Open source authentication client library for Java.
This project consists of 3 artifacts:
- google-auth-library-credentials: contains base classes and interfaces for Google credentials
- google-auth-library-appengine: contains App Engine credentials. This artifact depends on the App Engine SDK.
- google-auth-library-oauth2-http: contains a wide variety of credentials as well as utility methods to create them and to get Application Default Credentials
Note: This client is a work-in-progress, and may occasionally make backwards-incompatible changes.
If you are using Maven, add this to your pom.xml file (notice that you can replace
google-auth-library-oauth2-http
with any of google-auth-library-credentials
and
google-auth-library-appengine
, depending on your application needs):
<dependency>
<groupId>com.google.auth</groupId>
<artifactId>google-auth-library-oauth2-http</artifactId>
<version>0.16.0</version>
</dependency>
If you are using Gradle, add this to your dependencies
compile 'com.google.auth:google-auth-library-oauth2-http:0.16.0'
If you are using SBT, add this to your dependencies
libraryDependencies += "com.google.auth" % "google-auth-library-oauth2-http" % "0.16.0"
This artifact contains base classes and interfaces for Google credentials:
Credentials
: base class for an authorized identity. Implementations of this class can be used to authorize your applicationRequestMetadataCallback
: interface for the callback that receives the result of the asynchronousCredentials.getRequestMetadata(URI, Executor, RequestMetadataCallback)
ServiceAccountSigner
: interface for a service account signer. Implementations of this class are capable of signing byte arrays using the credentials associated to a Google Service Account
This artifact depends on the App Engine SDK (appengine-api-1.0-sdk
) and should be used only by
applications running on App Engine. The AppEngineCredentials
class allows you to authorize your App
Engine application given an instance of AppIdentityService.
You can install the App Engine SDK from Maven Central:
$ mvn dependency:get -Dartifact=com.google.appengine:appengine-api-1.0-sdk:1.9.71
You can find all available versions on Maven Central.
This artifact contains a wide variety of credentials as well as utility methods to create them and to get Application Default Credentials. Credentials classes contained in this artifact are:
CloudShellCredentials
: credentials for Google Cloud Shell built-in service accountComputeEngineCredentials
: credentials for Google Compute Engine built-in service accountOAuth2Credentials
: base class for OAuth2-based credentialsServiceAccountCredentials
: credentials for a Service Account - use a JSON Web Token (JWT) to get access tokensServiceAccountJwtAccessCredentials
: credentials for a Service Account - use JSON Web Token (JWT) directly in the request metadata to provide authorizationUserCredentials
: credentials for a user identity and consent
To get Application Default Credentials use GoogleCredentials.getApplicationDefault()
or
GoogleCredentials.getApplicationDefault(HttpTransportFactory)
. These methods return the
Application Default Credentials which are used to identify and authorize the whole application. The
following are searched (in order) to find the Application Default Credentials:
- Credentials file pointed to by the
GOOGLE_APPLICATION_CREDENTIALS
environment variable - Credentials provided by the Google Cloud SDK
gcloud auth application-default login
command - Google App Engine built-in credentials
- Google Cloud Shell built-in credentials
- Google Compute Engine built-in credentials
- Skip this check by setting the environment variable
NO_GCE_CHECK=true
- Customize the GCE metadata server address by setting the environment variable
GCE_METADATA_HOST=<hostname>
- Skip this check by setting the environment variable
To get Credentials from a Service Account JSON key use GoogleCredentials.fromStream(InputStream)
or GoogleCredentials.fromStream(InputStream, HttpTransportFactory)
. Note that the credentials must
be refreshed before the access token is available.
GoogleCredentials credentials = GoogleCredentials.fromStream(new FileInputStream("/path/to/credentials.json"));
credentials.refreshIfExpired();
AccessToken token = credentials.getAccessToken();
// OR
AccessToken token = credentials.refreshAccessToken();
Allows a credentials issued to a user or service account to impersonate another. The source project using ImpersonaedCredentials must enable the "IAMCredentials" API. Also, the target service account must grant the orginating principal the "Service Account Token Creator" IAM role.
String credPath = "/path/to/svc_account.json";
ServiceAccountCredentials sourceCredentials = ServiceAccountCredentials
.fromStream(new FileInputStream(credPath));
sourceCredentials = (ServiceAccountCredentials) sourceCredentials
.createScoped(Arrays.asList("https://www.googleapis.com/auth/iam"));
ImpersonatedCredentials targetCredentials = ImpersonatedCredentials.create(sourceCredentials,
"[email protected]", null,
Arrays.asList("https://www.googleapis.com/auth/devstorage.read_only"), 300);
Storage storage_service = StorageOptions.newBuilder().setProjectId("project-id")
.setCredentials(targetCredentials).build().getService();
for (Bucket b : storage_service.list().iterateAll())
System.out.println(b);
Java Version | Status |
---|---|
Java 7 | |
Java 8 | |
Java 8 OSX | |
Java 8 Windows | |
Java 10 |
Contributions to this library are always welcome and highly encouraged.
See CONTRIBUTING documentation for more information on how to get started.
Please note that this project is released with a Contributor Code of Conduct. By participating in this project you agree to abide by its terms. See Code of Conduct for more information.
To run the tests you will need:
- Maven 3+
- App Engine SDK (see installation instructions above)
$ mvn install -DskipTests=true
$ mvn test
BSD 3-Clause - See LICENSE for more information.