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FastAPI plugin to enable SSO to most common providers (such as Facebook login, Google login and login via Microsoft Office 365 Account)

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FastAPI SSO

FastAPI plugin to enable SSO to most common providers (such as Facebook login, Google login and login via Microsoft Office 365 account).

This allows you to implement the famous Login with Google/Facebook/Microsoft buttons functionality on your backend very easily.

Installation

Install using pip

pip install fastapi-sso

Install using poetry

poetry add fastapi-sso

Example

For more examples, see examples directory.

example.py

"""This is an example usage of fastapi-sso.
"""

from fastapi import FastAPI
from starlette.requests import Request
from fastapi_sso.sso.google import GoogleSSO

app = FastAPI()

google_sso = GoogleSSO("my-client-id", "my-client-secret", "https://my.awesome-web.com/google/callback")

@app.get("/google/login")
async def google_login():
    """Generate login url and redirect"""
    return await google_sso.get_login_redirect()


@app.get("/google/callback")
async def google_callback(request: Request):
    """Process login response from Google and return user info"""
    user = await google_sso.verify_and_process(request)
    return {
        "id": user.id,
        "picture": user.picture,
        "display_name": user.display_name,
        "email": user.email,
        "provider": user.provider,
    }

Run using uvicorn example:app.

Specify redirect_uri on request time

In scenarios you cannot provide the redirect_uri upon the SSO class initialization, you may simply omit the parameter and provide it when calling get_login_redirect method.

...

google_sso = GoogleSSO("my-client-id", "my-client-secret")

@app.get("/google/login")
async def google_login(request: Request):
    """Generate login url and redirect"""
    return await google_sso.get_login_redirect(redirect_uri=request.url_for("google_callback"))

@app.get("/google/callback")
async def google_callback(request: Request):
    ...

Specify scope

Since 0.4.0 you may specify scope when initializing the SSO class.

from fastapi_sso.sso.microsoft import MicrosoftSSO

sso = MicrosoftSSO(client_id="client-id", client_secret="client-secret", scope=["openid", "email"])

Additional query parameters

Since 0.4.0 you may provide additional query parameters to be sent to the login screen.

E.g. sometimes you want to specify access_type=offline or prompt=consent in order for Google to return refresh_token.

async def google_login():
    return await google_sso.get_login_redirect(
        redirect_uri=request.url_for("google_callback"),
        params={"prompt": "consent", "access_type": "offline"}
        )

HTTP and development

You should always use https in production. But in case you need to test on localhost and do not want to use self-signed certificate, make sure you set up redirect uri within your SSO provider to http://localhost:{port} and then add this to your environment:

OAUTHLIB_INSECURE_TRANSPORT=1

And make sure you pass allow_insecure_http = True to SSO class' constructor, such as:

google_sso = GoogleSSO("client-id", "client-secret", allow_insecure_http=True)

See this issue for more information.

State

State is used in OAuth to make sure server is responding to the request we send. It may cause you trouble as fastsapi-sso actually saves the state content as a cookie and attempts reading upon callback and this may fail (e.g. when loging in from different domain then the callback is landing on). If this is your case, you may want to disable state checking by passing use_state = False in SSO class's constructor, such as:

google_sso = GoogleSSO("client-id", "client-secret", use_state=False)

See more on state here.

Supported login providers

Official

  • Google
  • Microsoft
  • Facebook
  • Spotify

Contributing

If you'd like to contribute and add your specific login provider, please see CONTRIBUTING.md file.

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FastAPI plugin to enable SSO to most common providers (such as Facebook login, Google login and login via Microsoft Office 365 Account)

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