I am using Twitter to log users into to a website, which seems to be working up until I attempt to obtain a valid Access Token.
require("twitteroauth.php");
require 'twconfig.php';
session_start();
$twitteroauth = new TwitterOAuth(YOUR_CONSUMER_KEY, YOUR_CONSUMER_SECRET);
$request_token = $twitteroauth->getRequestToken('http://****/tw_response.php');
$oauth_token = $request_token['oauth_token'];
$_SESSION['oauth_token'] = $oauth_token;
$oauth_token_secret = $request_token['oauth_token_secret'];
$_SESSION['oauth_token_secret'] = $oauth_token_secret;
if ($twitteroauth->http_code == 200) {
url = $twitteroauth->getAuthorizeURL($request_token['oauth_token']);
header('Location: '.$url);
} else {
die('Something wrong happened.');
}
This seems to be working correctly, redirecting me to twitter to sign in and confirm access, after which it returns me to tw_response.php (my Callback url), with the following variables in the url:
http://example.com/login.php?oauth_token=sO3X...yj0k&oauth_verifier=Ip6T...gALQ
In tw_response.php I then try to get the Access Token, but it reports as invalid. I tried using var_dump
to view the content of the access token as follows:
require("twitteroauth.php");
require 'twconfig.php';
session_start();
$oauth_verifier = $_REQUEST['oauth_verifier'];
$oauth_token = $_SESSION['oauth_token'];
$oauth_token_secret = $_SESSION['oauth_token_secret'];
$twitteroauth = new TwitterOAuth(YOUR_CONSUMER_KEY, YOUR_CONSUMER_SECRET, $oauth_token, $oauth_token_secret);
$access_token = $twitteroauth->getAccessToken($data['oauth_verifier']);
var_dump($access_token);
The result of the var_dump
ends in "invalid / expired Token":
array(8) {
["oauth_url"] => string(104) ""1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?>/oauth/access_token?oauth_consumer_key=ceE...9Dg"
["oauth_nonce"]=> string(32) "c52...d07"
["oauth_signature"]=> string(28) "ry7...Fcc="
["oauth_signature_method"]=> string(9) "HMAC-SHA1"
["oauth_timestamp"]=> string(10) "1359031586"
["oauth_token"]=> string(40) "sO3...j0k"
["oauth_verifier"]=> string(43) "Ip6...ALQ"
["oauth_version"]=> string(63) "1.0 Invalid / expired Token "
}
If your OAuth flow was working one day and failing the next, check your computer's clock. I was running a Vagrant box that somehow had its time set to the day before, which caused the Twitter API to return {"code":89,"message":"Invalid or expired token."}. This may also appear as 401 timestamp out of bounds. You can use this command to update your clock in Ubuntu:
Alternative method if
ntpdate
isn't available on your system:I think this link can help you out
http://www.phpgang.com/twitter-oauth-in-php_175.html
Where did
$data
magically come from? You have the variable$oauth_verifier
, but keep in mind you don't need this if this is your registered callback URL.Since you used an invalid variable inside
getAccessToken
, it will return an invalid value back.The correct way to use TwitterOAuth:
I just use a single script for callbacks for ease of use; you can split the relevant sections into multiple scripts if you like (and you probably should).
Handily for your database, the credentials include the twitter user's username, too.
Edit: Twitter is now allocating 64bit integers for user IDs. You should store this as a string to ensure that you don't end up with mangled user IDs and collisions if you can't handle 64bit integers in every part of your application.
So, if you want to log users in through twitter, without explicitly giving them a login to your site, you could use
$_SESSION
(I use databases for my logins, which is recommended if you want to save that state) In the above script you would add this to the end of theelse
block:You can also get the user's screen name and more from
GET account/verify_credentials
, if you want to give them a user page (if you use javascript, grab their userid throughid_str
here):