Node.js Google Authentication Service Account Tokens
This is a low level utility library used to interact with Google Authentication services. In most cases, you probably want to use the google-auth-library instead.
npm install gtoken
const { GoogleToken } = require('gtoken');
const gtoken = new GoogleToken({
keyFile: 'path/to/key.pem', // or path to .p12 key file
email: 'my_service_account_email@developer.gserviceaccount.com',
scope: ['https://scope1', 'https://scope2'], // or space-delimited string of scopes
eagerRefreshThresholdMillis: 5 * 60 * 1000
});
gtoken.getToken((err, tokens) => {
if (err) {
console.log(err);
return;
}
console.log(tokens);
// {
// access_token: 'very-secret-token',
// expires_in: 3600,
// token_type: 'Bearer'
// }
});
You can also use the async/await style API:
const tokens = await gtoken.getToken()
console.log(tokens);
Or use promises:
gtoken.getToken()
.then(tokens => {
console.log(tokens)
})
.catch(console.error);
const { GoogleToken } = require('gtoken');
const gtoken = new GoogleToken({
keyFile: 'path/to/key.json',
scope: ['https://scope1', 'https://scope2'], // or space-delimited string of scopes
eagerRefreshThresholdMillis: 5 * 60 * 1000
});
gtoken.getToken((err, tokens) => {
if (err) {
console.log(err);
return;
}
console.log(tokens);
});
const key = '-----BEGIN RSA PRIVATE KEY-----\nXXXXXXXXXXX...';
const { GoogleToken } = require('gtoken');
const gtoken = new GoogleToken({
email: 'my_service_account_email@developer.gserviceaccount.com',
scope: ['https://scope1', 'https://scope2'], // or space-delimited string of scopes
key: key,
eagerRefreshThresholdMillis: 5 * 60 * 1000
});
Various options that can be set when creating initializing the
gtoken
object.
-
options.email or options.iss
: The service account email address. -
options.scope
: An array of scope strings or space-delimited string of scopes. -
options.sub
: The email address of the user requesting delegated access. -
options.keyFile
: The filename of.json
key,.pem
key or.p12
key. -
options.key
: The raw RSA private key value, in place of usingoptions.keyFile
. -
options.additionalClaims
: Additional claims to include in the JWT when requesting a token. -
options.eagerRefreshThresholdMillis
: How long must a token be valid for in order to return it from the cache. Defaults to 0.
Returns the cached tokens or requests a new one and returns it.
gtoken.getToken((err, token) => {
console.log(err || token);
// gtoken.rawToken value is also set
});
Given a keyfile, returns the key and (if available) the client email.
const creds = await gtoken.getCredentials('path/to/key.json');
Various properties set on the gtoken object after call to
.getToken()
.
-
gtoken.idToken
: The OIDC token returned (if any). -
gtoken.accessToken
: The access token. -
gtoken.expiresAt
: The expiry date as milliseconds since 1970/01/01 -
gtoken.key
: The raw key value. -
gtoken.rawToken
: Most recent raw token data received from Google.
Returns true if the token has expired, or token does not exist.
const tokens = await gtoken.getToken();
gtoken.hasExpired(); // false
Revoke the token if set.
await gtoken.revokeToken();
console.log('Token revoked!');
- Open the Google Developer Console.
- Open your project and under "APIs & auth", click Credentials.
- Generate a new
.p12
key and download it into your project.
You can just specify your .p12
file (with .p12
extension) as the keyFile
and it will automatically be converted to a .pem
on the fly, however this results in a slight performance hit. If you'd like to convert to a .pem
for use later, use OpenSSL if you have it installed.
$ openssl pkcs12 -in key.p12 -nodes -nocerts > key.pem
Don't forget, the passphrase when converting these files is the string 'notasecret'