Net::OpenID::Consumer - phpMan

Command: man perldoc info search(apropos)  


Sections
NAME VERSION SYNOPSIS DESCRIPTION CONSTRUCTOR METHODS ERROR CODES PROTOCOL VARIANCES COPYRIGHT WARRANTY MAILING LIST SEE ALSO AUTHORS
NAME
    Net::OpenID::Consumer - Library for consumers of OpenID identities

VERSION
    version 1.18

SYNOPSIS
      use Net::OpenID::Consumer;

      my $csr = Net::OpenID::Consumer->new(
        ua    => LWPx::ParanoidAgent->new,
        cache => Cache::File->new( cache_root => '/tmp/mycache' ),
        args  => $cgi,
        consumer_secret => ...,
        required_root => "http://site.example.com/",
        assoc_options => [
          max_encrypt => 1,
          session_no_encrypt_https => 1,
        ],
      );

      # Say a user enters "bradfitz.com" as his/her identity.  The first
      # step is to perform discovery, i.e., fetch that page, parse it,
      # find out the actual identity provider and other useful information,
      # which gets encapsulated in a Net::OpenID::ClaimedIdentity object:

      my $claimed_identity = $csr->claimed_identity("bradfitz.com");
      unless ($claimed_identity) {
        die "not actually an openid?  " . $csr->err;
      }

      # We can then launch the actual authentication of this identity.
      # The first step is to redirect the user to the appropriate URL at
      # the identity provider.  This URL is constructed as follows:
      #
      my $check_url = $claimed_identity->check_url(
        return_to  => "http://example.com/openid-check.app?yourarg=val",
        trust_root => "http://example.com/",

        # to do a "checkid_setup mode" request, in which the user can
        # interact with the provider, e.g., so that the user can sign in
        # there if s/he has not done so already, you will need this,
        delayed_return => 1

        # otherwise, this will be a "check_immediate mode" request, the
        # provider will have to immediately return some kind of answer
        # without interaction
      );

      # Once you redirect the user to $check_url, the provider should
      # eventually redirect back, at which point you need some kind of
      # handler at openid-check.app to deal with that response.

      # You can either use the callback-based API (recommended)...
      #
      $csr->handle_server_response(
          not_openid => sub {
              die "Not an OpenID message";
          },
          setup_needed => sub {
              if ($csr->message->protocol_version >= 2) {
                  # (OpenID 2) retry request in checkid_setup mode (above)
              }
              else {
                  # (OpenID 1) redirect user to $csr->user_setup_url
              }
          },
          cancelled => sub {
              # User hit cancel; restore application state prior to check_url
          },
          verified => sub {
              my ($vident) = @_;
              my $verified_url = $vident->url;
              print "You are $verified_url !";
          },
          error => sub {
              my ($errcode,$errtext) = @_;
              die("Error validating identity: $errcode: $errcode");
          },
      );

      # ... or handle the various cases yourself
      #
      unless ($csr->is_server_response) {
          die "Not an OpenID message";
      } elsif ($csr->setup_needed) {
           # (OpenID 2) retry request in checkid_setup mode
           # (OpenID 1) redirect/link/popup user to $csr->user_setup_url
      } elsif ($csr->user_cancel) {
           # User hit cancel; restore application state prior to check_url
      } elsif (my $vident = $csr->verified_identity) {
           my $verified_url = $vident->url;
           print "You are $verified_url !";
      } else {
           die "Error validating identity: " . $csr->err;
      }

DESCRIPTION
    This is the Perl API for (the consumer half of) OpenID, a distributed
    identity system based on proving you own a URL, which is then your
    identity. More information is available at:

      http://openid.net/

CONSTRUCTOR
    new
         my $csr = Net::OpenID::Consumer->new( %options );

        The following option names are recognized: "ua", "cache", "args",
        "consumer_secret", "minimum_version", "required_root",
        "assoc_options", and "nonce_options" in the constructor. In each
        case the option value is treated exactly as the argument to the
        corresponding method described below under Configuration.

METHODS
  State
    $csr->message($key)
        Returns the value for the given key/field from the OpenID protocol
        message contained in the request URL parameters (i.e., the value for
        the URL parameter "openid.$key"). This can only be used to obtain
        core OpenID fields not extension fields.

        Calling this method without a $key argument returns a
        Net::OpenID::IndirectMessage object representing the protocol
        message, at which point the various object methods are available,
        including

         $csr->message->protocol_version
         $csr->message->has_ext
         $csr->message->get_ext

        Returns undef in either case if no URL parameters have been supplied
        (i.e., because args() has not been initialized) or if the request is
        not an actual OpenID message.

    $csr->err
        Returns the last error, in form "errcode: errtext", as set by the
        various handlers below.

    $csr->errcode
        Returns the last error code. See Error Codes below.

    $csr->errtext
        Returns the last error text.

    $csr->json_err
        Returns the last error code/text in JSON format.

  Configuration
    $csr->ua($user_agent)
    $csr->ua
        Getter/setter for the LWP::UserAgent (or subclass) instance which
        will be used when direct HTTP requests to a provider are needed.
        It's highly recommended that you use LWPx::ParanoidAgent, or at
        least read its documentation so you're aware of why you should care.

    $csr->cache($cache)
    $csr->cache
        Getter/setter for the cache instance which is used for storing
        fetched HTML or XRDS pages, keys for associations with identity
        providers, and received response_nonce values from positive provider
        assertions.

        The $cache object can be anything that has a ->get($key) and
        ->set($key,$value[,$expire]) methods. See URI::Fetch for more
        information. This cache object is passed to URI::Fetch directly.

        Setting a cache instance is not absolutely required, But without it,
        provider associations will not be possible and the same pages may be
        fetched multiple times during discovery. It will also not be
        possible to check for repetition of the response_nonce, which may
        then leave you open to replay attacks.

    $csr->consumer_secret($scalar)
    $csr->consumer_secret($code)
         $code = $csr->B<consumer_secret>; ($secret) = $code->($time);

        The consumer secret is used to generate self-signed nonces for the
        return_to URL, to prevent spoofing.

        In the simplest (and least secure) form, you configure a static
        secret value with a scalar. If you use this method and change the
        scalar value, any outstanding requests from the last 30 seconds or
        so will fail.

        You may also supply a subref that takes one argument, *$time*, a
        unix timestamp and returns a secret.

        Your secret may not exceed 255 characters.

        For the best protection against replays and login cross-site request
        forgery, consumer_secret should additionally depend on something
        known to be specific to the client browser instance and not visible
        to an attacker. If "SSH_SESSION_ID" is available, you should use
        that. Otherwise you'll need to set a (Secure) cookie on the (HTTPS)
        page where the signin form appears in order to establish a pre-login
        session, then make sure to change this cookie upon successful login.

    $csr->minimum_version(2)
    $csr->minimum_version
        Get or set the minimum OpenID protocol version supported. Currently
        the only useful value you can set here is 2, which will cause 1.1
        identifiers to fail discovery with the error
        "protocol_version_incorrect" and responses from version 1 providers
        to not be recognized.

        In most cases you'll want to allow both 1.1 and 2.0 identifiers,
        which is the default. If you want, you can set this property to 1 to
        make this behavior explicit.

    $csr->args($ref)
    $csr->args($param)
    $csr->args
        Can be used in 1 of 3 ways:

        1.  Set the object from which URL parameter names and values are to
            be retrieved:

             $csr->args( $reference )

            where $reference is either an unblessed "HASH" ref, a "CODE"
            ref, or some kind of "request object" — the latter being either
            a CGI, Apache, Apache::Request, Apache2::Request, or
            Plack::Request object.

            If you pass in a "CODE" ref, it must,

            *   given a single parameter name argument, return the
                corresponding parameter value, *and*,

            *   given no arguments at all, return the full list of parameter
                names from the request.

            If you pass in an Apache (mod_perl 1.x interface) object and
            this is a POST request, you must *not* have already called
            "$r->content" as this routine will be making said call itself in
            order to extract the request parameters.

        2.  Get a parameter value:

             my $foo = $csr->args("foo");

            When given an unblessed scalar, it retrieves the value. It
            croaks if you haven't defined a way to get at the parameters.

            Most callers should instead use the "message" method above,
            which abstracts away the need to understand OpenID's message
            serialization.

        3.  Get the parameter getter:

             my $code = $csr->args;

            this being a subref that takes a parameter name and returns the
            corresponding value.

            Most callers should instead use the "message" method above with
            no arguments, which returns an object from which extension
            attributes can be obtained by their documented namespace URI.

    $csr->required_root($url_prefix)
    $csr->required_root
        Gets or sets the string prefix that, if nonempty, all return_to URLs
        must start with. Messages with return_to URLS that don't match will
        be considered invalid (spoofed from another site).

    $csr->assoc_options(...)
    $csr->assoc_options
        Get or sets the hash of parameters that determine how associations
        with identity providers will be made. Available options include:

        "assoc_type"
            Association type, (default 'HMAC-SHA1')

        "session_type"
            Association session type, (default 'DH-SHA1')

        "max_encrypt"
            (boolean) Use best encryption available for protocol version for
            both session type and association type. This overrides
            "session_type" and "assoc_type"

        "session_no_encrypt_https"
            (boolean) Use an unencrypted session type if the ID provider URL
            scheme is "https:". This overrides "max_encrypt" if both are
            set.

        "allow_eavesdropping"
            (boolean) Because it is generally a bad idea, we abort
            associations where an unencrypted session over a non-SSL
            connection is called for. However the OpenID 1.1 specification
            technically allows this, so if that is what you really want, set
            this flag true. Ignored under protocol version 2.

    $csr->nonce_options(...)
    $csr->nonce_options
        Gets or sets the hash of options for how response_nonce should be
        checked.

        In OpenID 2.0, response_nonce is sent by the identity provider as
        part of a positive identity assertion in order to help prevent
        replay attacks. In the check_authentication phase, the provider is
        also required to not authenticate the same response_nonce twice.

        The relying party is strongly encouraged but not required to reject
        multiple occurrences of a nonce (which can matter if associations
        are in use and there is no check_authentication phase). Relying
        party may also choose to reject a nonce on the basis of the
        timestamp being out of an acceptable range.

        Available options include:

        "nocheck"
            (boolean) Skip response_nonce checking entirely. This overrides
            all other nonce_options.

            "nocheck" is implied and is the only possibility if $csr->cache
            is unset.

        "lifetime"
            (integer) Cache entries for nonces will expire after this many
            seconds.

            Defaults to the value of "window", below.

            If "lifetime" is zero or negative, expiration times will not be
            set at all; entries will expire as per the default behavior for
            your cache (or you will need to purge them via some separate
            process).

            If your cache implementation ignores the third argument on
            $entry->set() calls (see Cache::Entry), then this option has no
            effect beyond serving as a default for "window".

        "ignoretime"
            (boolean) Do not do any checking of timestamps, i.e., only test
            whether nonce is in the cache. This overrides all other nonce
            options except for "lifetime" and "nocheck"

        "skew"
            (integer) Number of seconds that a provider clock can be ahead
            of ours before we deem it to be misconfigured.

            Default skew is 300 (5 minutes) or "window/2", if "window" is
            specified and "window/2" is smaller.

            ("skew" is treated as 0 if set negative, but don't do that).

            Misconfiguration of the provider clock means its timestamps are
            not reliable, which then means there is no way to know whether
            or not the nonce could have been sent before the start of the
            cache window, which nullifies any obligation to detect all
            multiply sent nonces. Conversely, if proper configuration can be
            assumed, then the timestamp value minus "skew" will be the
            earliest possible time that we could have received a previous
            instance of this response_nonce, and if the cache is reliable
            about holding entries from that time forward, then (and only
            then) can one be certain that an uncached nonce instance is
            indeed the first.

        "start"
            (integer) Reject nonces where *timestamp* minus "skew" is
            earlier than "start" (absolute seconds; default is zero a.k.a.
            midnight 1/1/1970 UTC)

            If you know the start time of your HTTP server (or your cache
            server, if that is separate — or the maximum of the start times
            if you have multiple cache servers), you should use this option
            to declare that.

        "window"
            (integer) Reject nonces where *timestamp* minus "skew" is more
            than "window" seconds ago. Zero or negative values of "window"
            are treated as infinite (i.e., allow everything).

            If "lifetime" is specified, "window" defaults to that. If
            "lifetime" is not specified, "window" defaults to 1800 (30
            minutes), adjusted upwards if "skew" is specified and larger
            than the default skew.

            On general principles, "window" should be a maximal expected
            propagation delay plus twice the "skew".

            Values between 0 and "skew" (causing all nonces to be rejected)
            and values greater than "lifetime" (cache may fail to keep all
            nonces that are still within the window) are *not* recommended.

        "timecop"
            (boolean) Reject nonces from The Future (i.e., timestamped more
            than "skew" seconds from now).

            Note that rejecting future nonces is not required. Nor does it
            protect from anything since an attacker can retry the message
            once it has expired from the cache but is still within the time
            interval where we would not yet *expect* that it could expire —
            this being the essential problem with future nonces. It may,
            however, be useful to have warnings about misconfigured provider
            clocks — and hence about this insecurity — at the cost of
            impairing interoperability (since this rejects messages that are
            otherwise allowed by the protocol), hence this option.

        In most cases it will be enough to either set "nocheck" to dispense
        with response_nonce checking entirely because some other (better)
        method of preventing replay attacks (see consumer_secret) has been
        implemented, or use "lifetime" to declare/set the lifetime of cache
        entries for nonces whether because the default lifetime is
        unsatisfactory or because the cache implementation is incapable of
        setting individual expiration times. All other options should
        default reasonably in these cases.

        In order for the nonce check to be as reliable/secure as possible
        (i.e., that it block all instances of duplicate nonces from properly
        configured providers as defined by "skew", which is the best we can
        do), "start" must be no earlier than the cache start time and the
        cache must be guaranteed to hold nonce entries for at least "window"
        seconds (though, to be sure, if you can tolerate being vulnerable
        for the first "window" seconds of a server run, then you do not need
        to set "start").

  Performing Discovery
    $csr->claimed_identity($url)
        Given a user-entered $url (which could be missing http://, or have
        extra whitespace, etc), converts it to canonical form, performs
        partial discovery to confirm that at least one provider endpoint
        exists, and returns a Net::OpenID::ClaimedIdentity object, or, on
        failure of any of the above, returns undef and sets last error
        ($csr->err).

        Note that the identity returned is *not* verified yet. It's only who
        the user claims they are, but they could be lying.

        If this method returns undef, an error code will be set. See Error
        Codes below.

  Handling Provider Responses
    The following routines are for handling a redirected provider response
    and assume that, among other things, $csr->args has been properly
    populated with the URL parameters.

    $csr->handle_server_response( %callbacks );
        When a request comes in that contains a response from an OpenID
        provider, figure out what it means and dispatch to an appropriate
        callback to handle the request. This is the callback-based
        alternative to explicitly calling the methods below in the correct
        sequence, and is recommended unless you need to do something
        strange.

        Anything you return from the selected callback function will be
        returned by this method verbatim. This is useful if the caller needs
        to return something different in each case.

        The available callbacks are:

        "not_openid"
            the request isn't an OpenID response after all.

        "setup_needed"
            a checkid_immediate mode request was rejected, indicating that
            the provider requires user interaction.

        "cancelled"
            the user cancelled the authentication request from the
            provider's UI.

        "verified ($verified_identity)"
            the user's identity has been successfully verified. A
            Net::OpenID::VerifiedIdentity object is passed in.

        "error ($errcode, $errmsg)"
            an error has occurred. An error code and message are provided.
            See Error Codes below for the meanings of the codes.

        For the sake of legacy code we also allow

        "setup_required ($setup_url)"
            [DEPRECATED] a checkid_immediate mode request was rejected *and*
            $setup_url was provided.

            Clients using this callback should be updated to use
            setup_needed at the earliest opportunity. Here $setup_url is the
            same as returned by $csr->user_setup_url.

    $csr->is_server_response
        Returns true if a set of URL parameters has been supplied (via
        $csr->args) and constitutes an actual OpenID protocol message.

    $csr->setup_needed
        Returns true if a checkid_immediate request failed because the
        provider requires user interaction. The correct action to take at
        this point depends on the OpenID protocol version

        (Version 1) Redirect to or otherwise make available a link to
        $csr->"user_setup_url".

        (Version 2) Retry the request in checkid_setup mode; the provider
        will then issue redirects as needed.

            N.B.: While some providers have been known to supply the
            "user_setup_url" parameter in Version 2 "setup_needed"
            responses, you *cannot* rely on this, and, moreover, since the
            OpenID 2.0 specification has nothing to say about the meaning of
            such a parameter, you cannot rely on it meaning anything in
            particular even if it is supplied.

    $csr->user_setup_url( [ %opts ] )
        (Version 1 only) Returns the URL the user must return to in order to
        login, setup trust, or do whatever the identity provider needs them
        to do in order to make the identity assertion which they previously
        initiated by entering their claimed identity URL.

            N.B.: Checking whether "user_setup_url" is set in order to
            determine whether a checkid_immediate request failed is
            DEPRECATED and will fail under OpenID 2.0. Use "setup_needed()"
            instead.

        The base URL that this function returns can be modified by using the
        following options in %opts:

        "post_grant"
            What you're asking the identity provider to do with the user
            after they setup trust. Can be either "return" or "close" to
            return the user back to the return_to URL, or close the browser
            window with JavaScript. If you don't specify, the behavior is
            undefined (probably the user gets a dead-end page with a link
            back to the return_to URL). In any case, the identity provider
            can do whatever it wants, so don't depend on this.

    $csr->user_cancel
        Returns true if the user declined to share their identity, false
        otherwise. (This function is literally one line: returns true if
        "openid.mode" eq "cancel")

        It's then your job to restore your app to where it was prior to
        redirecting them off to the user_setup_url, using the other query
        parameters that you'd sent along in your return_to URL.

    $csr->verified_identity( [ %opts ] )
        Returns a Net::OpenID::VerifiedIdentity object, or returns undef and
        sets last error ($csr->err). Verification includes double-checking
        the reported identity URL declares the identity provider, verifying
        the signature, etc.

        The options in %opts may contain:

        "required_root"
            Sets the required_root just for this request. Values returns to
            its previous value afterwards.

        If this method returns undef, an error code will be set. See Error
        Codes below.

ERROR CODES
    This is the complete list of error codes that can be set. Errors marked
    with (C) are set by claimed_identity. Other errors occur during handling
    of provider responses and can be set by args (A), verified_identity (V),
    and user_setup_url (S), all of which can show up in the "error" callback
    for handle_server_response.

        "provider_error"
            (A) The protocol message is a (2.0) error mode (i.e.,
            "openid.mode = 'error'") message, typically used for
            provider-specific error responses. Use $csr->message to get at
            the "contact" and "reference" fields.

        "empty_url"
            (C) Tried to do discovery on an empty or all-whitespace string.

        "bogus_url"
            (C) Tried to do discovery on a non-http:/https: URL.

        "protocol_version_incorrect"
            (C) None of the ID providers found support even the minimum
            protocol version ($csr->minimum_version)

        "no_identity_server"
            (CV) Tried to do discovery on a URL that does not seem to have
            any providers at all.

        "bad_mode"
            (SV) The "openid.mode" was expected to be "id_res" (positive
            assertion or, in version 1, checkid_immediate failed).

        "no_identity"
            (V) The "openid.identity" parameter is missing.

        "no_sig"
            (V) The "openid.sig" parameter is missing.

        "no_return_to"
            (V) The "openid.return_to" parameter is missing

        "bogus_return_to"
            (V) The "return_to" URL does not match $csr->required_root

        "nonce_missing"
            (V) The "openid.response_nonce" parameter is missing.

        "nonce_reused"
            (V) A previous assertion from this provider used this
            response_nonce already. Someone may be attempting a replay
            attack.

        "nonce_format"
            (V) Either the response_nonce timestamp was not in the correct
            format (e.g., tried to have fractional seconds or not UTC) or
            one of the components was out of range (e.g., month = 13).

        "nonce_future"
            (V) "timecop" was set and we got a response_nonce that was more
            than "skew" seconds into the future.

        "nonce_stale"
            (V) We got a response_nonce that was either prior to the start
            time or more than window seconds ago.

        "time_expired"
            (V) The return_to signature time ("oic.time") is from too long
            ago.

        "time_in_future"
            (V) The return_to signature time ("oic.time") is too far into
            the future.

        "time_bad_sig"
            (V) The HMAC of the return_to signature ("oic.time") is not what
            it should be.

        "server_not_allowed"
            (V) None of the provider endpoints found for the given ID match
            the server specified by the "openid.op_endpoint" parameter
            (OpenID 2 only).

        "unexpected_url_redirect"
            (V) Discovery for the given ID ended up at the wrong place

        "bogus_delegation"
            (V) Asserted identity ("openid.identity") does not match
            claimed_id or local_id/delegate.

        "unsigned_field"
            (V) In OpenID 2.0, "openid.op_endpoint", "openid.return_to",
            "openid.response_nonce", and "openid.assoc_handle" must always
            be signed, while "openid.claimed_id" and "openid.identity" must
            be signed if present.

        "expired_association"
            (V) "openid.assoc_handle" is for an association that has
            expired.

        "signature_mismatch"
            (V) An attempt to confirm the positive assertion using the
            association given by "openid.assoc_handle" failed; the signature
            is not what it should be.

        "naive_verify_failed_network"
            (V) An attempt to confirm the positive assertion via direct
            contact (check_authentication) with the provider failed with no
            response or a bad status code (!= 200).

        "naive_verify_failed_return"
            (V) An attempt to confirm a positive assertion via direct
            contact (check_authentication) received an explicitly negative
            response ("openid.is_valid = FALSE").

PROTOCOL VARIANCES
    XRI-based identities are not supported.

    Meanwhile, here are answers to the security profile questions from
    section 15.6 of the OpenID 2.0 specification
    <http://openid.net/specs/openid-authentication-2_0.html#anchor47> that
    are relevant to the Consumer/Relying-Party:

    1.  *Are wildcards allowed in realms?* Yes.

    2.  N/A.

    3.  *Types of claimed identifiers accepted.* HTTP or HTTPS

    4.  *Are self-issued certificates allowed for authentication?* Depends
        entirely on the user agent ("ua") supplied. LWP::UserAgent, as of
        version 6.0, can be configured to only accept connections to sites
        with certificates deriving from a set of trusted roots.

    5.  *Must the XRDS file be signed?* No.

    6.  *Must the XRDS file be retrieved over secure channel?* No.

    7.  *What types of session types can be used when creating
        associations?* Any of "no-encryption","DH-SHA1","DH-SHA256"

    8.  N/A.

    9.  N/A.

    10. *Must the association request take place over a secure channel?* If
        the session type is "no-encryption", then Yes for version 2.0
        providers and likewise for version 1.1 providers if
        "allow_eavesdropping" is not set, otherwise No.

COPYRIGHT
    This module is Copyright (c) 2005 Brad Fitzpatrick. All rights reserved.

    You may distribute under the terms of either the GNU General Public
    License or the Artistic License, as specified in the Perl README file.
    If you need more liberal licensing terms, please contact the maintainer.

WARRANTY
    This is free software. IT COMES WITHOUT WARRANTY OF ANY KIND.

MAILING LIST
    The Net::OpenID family of modules has a mailing list powered by Google
    Groups. For more information, see
    <http://groups.google.com/group/openid-perl>.

SEE ALSO
    OpenID website: <http://openid.net/>

    Net::OpenID::ClaimedIdentity -- part of this module

    Net::OpenID::VerifiedIdentity -- part of this module

    Net::OpenID::Server -- another module, for implementing an OpenID
    identity provider/server

AUTHORS
    Brad Fitzpatrick <brad AT danga.com>

    Tatsuhiko Miyagawa <miyagawa AT sixapart.com>

    Martin Atkins <mart AT degeneration.uk>

    Robert Norris <rob AT eatenbyagrue.org>

    Roger Crew <crew AT cs.edu>


Generated by phpMan Author: Che Dong On Apache Under GNU General Public License - MarkDown Format
2026-05-23 08:38 @216.73.217.24 CrawledBy Mozilla/5.0 AppleWebKit/537.36 (KHTML, like Gecko; compatible; ClaudeBot/1.0; +claudebot@anthropic.com)
Valid XHTML 1.0 TransitionalValid CSS!

^_back to top