I'll split them to: Authorization endpoint and Toke endpoint. In the WWW-Authenticate header I'll add a parameter for each (instead of one) for lightweight discovery (which we can keep, change, or drop later).
EHL On 4/15/10 6:22 PM, "James Manger" <james.h.man...@team.telstra.com> wrote: I strongly favour specifying 2 separate endpoints: one for where to redirect a user, another for direct client calls. I agree with Marius that these two endpoints are different enough to be separate. One is only used by users via browsers. The other is only used by client apps. These are different populations, using different authentication mechanisms, with different performance requirements, and different technologies. The use of a type parameter is a poor tool to distinguishes these cases. I guess 1 URI could default to the other if not defined. 1 URI could be allowed to be relative to the other to save some bytes. -- James Manger -----Original Message----- From: oauth-boun...@ietf.org [mailto:oauth-boun...@ietf.org] On Behalf Of Eran Hammer-Lahav Sent: Friday, 16 April 2010 4:41 AM To: OAuth WG Subject: [OAUTH-WG] Issue: Split the authorization endpoint into two endpoints OAuth 2.0 defines a single authorization endpoint with a 'type' parameter for the various flows and flow steps. There are two types of calls made to the authorization endpoint: - Requests for Access - requests in which an end user interacts with the authorization server, granting client access. - Requests for Token - requests in which the client uses a verification code or other credentials to obtain an access token. These requests require SSL/TLS because they always result in the transmission of plaintext credentials in the response and sometimes in the request. A proposal has been made to define two separate endpoints due to the different nature of these endpoints: On 4/6/10 4:06 PM, "Marius Scurtescu" <mscurte...@google.com> wrote: > Constraints for endpoints: > access token URL: HTTPS and POST only, no user > user authentication URL: HTTP or HTTPS, GET or POST, authenticated user > > In many cases the above constraints can be enforced with configuration > that sits in front of the controllers implementing these endpoints. > For example, Apache config can enforce SSL and POST. Same can be done > in a Java filter. Also a Java filter can enforce that only > authenticated users hit the endpoint, it can redirect to a login page > if needed. > > By keeping two different endpoints all of the above is much simpler. > Nothing prevents an authz server to collapse these two into one > endpoint. While requests for access do not require HTTPS, they should because they involve authenticating the end user. As for enforcing HTTP methods (GET, POST), this is simple to do both at the server configuration level or application level. On the other hand, having a single endpoint makes the specification simpler, and more importantly, makes discovery trivial as a 401 response needs to include a single endpoint for obtaining a token regardless of the flow (some flows use one, others two steps). A richer discovery later can use LRDD on the single authorization endpoint to obtain an XRD describing the flows and UI options provided by the server. But this is outside our scope. Proposal: No change. Keep the single authorization endpoint and require HTTPS for all requests. EHL _______________________________________________ OAuth mailing list OAuth@ietf.org https://www.ietf.org/mailman/listinfo/oauth
_______________________________________________ OAuth mailing list OAuth@ietf.org https://www.ietf.org/mailman/listinfo/oauth