020 at 13:25
  • 1
    Seems it will affect third party cookies that do not include the SameSite tag or do not use https. This affects tracking cookies but not the use explained in the answer and in no case to localStorage. The content is shared using postMessage between iframes that is a secure and accepted method
    – pedrofb
    Jun 25, 2020 at 19:16
2

Check this out.. http://www.codeproject.com/Articles/106439/Single-Sign-On-SSO-for-cross-domain-ASP-NET-applic. The article consist explanation and sample of SSO cross domain.

0

As far as I remember, if I am not wrong, cookies contains a specified field that contains the domain that can read and get such cookie. That is made in order to prevent certain web sites to read all your cookie list and make your own business. You should be able to see which kind of sites can 'see' your gmail cookie.

Correct me if I am wrong, this should compile the answer given regarding the SID and gmail-YouTube example..

0

While evaluating this cross domain SSO topic, I have come up with possible a new SSO synchronization flow using cookie with timestamp. Although it is not a flow used by Google, I think this flow is possible to implement for system with limited number of domains.

This flow do not use 3rd party cookie

This is going to be a long post :)

domains

To make an example, let say we have these domains for our example pet forums:

Change to https://account.domain1.com:

Login Steps:

  1. User go to dog.domain2.com, user have not sign in yet.
  2. User click the Login button in dog.domain2.com
  3. User get redirect to account.domain1.com for login
  4. User Input username & password, login success
  5. New step, before redirect back to https://dog.domain2.com, set cookies on all domains
    1. Redirect browser to https://accounts.domain2.com?...
    2. Set a cookie on the .domains2.com domain (More on the cookie value later)
    3. Redirect browser to https://accounts.domain2.com?...
    4. Set a cookie on the .domains3.com domain
    5. Redirect browser to https://accounts.domain1.com?...
    6. Set a cookie on the .domains1.com domain
    7. Redirect back to original flow
  6. Redirect user back to their original service, i.e. https://dog.domain2.com

Now, right after login flow we have cookies over all 3 domains. Any of our service (e.g. https://cat.domain1.com / https://dog.domain2.com / https://rabbit.domain2.com ) can access this cookie under their own domain.

Cookie Content

  • The content of the cookie, should allows for any webpage to look at it, and determine if SSO sync is needed
  • Different types of cookie content can be stored, including
    • Boolean indicate user logined or not
    • User ID
    • Expired At timestamp

Boolean indicate user logined or not

User ID

  • While it is tempting to just stored the user_id on those cookie, and let all the domain to see them and set the user accordingly.
    • This is way too dangerous, since the cookie is set at the parent domain,
    • if any of the website under your domain been hacked, impersonation might happen (Copying any of the user_id, pasting it to their own browser cookie).

Expired At Timestamp

  • What I suggest, is for the cookie value to set as the SSO expired time, and set the type as session cookie, this have the following benefits:
    • An expired time have minimal security impact if leaked / altered
    • Our website can check the expired time to know if user need to relogin
    • As for why session cookie, is for when user close them browser, and tried to login again, the cookie will be deleted hence logout the user as well
  • Any webpage that use the SSO, should also stored a cookie themselves with the same expired time
    • There will be cases that, User A Login, visit https://cat.domains1.com Then User B Login
    • Since User A and User B will have a different login expired time, storing and compare that timestamp will tell the user to sync with SSO again

Example checking implement for your service

E.g. On https://cat.domains1.com, you can add this to the top of your page load

<?php
$sso_expired_time = $_COOKIE["sso_expired_time "] ?? 0;
$website_expired_time = $_COOKIE["website_expired_time "] ?? 0;

if( (int) $sso_expired_time  < time() || $sso_expired_time  !== $website_expired_time ) {
    // User not sync, perform sync
    setcookie("website_expired_time", $website_expired_time,0,"/", $_SERVER['SERVER_NAME'], true, true);
    // Redirect to https://account.domain1.com for Login
    // Or, Initiate the login sequence for your selected login protocol
    header("Location: https://account.domain1.com/.....") 
    exit;
}
// User is sync

// Page load success, continue other operation

Logout

Login is very similar to Login, basically:

  • Before logout goes through, redirect to all 3 domains just like login
  • Remove the SSO cookie
  • Continue the normal logout flow

Pro and cons for the methods:

  • Pro: All domain sync possible
  • Pro: No need to relies on 3rd party cookie
  • Cons: First time login longer (around 50ms longer)
  • Cons: Customization on every website is needed for the sync to works
2
  • In this implementation if a domain is unavailable, it won't redirect to the next one and subsequent domains won't log in/out, right? Is there an easy way to go around that other than opening multiple tabs/popups for each domain?
    – Lauro
    May 4, 2022 at 18:23
  • 1
    You can check if the page is up or not using this image trick: stackoverflow.com/a/63897923/6463291. May 5, 2022 at 2:06

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