command-line google oauth tools
Project description
oauth2l
-------
[![Build Status](https://travis-ci.org/google/oauth2l.svg?branch=master)](https://travis-ci.org/google/oauth2l)
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`oauth2l` (pronounced "oauth tool") is a simple command-line tool for
interacting with Google OAuth system. Its primary use is to fetch and
print OAuth 2.0 access tokens, which can be used with other command-line
tools and shell scripts.
## Overview
`oauth2l` supports multiple OAuth 2.0 authentication flows for both user
accounts and service accounts:
* When running inside Google Compute Engine (GCE) and Google Container
Engine (GKE), it uses the credentials of the current GCE service account
(if it exists).
* When running inside user context that has an active Google Cloud SDK
(gcloud) session, it uses the gcloud credential.
* When running with command line flag `--json xxx`, where `xxx` points to a
JSON credential file -- either a service account or an OAuth client ID --
downloaded from Google API Console, `oauth2l` will use the JSON file to start
the OAuth session.
NOTE: `oauth2l` will cache the OAuth credential until its expiration to avoid
prompting user repeatedly.
## Install
```
# Mac only. Install pip.
$ sudo easy_install pip
# Install oauth2l under OS, typically "/usr/local/bin".
$ pip install google-oauth2l --upgrade
# If you see an error on OS X El Capitan or up, please try
$ pip install google-oauth2l --upgrade --ignore-installed
# Install oauth2l under current user, typically "~/.local/bin" (on Linux)
# and "~/Library/Python/2.7/bin" (on Mac).
$ pip install --user google-oauth2l
```
## Commands
### fetch
Fetch and print an access token for the specified OAuth scopes. For example,
the following command prints access token for the following OAuth2 scopes:
* https://www.googleapis.com/auth/userinfo.email
* https://www.googleapis.com/auth/cloud-platform
```
$ oauth2l fetch -f bare userinfo.email cloud-platform
ya29.zyxwvutsrqpnmolkjihgfedcba
```
Note the `-f` flag specifies output format. Supported formats are:
bare, header, json, json_compact, pretty(default).
You can also fetch an OAuth token by using the secret json file downloaded from
[Google Cloud Console](https://console.cloud.google.com/).
```
$ oauth2l fetch -f bare --json service_account.json cloud-platform
ya29.zyxwvutsrqpnmolkjihgfedcba
```
### header
Same as `fetch`, except that we print the token in HTTP header format:
```
$ oauth2l header userinfo.email
Authorization: Bearer ya29.zyxwvutsrqpnmolkjihgfedcba
```
The `header` command is designed to be easy to use with `curl`. For example,
the following command uses the BigQuery API to list all projects.
```
$ curl -H "$(oauth2l header bigquery)" 'https://www.googleapis.com/bigquery/v2/projects'
```
If you need to call Google APIs frequently using the `header` command, you
can define a shell alias for it, for example:
```
$ alias gcurl='curl -H "$(oauth2l header cloud-platform)" -H "Content-Type: application/json" '
$ gcurl 'https://www.googleapis.com/bigquery/v2/projects'
```
### info
Print information about a valid token. This always includes the list of scopes
and expiration time. If the token has either the
`https://www.googleapis.com/auth/userinfo.email` or
`https://www.googleapis.com/auth/plus.me` scope, it also prints the email
address of the authenticated identity.
```
$ oauth2l info $(oauth2l fetch -f bare bigquery)
{
"expires_in": 3599,
"scope": "https://www.googleapis.com/auth/bigquery",
"email": "user@gmail.com"
}
```
NOTE: The actual output may have a few more fields.
### test
Test a token. This sets an exit code of 0 for a valid token and 1 otherwise,
which can be useful in shell pipelines.
```
$ oauth2l test ya29.zyxwvutsrqpnmolkjihgfedcba
$ echo $?
0
$ oauth2l test ya29.justkiddingmadethisoneup
$ echo $?
1
```
### reset
Reset all tokens cached locally. We cache previously retrieved tokens in the
file `~/.oauth2l.token`.
```
$ oauth2l reset
```
-------
[![Build Status](https://travis-ci.org/google/oauth2l.svg?branch=master)](https://travis-ci.org/google/oauth2l)
[![Coverage](https://coveralls.io/repos/google/oauth2l/badge.svg?branch=master)](https://coveralls.io/r/google/oauth2l?branch=master)
[![PyPI](https://img.shields.io/pypi/v/google-oauth2l.svg)](https://pypi-hypernode.com/pypi/google-oauth2l)
[![Versions](https://img.shields.io/pypi/pyversions/google-oauth2l.svg)](https://pypi-hypernode.com/pypi/google-oauth2l)
`oauth2l` (pronounced "oauth tool") is a simple command-line tool for
interacting with Google OAuth system. Its primary use is to fetch and
print OAuth 2.0 access tokens, which can be used with other command-line
tools and shell scripts.
## Overview
`oauth2l` supports multiple OAuth 2.0 authentication flows for both user
accounts and service accounts:
* When running inside Google Compute Engine (GCE) and Google Container
Engine (GKE), it uses the credentials of the current GCE service account
(if it exists).
* When running inside user context that has an active Google Cloud SDK
(gcloud) session, it uses the gcloud credential.
* When running with command line flag `--json xxx`, where `xxx` points to a
JSON credential file -- either a service account or an OAuth client ID --
downloaded from Google API Console, `oauth2l` will use the JSON file to start
the OAuth session.
NOTE: `oauth2l` will cache the OAuth credential until its expiration to avoid
prompting user repeatedly.
## Install
```
# Mac only. Install pip.
$ sudo easy_install pip
# Install oauth2l under OS, typically "/usr/local/bin".
$ pip install google-oauth2l --upgrade
# If you see an error on OS X El Capitan or up, please try
$ pip install google-oauth2l --upgrade --ignore-installed
# Install oauth2l under current user, typically "~/.local/bin" (on Linux)
# and "~/Library/Python/2.7/bin" (on Mac).
$ pip install --user google-oauth2l
```
## Commands
### fetch
Fetch and print an access token for the specified OAuth scopes. For example,
the following command prints access token for the following OAuth2 scopes:
* https://www.googleapis.com/auth/userinfo.email
* https://www.googleapis.com/auth/cloud-platform
```
$ oauth2l fetch -f bare userinfo.email cloud-platform
ya29.zyxwvutsrqpnmolkjihgfedcba
```
Note the `-f` flag specifies output format. Supported formats are:
bare, header, json, json_compact, pretty(default).
You can also fetch an OAuth token by using the secret json file downloaded from
[Google Cloud Console](https://console.cloud.google.com/).
```
$ oauth2l fetch -f bare --json service_account.json cloud-platform
ya29.zyxwvutsrqpnmolkjihgfedcba
```
### header
Same as `fetch`, except that we print the token in HTTP header format:
```
$ oauth2l header userinfo.email
Authorization: Bearer ya29.zyxwvutsrqpnmolkjihgfedcba
```
The `header` command is designed to be easy to use with `curl`. For example,
the following command uses the BigQuery API to list all projects.
```
$ curl -H "$(oauth2l header bigquery)" 'https://www.googleapis.com/bigquery/v2/projects'
```
If you need to call Google APIs frequently using the `header` command, you
can define a shell alias for it, for example:
```
$ alias gcurl='curl -H "$(oauth2l header cloud-platform)" -H "Content-Type: application/json" '
$ gcurl 'https://www.googleapis.com/bigquery/v2/projects'
```
### info
Print information about a valid token. This always includes the list of scopes
and expiration time. If the token has either the
`https://www.googleapis.com/auth/userinfo.email` or
`https://www.googleapis.com/auth/plus.me` scope, it also prints the email
address of the authenticated identity.
```
$ oauth2l info $(oauth2l fetch -f bare bigquery)
{
"expires_in": 3599,
"scope": "https://www.googleapis.com/auth/bigquery",
"email": "user@gmail.com"
}
```
NOTE: The actual output may have a few more fields.
### test
Test a token. This sets an exit code of 0 for a valid token and 1 otherwise,
which can be useful in shell pipelines.
```
$ oauth2l test ya29.zyxwvutsrqpnmolkjihgfedcba
$ echo $?
0
$ oauth2l test ya29.justkiddingmadethisoneup
$ echo $?
1
```
### reset
Reset all tokens cached locally. We cache previously retrieved tokens in the
file `~/.oauth2l.token`.
```
$ oauth2l reset
```
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