The 5.0 release includes breaking changes to address several long-standing API issues, along with a few minor improvements. Consider following the tips below to help ensure a smooth upgrade process.
The minimum supported Rust version (MSRV) is now 1.65. Going forward, this crate will maintain a policy of supporting Rust releases going back at least 6 months. Changes that break compatibility with Rust releases older than 6 months will no longer be considered SemVer breaking changes and will not result in a new major version number for this crate. MSRV changes will coincide with minor version updates and will not happen in patch releases.
Each auth flow depends on one or more server endpoints. For example, the
authorization code flow depends on both an authorization endpoint and a token endpoint, while the
client credentials flow only depends on a token endpoint. Previously, it was possible to instantiate
a Client
without a token endpoint and then attempt to use an auth flow that required a token
endpoint, leading to errors at runtime. Also, the authorization endpoint was always required, even
for auth flows that do not use it.
In the 5.0 release, all endpoints are optional.
Typestates are used to statically track, at compile
time, which endpoints' setters (e.g., set_auth_uri()
) have been called. Auth flows that depend on
an endpoint cannot be used without first calling the corresponding setter, which is enforced by the
compiler's type checker. This guarantees that certain errors will not arise at runtime.
In addition to unconditional setters (e.g., set_auth_uri()
), each
endpoint has a corresponding conditional setter (e.g., set_auth_uri_option()
) that sets a
conditional typestate (EndpointMaybeSet
). When the conditional typestate is set, endpoints can
be used via fallible methods that return Err(ConfigurationError::MissingUrl(_))
if an endpoint
has not been set. This is useful in dynamic scenarios such as
OpenID Connect Discovery, in which
it cannot be determined until runtime whether an endpoint is configured.
There are three possible typestates, each implementing the EndpointState
trait:
EndpointNotSet
: the corresponding endpoint has not been set and cannot be used.EndpointSet
: the corresponding endpoint has been set and is ready to be used.EndpointMaybeSet
: the corresponding endpoint may have been set and can be used via fallible methods that returnResult<_, ConfigurationError>
.
The following code changes are required to support the new interface:
-
Update calls to
Client::new()
to use the single-argument constructor (which accepts only aClientId
). Use theset_auth_uri()
,set_token_uri()
, andset_client_secret()
methods to set the authorization endpoint, token endpoint, and client secret, respectively, if applicable to your application's auth flows. -
If required by your usage of the
Client
orBasicClient
types (i.e., if you see related compiler errors), add the following generic parameters:HasAuthUrl: EndpointState, HasDeviceAuthUrl: EndpointState, HasIntrospectionUrl: EndpointState, HasRevocationUrl: EndpointState, HasTokenUrl: EndpointState,
For example, if you store a
BasicClient
within another data type, you may need to annotate it asBasicClient<EndpointSet, EndpointNotSet, EndpointNotSet, EndpointNotSet, EndpointSet>
if it has both an authorization endpoint and a token endpoint set. Compiler error messages will likely guide you to the appropriate combination of typestates.If, instead of using
BasicClient
, you are directly usingClient
with a different set of type parameters, you will need to append the five generic typestate parameters. For example, replace:type SpecialClient = Client< BasicErrorResponse, SpecialTokenResponse, BasicTokenType, BasicTokenIntrospectionResponse, StandardRevocableToken, BasicRevocationErrorResponse, >;
with:
type SpecialClient< HasAuthUrl = EndpointNotSet, HasDeviceAuthUrl = EndpointNotSet, HasIntrospectionUrl = EndpointNotSet, HasRevocationUrl = EndpointNotSet, HasTokenUrl = EndpointNotSet, > = Client< BasicErrorResponse, SpecialTokenResponse, BasicTokenType, BasicTokenIntrospectionResponse, StandardRevocableToken, BasicRevocationErrorResponse, HasAuthUrl, HasDeviceAuthUrl, HasIntrospectionUrl, HasRevocationUrl, HasTokenUrl, >;
The default values (
= EndpointNotSet
) are optional but often helpful since they will allow you to instantiate a client usingSpecialClient::new()
instead of having to specifySpecialClient::<EndpointNotSet, EndpointNotSet, EndpointNotSet, EndpointNotSet, EndpointNotSet>::new()
.
The 4.0 release aimed to align the naming of each endpoint with the terminology used in the relevant RFC. For example, RFC 6749 uses the term "endpoint URI" to refer to the authorization and token endpoints, while RFC 7009 refers to the "token revocation endpoint URL," and RFC 7662 uses neither "URI" nor "URL" to describe the introspection endpoint. However, the renaming in 4.0 was both internally inconsistent, and inconsistent with the specs.
In 5.0, the Client
's getters and setters for each endpoint are now named as follows:
- Authorization endpoint:
auth_uri()
/set_auth_uri()
- Token endpoint:
token_uri()
/set_token_uri()
- Redirect:
redirect_uri()
/set_redirect_uri()
- Revocation endpoint:
revocation_url()
/set_revocation_url()
- Introspection endpoint:
introspection_url()
/set_introspection_url()
- Device authorization endpoint:
device_authorization_url()
/set_device_authorization_url()
(no change)
Previously, the HTTP clients provided by this crate were stateless. For example, the
oauth2::reqwest::async_http_client()
method would instantiate a new reqwest::Client
for each
request. This meant that TCP connections could not be reused across requests, and customizing HTTP
clients (e.g., adding a custom request header to every request) was inconvenient.
The 5.0 release introduces two new traits: AsyncHttpClient
and SyncHttpClient
. Each
request_async()
and request()
method now accepts a reference to a type that implements these
traits, respectively, rather than a function type.
Warning
To prevent
SSRF
vulnerabilities, be sure to configure the HTTP client not to follow redirects. For example, use
redirect::Policy::none
when using reqwest
, or
redirects(0)
when using ureq
.
The AsyncHttpClient
trait is implemented for the following types:
reqwest::Client
(when the defaultreqwest
feature is enabled)- Any function type that implements:
To implement a custom asynchronous HTTP client, either directly implement the
Fn(HttpRequest) -> F where E: std::error::Error + 'static, F: Future<Output = Result<HttpResponse, E>>,
AsyncHttpClient
trait, or use a function that implements the signature above.
The SyncHttpClient
trait is implemented for the following types:
reqwest::blocking::Client
(when thereqwest-blocking
feature is enabled; see below)ureq::Agent
(when theureq
feature is enabled)oauth2::CurlHttpClient
(when thecurl
feature is enabled)- Any function type that implements:
To implement a custom synchronous HTTP client, either directly implement the
Fn(HttpRequest) -> Result<HttpResponse, E> where E: std::error::Error + 'static,
SyncHttpClient
trait, or use a function that implements the signature above.
The 5.0 release of this crate depends on the new stable http
1.0 release, which affects various public interfaces. In particular, reqwest
has been upgraded
to 0.12, which uses http
1.0.
In 4.0, enabling the (default) reqwest
feature also enabled reqwest
's blocking
feature.
To reduce dependencies and improve compilation speed, the reqwest
feature now only enables
reqwest
's asynchronous (non-blocking) client. To use the synchronous (blocking) client, enable the
reqwest-blocking
feature in Cargo.toml
:
oauth2 = { version = "5", features = ["reqwest-blocking" ] }
The HttpRequest
and HttpResponse
structs have been replaced with type aliases to
http::Request
and
http::Response
, respectively.
Custom HTTP clients will need to be updated to use the http
types. See the
reqwest
client implementations
for an example.
Previously, certain types were exported from both the root of the crate and the devicecode
or
revocation
modules. These modules are no longer public, and their public types are exported from
the root. For example, if you were previously importing
oauth2::devicecode::DeviceAuthorizationResponse
, instead import
oauth2::DeviceAuthorizationResponse
.
Previously, the TokenResponse
and TokenIntrospectionResponse
traits had a generic type
parameter TT: TokenType
. This has been replaced with an associated type called TokenType
.
Uses of BasicTokenResponse
and BasicTokenIntrospectionResponse
should continue to work without
changes, but custom implementations of either trait will need to be updated to replace the type
parameter with an associated type.
Removing the TT
generic type parameter from TokenResponse
(see above) made the TT
parameters
to Client
and each *Request
(e.g., CodeTokenRequest
) redundant. Consequently, the TT
parameter has been removed from each of these types. BasicClient
should continue to work
without any changes, but code that provides generic types for Client
or any of the *Response
types will need to be updated to remove the TT
type parameter.
To improve error messages, the
RequestTokenError::ServerResponse
enum variant now prints a message describing the server response using the Display
trait. For most
users (i.e., those using the default
StandardErrorResponse
),
this does not require any code changes. However, users providing their own implementations
of the ErrorResponse
trait must now implement the Display
trait. See
StandardErrorResponse
's
Display
implementation
for an example.