Oauth - Protected Resource Request

Oauth

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Oauth
Client Endpoint (Redirection URI | Redirection Endpoint | User Agent Redirection)

The client endpoint is an endpoint used by the authorization endpoint to return authorization responses containing authorization credentials to the client via the resource owner user-agent (typically a...
Oauth
OAuth - Resource Owner Password Credentials / Password Credentials Flow

This page is the authentication via the password credentials (ie login+password) in OAuth. This type of authentication is known in Oauth as: the Password Credentials Flow. the Resource owner password...
Oauth
Oauth - Authorization Grant (Resource Owner Authorization|Authorization Credentials)

An Authorization Grant is a credential representing the resource owner's authorization to access its protected resources. The flow for each type of grant is expressed using grant type: one of four...
Oauth
Oauth - Client (App)

client is one of the 4 roles of the Oauth specification. In its most basic form, it's a web site used by a end-user. In more details, it's is a (first-party or third party service application making...
Oauth
Oauth - Flow (Abstract Protocol Flow)

The abstract OAuth 2.0 flow describes the interaction between the four roles. For each type of grant, you got a flow: Type / Flow Description Client Type (Public / Private) Direction Type Redirection...
Oauth
Oauth - Protected Resource

A protected resource is a resource hosted and protected by a resource server. Resource Server Protected resource request
Oauth
Oauth - Refresh token

When an access token expires, developers can use an optional refresh token to request a new access token without having to ask the user to enter their credentials again. Refresh tokens are credentials...
Oauth
Oauth - Resource Server

A resource server is one of the 4 roles of Oauth. It hosts the protected resources, capable of accepting and responding to protected resource requests using access tokens. An end-user (resource owner)...
Oauth 2.0 - Authorization framework

This section talks OAuth 2.0 (OAuth 2.0 replaces OAuth 1.0) The following two specifications provide a general framework for third-party applications (know as the client) to obtain and use limited...



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