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  5. CHANGELOG.md
  6. LICENSE
  7. pubspec.yaml
  8. README.md
packages/google_sign_in/google_sign_in_web/README.md

google_sign_in_web

The web implementation of google_sign_in

Migrating to v0.11 and v0.12 (Google Identity Services)

The google_sign_in_web plugin is backed by the new Google Identity Services (GIS) JS SDK since version 0.11.0.

The GIS SDK is used both for Authentication and Authorization flows.

The GIS SDK, however, doesn‘t behave exactly like the one being deprecated. Some concepts have experienced pretty drastic changes, and that’s why this plugin required a major version update.

Differences between Google Identity Services SDK and Google Sign-In for Web SDK.

The Google Sign-In JavaScript for Web JS SDK is set to be deprecated after March 31, 2023. Google Identity Services (GIS) SDK is the new solution to quickly and easily sign users into your app suing their Google accounts.

  • In the GIS SDK, Authentication and Authorization are now two separate concerns.
    • Authentication (information about the current user) flows will not authorize scopes anymore.
    • Authorization (permissions for the app to access certain user information) flows will not return authentication information.
  • The GIS SDK no longer has direct access to previously-seen users upon initialization.
    • signInSilently now displays the One Tap UX for web.
  • Since 0.12 The plugin provides an idToken (JWT-encoded info) when the user successfully completes an authentication flow:
    • In the plugin: signInSilently and through the web-only renderButton widget.
  • The plugin signIn method uses the OAuth “Implicit Flow” to Authorize the requested scopes.
    • This method only provides an accessToken, and not an idToken, so if your app needs an idToken, this method should be avoided on the web.
  • The GIS SDK no longer handles sign-in state and user sessions, it only provides Authentication credentials for the moment the user did authenticate.
  • The GIS SDK no longer is able to renew Authorization sessions on the web. Once the token expires, API requests will begin to fail with unauthorized, and user Authorization is required again.

See more differences in the following migration guides:

New use cases to take into account in your app

Authentication != Authorization

In the GIS SDK, the concepts of Authentication and Authorization have been separated.

It is possible now to have an Authenticated user that hasn't Authorized any scopes.

Flutter apps that need to run in the web must now handle the fact that an Authenticated user may not have permissions to access the scopes it requires to function.

The Google Sign In plugin has a new canAccessScopes method that can be used to check if a user is Authorized or not.

It is also possible that Authorizations expire while users are using an app (after 3600 seconds), so apps should monitor response failures from the APIs, and prompt users (interactively) to grant permissions again.

Check the “Integration considerations > UX separation for authentication and authorization guide” in the official GIS SDK documentation for more information about this.

(See also the package:google_sign_in example app for a simple implementation of this (look at the isAuthorized variable).)

Is this separation always required?

Only if the scopes required by an app are different from the OpenID Connect scopes.

If an app only needs an idToken, or the OpenID Connect scopes, the Authentication bits of the plugin should be enough for your app (signInSilently and renderButton).

What happened to the signIn method on the web?

Because the GIS SDK for web no longer provides users with the ability to create their own Sign-In buttons, or an API to start the sign in flow, the current implementation of signIn (that does authorization and authentication) is no longer feasible on the web.

The web plugin attempts to simulate the old signIn behavior by using the OAuth Implicit pop-up flow, which authenticates and authorizes users.

The drawback of this approach is that the OAuth flow only returns an accessToken, and a synthetic version of the User Data, that does not include an idToken.

The solution to this is to migrate your custom “Sign In” buttons in the web to the Button Widget provided by this package: Widget renderButton().

(Check the package:google_sign_in example app for an example on how to mix the renderButton widget on the web, with a custom button for the mobile.)

Enable access to the People API for your GCP project

If you want to use the signIn method on the web, the plugin will do an additional request to the PeopleAPI to retrieve the logged-in user information (minus the idToken).

For this to work, you must enable access to the People API on your Client ID in the GCP console.

This is not recommended. Ideally, your web application should use a mix of signInSilently and the Google Sign In web renderButton to authenticate your users, and then canAccessScopes and requestScopes to authorize the scopes that are needed.

Why is the idToken missing after signIn?

The idToken is cryptographically signed by Google Identity Services, and this plugin can't spoof that signature.

User Sessions

Since the GIS SDK does not manage user sessions anymore, apps that relied on this feature might break.

If long-lived sessions are required, consider using some user authentication system that supports Google Sign In as a federated Authentication provider, like Firebase Auth, or similar.

Expired / Invalid Authorization Tokens

Since the GIS SDK does not auto-renew authorization tokens anymore, it's now the responsibility of your app to do so.

Apps now need to monitor the status code of their REST API requests for response codes different to 200. For example:

  • 401: Missing or invalid access token.
  • 403: Expired access token.

In either case, your app needs to prompt the end user to requestScopes, to interactively renew the token.

The GIS SDK limits authorization token duration to one hour (3600 seconds).

Usage

Import the package

This package is endorsed, which means you can simply use google_sign_in normally. This package will be automatically included in your app when you do, so you do not need to add it to your pubspec.yaml.

However, if you import this package to use any of its APIs directly, you should add it to your pubspec.yaml as usual.

For example, you need to import this package directly if you plan to use the web-only Widget renderButton() method.

Web integration

First, go through the instructions here to create your Google Sign-In OAuth client ID.

On your web/index.html file, add the following meta tag, somewhere in the head of the document:

<meta name="google-signin-client_id" content="YOUR_GOOGLE_SIGN_IN_OAUTH_CLIENT_ID.apps.googleusercontent.com">

For this client to work correctly, the last step is to configure the Authorized JavaScript origins, which identify the domains from which your application can send API requests. When in local development, this is normally localhost and some port.

You can do this by:

  1. Going to the Credentials page.
  2. Clicking “Edit” in the OAuth 2.0 Web application client that you created above.
  3. Adding the URIs you want to the Authorized JavaScript origins.

For local development, you must add two localhost entries:

  • http://localhost and
  • http://localhost:7357 (or any port that is free in your machine)

Starting flutter in http://localhost:7357

Normally flutter run starts in a random port. In the case where you need to deal with authentication like the above, that's not the most appropriate behavior.

You can tell flutter run to listen for requests in a specific host and port with the following:

flutter run -d chrome --web-hostname localhost --web-port 7357

Other APIs

Read the rest of the instructions if you need to add extra APIs (like Google People API).

Using the plugin

See the Usage instructions of package:google_sign_in

Note that the serverClientId parameter of the GoogleSignIn constructor is not supported on Web.

Example

Find the example wiring in the Google sign-in example application.

API details

See google_sign_in.dart for more API details.

Contributions and Testing

Tests are crucial for contributions to this package. All new contributions should be reasonably tested.

Check the test/README.md file for more information on how to run tests on this package.

Contributions to this package are welcome. Read the Contributing to Flutter Plugins guide to get started.

Issues and feedback

Please file issues to send feedback or report a bug.

Thank you!