Solution Overview (Server Apps + API)

In order to ensure that only authorized users and applications are allowed access to the Timesheets API, ExampleCo has decided to make use of the OAuth 2.0 authorization framework. The framework provides the flexibility the company wants since the different grants can allow them to easily authorize the various types of applications which need to communicate with the Timesheets API.

API Authentication and Authorization

An API is a way to expose functionality of your application to other applications. An application can make a request by sending a message to an endpoint on an API and receive information as a response.

An API endpoint can be secured or not. In our case, since the timesheets are sensitive information that affect reviews and payments, it is important to ensure that only authorized users and applications can call the endpoints on our API. When a client application wants to access protected endpoints on an API, it needs to present an Access Token as proof that it has the required permissions for making the call to the endpoint.

An Access Token is obtained by authenticating the user with an Authorization Server and the user can then, in turn, authorize the application to access the API on their behalf.

What is an Access Token?

An Access Token (also referred to as access_token) is an opaque string representing an authorization issued to the application. It may denote an identifier used to retrieve the authorization information or may self-contain the authorization information (for example, the user's identity, permissions, and so forth) in a verifiable manner.

It is quite common for Access Tokens to be implemented as JSON Web Tokens.

For more information on Auth0 Access Tokens refer to Access Token.

An API can enforce fine-grained control over who can access the various endpoints exposed by the API. These permissions are expressed as scopes.

When a user authorizes a client application, the application can also indicate which permissions it requires. The user is then allowed to review and grant these permissions. These permissions are then included in the Access Token as part of the scope claim.

Subsequently, when the client passes along the Access Token when making requests to the API, the API can inspect the scope claim to ensure that the required permissions were granted in order to call the particular API endpoint.

What are Scopes?

Each Access Token may include a list of the permissions that have been granted to the client. When a client authenticates with Auth0, it will specify the list of scopes (or permissions) it is requesting. If those scopes are authorized, then the Access Token will contain a list of authorized scopes.

For example, the timesheet API may accept four different levels of authorization: reading timesheets (scope read:timesheets), creating timesheets (scope create:timesheets), deleting timesheets (scope delete:timesheets) and approving timesheets (scope approve:timesheets).

When a client asks the API to create a new timesheet entry, then the Access Token should contain the create:timesheets scope. In a similar fashion, in order to delete existing timesheets, the Access Token should contain the delete:timesheets scope.

For more information on scopes refer to Scopes.

By using the OAuth 2.0 authorization framework, you can give your own applications or third-party applications limited access to your APIs on behalf of the application itself. Using Auth0, you can easily support different flows in your own APIs without worrying about the OAuth 2.0/OpenID Connect (OIDC) specification, or the many other technical aspects of API authorization.

OAuth roles

In any OAuth 2.0 flow we can identify the following roles:

  • Resource Owner: the entity that can grant access to a protected resource. Typically this is the end-user.

  • Resource Server: the server hosting the protected resources. This is the API you want to access.

  • Client: an application requesting access to a protected resource on behalf of the Resource Owner.

  • Authorization Server: the server that authenticates the Resource Owner, and issues Access Tokens after getting proper authorization. In this case, Auth0.

Using different grants types (or flows), these participants will interact to grant to the client apps limited access to the APIs you are building. As a result, the client app will obtain an Access Token that can be used to call the API on behalf of the user.

Client Credentials Grant

OAuth 2 provides several grant types for different use cases. In this particular use case where a cron job will be uploading timesheets via an API, there is no interactive user (or resource owner) who grants permission to the cron job to access the API.

The cron job is also not making the API calls on behalf of any user. Instead there is a machine to machine authorization and the application (the cron job) makes calls to the Resource Server (the API) on its own behalf.

For situations like this where there is no user interaction involved, the Client Credentials Grant is ideal. With Client Credentials Grant (defined in RFC 6749, section 4.4) an Application can directly request an Access Token from the Authorization Server by using its Client Credentials (a Client Id and a Client Secret). Instead of identifying a Resource Owner, this token will represent the Application itself.

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  1. The Application authenticates with the Authorization Server using its Client ID and Client Secret.

  2. The Authorization Server validates this information and returns an Access Token.

  3. The Application can use the Access Token to call the Resource Server on behalf of itself.