//----------------------------------------------------------------------- // // Copyright (c) Outercurve Foundation. All rights reserved. // //----------------------------------------------------------------------- namespace DotNetOpenAuth.OAuth.ChannelElements { using System; using System.Collections.Generic; using System.Linq; using System.Text; using DotNetOpenAuth.OAuth.Messages; using Validation; /// /// An interface OAuth hosts must implement for persistent storage /// and recall of tokens and secrets for an individual OAuth consumer /// or service provider. /// public interface ITokenManager { /// /// Gets the Token Secret given a request or access token. /// /// The request or access token. /// The secret associated with the given token. /// Thrown if the secret cannot be found for the given token. string GetTokenSecret(string token); /// /// Stores a newly generated unauthorized request token, secret, and optional /// application-specific parameters for later recall. /// /// The request message that resulted in the generation of a new unauthorized request token. /// The response message that includes the unauthorized request token. /// Thrown if the consumer key is not registered, or a required parameter was not found in the parameters collection. /// /// Request tokens stored by this method SHOULD NOT associate any user account with this token. /// It usually opens up security holes in your application to do so. Instead, you associate a user /// account with access tokens (not request tokens) in the /// method. /// void StoreNewRequestToken(UnauthorizedTokenRequest request, ITokenSecretContainingMessage response); /// /// Deletes a request token and its associated secret and stores a new access token and secret. /// /// The Consumer that is exchanging its request token for an access token. /// The Consumer's request token that should be deleted/expired. /// The new access token that is being issued to the Consumer. /// The secret associated with the newly issued access token. /// /// /// Any scope of granted privileges associated with the request token from the /// original call to should be carried over /// to the new Access Token. /// /// /// To associate a user account with the new access token, /// HttpContext.Current.User may be /// useful in an ASP.NET web application within the implementation of this method. /// Alternatively you may store the access token here without associating with a user account, /// and wait until WebConsumer.ProcessUserAuthorization or /// DesktopConsumer.ProcessUserAuthorization return the access /// token to associate the access token with a user account at that point. /// /// void ExpireRequestTokenAndStoreNewAccessToken(string consumerKey, string requestToken, string accessToken, string accessTokenSecret); /// /// Classifies a token as a request token or an access token. /// /// The token to classify. /// Request or Access token, or invalid if the token is not recognized. TokenType GetTokenType(string token); } }