Tcl
Tcl
OAuth2 using a SOCKS Proxy (for a Desktop Application)
See more OAuth2 Examples
Explains how to use a SOCKS proxy to send OAuth2 communications for a desktop application, using Microsoft Graph as an example. This method applies to all OAuth2 applications.Chilkat Tcl Downloads
load ./chilkat.dll
set success 0
# This example requires the Chilkat API to have been previously unlocked.
# See Global Unlock Sample for sample code.
# To use a SOCKS proxy with OAuth2, create a Chilkat socket object and specify the details for the
# SOCKS proxy server (SOCKS4 or SOCKS5).
set socket [new_CkSocket]
# Use your SOCKS proxy server domain or IP address.
CkSocket_put_SocksHostname $socket "mysocksproxyserver.com"
# Change this to the listening port of your SOCKS proxy server (if necessary)
CkSocket_put_SocksPort $socket 1080
CkSocket_put_SocksUsername $socket "myProxyLogin"
CkSocket_put_SocksPassword $socket "myProxyPassword"
# Set the SOCKS version to 4 or 5 based on the version
# of the SOCKS proxy server:
CkSocket_put_SocksVersion $socket 5
# Note: SOCKS4 servers only support usernames without passwords.
# SOCKS5 servers support full login/password authentication.
set oauth2 [new_CkOAuth2]
# We don't need to connect the socket beforehand.
# Just tell oauth2 to use the socket which has the SOCKS proxy properties.
set success [CkOAuth2_UseConnection $oauth2 $socket]
# This should be the port in the localhost callback URL for your app.
# The callback URL would look like "http://localhost:3017/" if the port number is 3017.
CkOAuth2_put_ListenPort $oauth2 3017
CkOAuth2_put_AuthorizationEndpoint $oauth2 "https://login.microsoftonline.com/common/oauth2/v2.0/authorize"
CkOAuth2_put_TokenEndpoint $oauth2 "https://login.microsoftonline.com/common/oauth2/v2.0/token"
# Replace these with actual values.
CkOAuth2_put_ClientId $oauth2 "MICROSOFT-GRAPH-CLIENT-ID"
# This is your app password:
CkOAuth2_put_ClientSecret $oauth2 "MICROSOFT-GRAPH-CLIENT-SECRET"
CkOAuth2_put_CodeChallenge $oauth2 0
# Provide a SPACE separated list of scopes.
# See https://developer.microsoft.com/en-us/graph/docs/authorization/permission_scopes
# Important: To get a refresh token in the final response, you have to ask for "offline_access" scope
CkOAuth2_put_Scope $oauth2 "openid profile offline_access user.readwrite mail.readwrite mail.send files.readwrite"
# Begin the OAuth2 Authorization code flow. This returns a URL that should be loaded in a browser.
set url [CkOAuth2_startAuth $oauth2]
if {[CkOAuth2_get_LastMethodSuccess $oauth2] != 1} then {
puts [CkOAuth2_lastErrorText $oauth2]
delete_CkSocket $socket
delete_CkOAuth2 $oauth2
exit
}
puts "url = $url"
# Launch the default browser on the system and navigate to the url.
# The LaunchBrowser method was added in Chilkat v10.1.2.
set success [CkOAuth2_LaunchBrowser $oauth2 $url]
if {$success == 0} then {
puts [CkOAuth2_lastErrorText $oauth2]
delete_CkSocket $socket
delete_CkOAuth2 $oauth2
exit
}
# Wait for the user to approve or deny authorization in the browser.
set numMsWaited 0
while {expr [$numMsWaited < 90000] && [[CkOAuth2_get_AuthFlowState $oauth2] < 3]} {
CkOAuth2_SleepMs $oauth2 100
set numMsWaited [expr $numMsWaited + 100]
}
# If the browser does not respond within the specified time, AuthFlowState will be:
#
# 1: Waiting for Redirect - The OAuth2 background thread is waiting for the browser's redirect request.
# 2: Waiting for Final Response - The thread is awaiting the final access token response.
# In either case, cancel the background task initiated by StartAuth.
if {[CkOAuth2_get_AuthFlowState $oauth2] < 3} then {
CkOAuth2_Cancel $oauth2
puts "No response from the browser!"
delete_CkSocket $socket
delete_CkOAuth2 $oauth2
exit
}
# Check AuthFlowState to determine if authorization was granted, denied, or failed:
#
# 3: Success - OAuth2 flow completed, the background thread exited, and the successful response is in AccessTokenResponse.
# 4: Access Denied - OAuth2 flow completed, the background thread exited, and the error response is in AccessTokenResponse.
# 5: Failure - OAuth2 flow failed before completion, the background thread exited, and error details are in FailureInfo.
if {[CkOAuth2_get_AuthFlowState $oauth2] == 5} then {
puts "OAuth2 failed to complete."
puts [CkOAuth2_failureInfo $oauth2]
delete_CkSocket $socket
delete_CkOAuth2 $oauth2
exit
}
if {[CkOAuth2_get_AuthFlowState $oauth2] == 4} then {
puts "OAuth2 authorization was denied."
puts [CkOAuth2_accessTokenResponse $oauth2]
delete_CkSocket $socket
delete_CkOAuth2 $oauth2
exit
}
if {[CkOAuth2_get_AuthFlowState $oauth2] != 3} then {
puts "Unexpected AuthFlowState:[CkOAuth2_get_AuthFlowState $oauth2]"
delete_CkSocket $socket
delete_CkOAuth2 $oauth2
exit
}
puts "OAuth2 authorization granted!"
puts "Access Token = [CkOAuth2_accessToken $oauth2]"
# Get the full JSON response:
set json [new_CkJsonObject]
CkJsonObject_Load $json [CkOAuth2_accessTokenResponse $oauth2]
CkJsonObject_put_EmitCompact $json 0
# The JSON response looks like this:
# {
# "token_type": "Bearer",
# "scope": "User.Read Mail.ReadWrite Mail.Send",
# "expires_in": 3600,
# "ext_expires_in": 0,
# "access_token": "EwBAA8l6B...",
# "refresh_token": "MCRMdbe...",
# "id_token": "eyJ0eXA..."
# }
# If an "expires_on" member does not exist, then add the JSON member by
# getting the current system date/time and adding the "expires_in" seconds.
# This way we'll know when the token expires.
if {[CkJsonObject_HasMember $json "expires_on"] != 1} then {
set dtExpire [new_CkDateTime]
CkDateTime_SetFromCurrentSystemTime $dtExpire
CkDateTime_AddSeconds $dtExpire [CkJsonObject_IntOf $json "expires_in"]
CkJsonObject_AppendString $json "expires_on" [CkDateTime_getAsUnixTimeStr $dtExpire 0]
}
puts [CkJsonObject_emit $json]
# Save the JSON to a file for future requests.
set fac [new_CkFileAccess]
CkFileAccess_WriteEntireTextFile $fac "qa_data/tokens/microsoftGraph.json" [CkJsonObject_emit $json] "utf-8" 0
delete_CkSocket $socket
delete_CkOAuth2 $oauth2
delete_CkJsonObject $json
delete_CkDateTime $dtExpire
delete_CkFileAccess $fac