This repository provides an example of how to use Flask-Dance to connect
to GitHub as an OAuth client. The example code is in github.py
--
all the other files in this repository are secondary. You can run this example
code locally, or deploy it to Heroku for free to see how it runs in a
production-style environment.
Heroku is a great way to get up and running fast, and you don't even need to open the terminal!
It's easy, and it's free! Just click on this button:
You can leave all the fields at their default values: we'll fill them in later. The only thing that matters right now is the app name, and Heroku will autogenerate a name for you if you leave that field blank. Using an autogenerated name is perfectly fine, just take note of what it is.
Note that your app isn't functional yet, and if you try to visit it right now, you'll end up at a GitHub 404 page. That's OK, we're not done yet!
Visit https://github.com/settings/applications/new to register an
application on GitHub. In order to register the application, you'll need that
app name from Heroku. The GitHub application's authorization callback URL
must be https://APPNAME.herokuapp.com/login/github/authorized
. For example,
if Heroku assigned you an app name of peaceful-lake
, your authorization
callback URL must be
https://peaceful-lake.herokuapp.com/login/github/authorized
.
Once you've registered your application on GitHub, GitHub will give you a client ID and client secret, which we'll use in the next step.
Go to Heroku and visit the settings page for your app. (You can get there from your Heroku dashboard, or by clicking on the "Manage App" button after the deploy step is finished.) On that page, there should be a section called "Config Variables" where you can manage the config vars for your application. You'll need click the "Reveal Config Vars" button to see which variables are available, and then the "Edit" button to allow you to change these variables.
Take the client ID you got from GitHub, and paste it into the "VALUE" field
next to the GITHUB_OAUTH_CLIENT_ID
field, replacing the dummy value that
was there before. Similarly, take the client secret you got from GitHub,
and paste it into the "VALUE" field next to the GITHUB_OAUTH_CLIENT_SECRET
field, replacing the dummy value that was there before.
Click the "Save" button when you're done.
Your app name from Heroku will determine the URL that your app is running on:
the URL will be https://APPNAME.herokuapp.com
. For example, if Heroku
assigned you an app name of peaceful-lake
, your app will be available at
https://peaceful-lake.herokuapp.com
. Visit that URL, and you should
immediately be redirected to login with GitHub!
If you'd prefer to run this locally on your computer, you can do that as well.
Visit https://github.com/settings/applications/new to register an
application on GitHub. You must set the application's authorization
callback URL to http://localhost:5000/login/github/authorized
.
Once you've registered your application on GitHub, GitHub will give you a client ID and client secret, which we'll use in step 3.
Run the following commands on your computer:
git clone https://github.com/singingwolfboy/flask-dance-github.git cd flask-dance-github pyvenv venv source venv/bin/activate pip install -r requirements.txt
These commands will clone this git repository onto your computer,
create a virtual environment for this project, activate it, and install
the dependencies listed in requirements.txt
.
Many applications use environment variables for configuration, and Flask-Dance is no exception. You'll need to set the following environment variables:
GITHUB_OAUTH_CLIENT_ID
: set this to the client ID you got from GitHub.GITHUB_OAUTH_CLIENT_SECRET
: set this to the client secret you got from GitHub.OAUTHLIB_INSECURE_TRANSPORT
: set this totrue
. This indicates that you're doing local testing, and it's OK to use HTTP instead of HTTPS for OAuth. You should only do this for local testing. Do not set this in production! [oauthlib docs]
How you set these variables depends on your operating system. For Mac/Linux, you
can use the export command. For Windows, you can use the SET command. If
you don't want to worry about this, you can create a .env
file with
your environment variables, and use foreman to run your app. This repository
has a .env.example
file that you can copy.
If you're setting environment variables manually, run your app using Python:
python github.py
If you're using a .env
file for your environment variables, install foreman
and use that to run your app:
foreman start
Then, go to http://localhost:5000/ to visit your app and log in with GitHub!
Fork this GitHub repo so that you can make changes to it. Read the documentation for Flask and Flask-Dance to learn what's possible. Ask questions, learn as you go, build your own OAuth-enabled web application, and don't forget to be awesome!