On Mon, Feb 7, 2011 at 3:01 PM, Martin Matula <martin.matula_at_oracle.com>wrote:
> I may be able to "hack" something by the end of Feb. Anyway, the last time
> I looked OAuth 2.0 was a lot simpler than OAuth 1.0, given the signatures
> were gone, so one can easily use it without a special framework.
>
Okay.
> One thing I am thinking about providing is a simple client filter that
> automates token renewals,
>
That'll be great.
Thanks,
Naresh
> but apart from that, there is not much to add.
> Martin
>
>
> On 7.2.2011 5:35, Srinivas Naresh Bhimisetty wrote:
>
> Hi Martin,
>
> I had a similar question regarding the OAuth2.0 and Jersey.
> Is there a roadmap for getting this support in Jersey?
>
> I see many providers like Facebook moving to / using OAuth2.0. It would
> be great to have support for this in Jersey.
>
> Thanks,
> Naresh
>
>
> On Sat, Feb 5, 2011 at 1:49 AM, Martin Matula <martin.matula_at_oracle.com>wrote:
>
>> Hi Girish,
>>
>>
>> On 4.2.2011 20:15, Girish Khadke wrote:
>>
>>
>> I have following questions:
>>
>> 1. I am using 1.1.5 API and I want to know does it support OAuth 2.0 ??
>> (because all the examples they have given for PHP and Python use some
>> Oauth2 libraries on Github)
>>
>> We don't have any special support for OAuth 2.0 - the Jersey OAuth
>> libraries support OAuth 1.0.
>> Anyway, I don't think your app is using OAuth 2.0 - that spec is not final
>> yet and none of the drafts that were out there had a notion of consumer
>> secret and token secret as far as I know. That's a concept used in OAuth
>> 1.0.
>> I know there were some bugs in the earlier versions of the libraries, so
>> you may want to try the latest (version 1.5).
>> Also, it would be interesting to see how the headers of the messages the
>> python client library sends look like.
>>
>>
>> 2. Also the basic Server side web service is all written in Python and it
>> supports JSON and plain text. ( I went through source code of Stashboard
>> located at folder /handler in installation directory written as script
>> restful.py)
>>
>> Now since the Server side web service is in Python and still I should
>> be able to consume and post JSON objects from it right?
>>
>> Yes.
>>
>> Martin
>>
>>
>