Python Flask App

Authentication for a Python web application

This guide demonstrates how to add authentication with Authgear to a Python web application built with the Flask framework using the Authlib OAuth library. The full source code for this sample project can be found on the GitHub repo.

Learning objectives

You will learn the following:

  • How to create an app on Authgear.

  • How to enable Email-based login.

  • Add sign-up and login features to the Flask app.

Prerequisites

Before you begin, you'll need the following:

  • A free Authgear account. Sign up if you don't have one already.

  • Make sure that Python 3.10 or above is installed on your machine.

  • Download and Install Pip to manage project packages.

Part 1: Configure Authgear

To use Authgear services, you’ll need to have an application set up in the Authgear Dashboard. This setup allows users in Authgear to sign in to the Flask application automatically once they are authenticated by Authgear.

Step 1: Configure an application

To set up the application, navigate to the Authgear Portal UI and select Applications on the left-hand navigation bar. Use the interactive selector to create a new Authgear OIDC Client application or select an existing application that represents the project you want to integrate with.

Every application in Authgear is assigned an alphanumeric, unique client ID that your application code will use to call Authgear APIs through the Authlib client library in the Flask app. Record the generated Authgear Issuer Domain (for example, example-auth.authgear-apps.com), CLIENT ID, CLIENT SECRET from the output. You will use these values in Part 2 for the Flask app config.

Step 2: Configure Redirect URI

An Authorized Redirect URI of your application is the URL that Authgear will redirect to after the user has authenticated in the Authgear to complete the authentication process. In our case, it will be a home page for our Flask and it will run at http://localhost:3000.

Set the following http://localhost:3000/callback to the Authorized Redirect URIs field. If not set, users will not be returned to your application after they log in.

Step 3: Choose a Login method

After you create the Authgear app, you choose how users need to authenticate on the login page. From the Authentication tab, navigate to Login Methods, you can choose a login method from various options including, by email, mobile, or social, just using a username or the custom method you specify. For this demo, we choose the Email+Passwordless approach where our users are asked to register an account and log in by using their emails. They will receive a One-time password (OTP) to their emails and verify the code to use the app.

Part 2: Create a Flask application

Next, create a Flask application with a single page and routes for home, callback, login, and logout flows.

Step 1: Configure an .env file

Start with creating a requirements.txt file in your project directory:

flask>=2.0.3
python-dotenv>=0.19.2
authlib>=1.0
requests>=2.27.1

Run pip install -r requirements.txt from your command-line interface to make these dependencies available to the Python project.

Step 2: Setup the application

Create a server.py file in the project directory that contains application logic. Add the necessary libraries the application uses.

import json
from os import environ as env
from urllib.parse import quote_plus, urlencode

from authlib.integrations.flask_client import OAuth
from dotenv import find_dotenv, load_dotenv
from flask import Flask, redirect, render_template, session, url_for

Load the configuration .env file to use values such as AUTHGEAR_CLIENT_ID AUTHGEAR_CLIENT_SECRET, AUTHGEAR_DOMAIN and APP_SECRET_KEY in the app.

Configure Authlib to handle the application's authentication with Authgear based on OIDC:

oauth = OAuth(app)

oauth.register(
    "authgear",
    client_id=env.get("AUTHGEAR_CLIENT_ID"),
    client_secret=env.get("AUTHGEAR_CLIENT_SECRET"),
    client_kwargs={
        "scope": "openid offline_access",
    },
    server_metadata_url=f'https://{env.get("AUTHGEAR_DOMAIN")}/.well-known/openid-configuration',
)

Step 3: Setup the application routes

When visitors to the app visit the /login route, they'll be redirected to Authgear to begin the authentication flow.

@app.route("/login")
def login():
    return oauth.authgear.authorize_redirect(
        redirect_uri=url_for("callback", _external=True)
    )

Once users complete the login process using Authgear, they will be redirected back to the application's /callback route. This route ensures that the user's session is saved, so they won't need to log in again during subsequent visits.

@app.route("/callback", methods=["GET", "POST"])
def callback():
    token = oauth.authgear.authorize_access_token()
    session["user"] = token
    return redirect("/")

Refresh Token

Calling the authorize_access_token() method of the Flask Authlib package will include a refresh token in the token response, provided your Flask application has offline_access as one of the OAuth 2.0 scopes.

Authlib will also use the refresh token to obtain a new access token automatically when the current access token has expired.

Logout

The route /logout manages the user's logout process from the application. It clears the user's session within the app and momentarily redirects to Authgear's logout endpoint to guarantee a thorough session clearance. After this, users are navigated back to your home route (which we'll discuss shortly).

@app.route("/logout")
def logout():
    session.clear()
    return redirect(
        "https://"
        + env.get("AUTHGEAR_DOMAIN")
        + "/oauth2/end_session"
    )

The home route will either display the details of a logged-in user or provide an option for visitors to sign in.

@app.route("/")
def home():
    return render_template(
        "home.html",
        session=session.get("user"),
        pretty=json.dumps(session.get("user"), indent=4),
    )

Step 4: Add UI page

Create a new sub-directory in the project folder named templates, and create a file home.html.

<html>
  <head>
    <meta charset="utf-8" />
    <title>Authgear Flak Login Example</title>
  </head>
  <body>
    <div data-gb-custom-block data-tag="if">
    <h1>Welcome {{session.userinfo.name}}!</h1>
    <p><a href="/logout" id="qsLogoutBtn">Logout</a></p>
    <div><pre>{{pretty}}</pre></div>
    <div data-gb-custom-block data-tag="else"></div>
    <h1 id="profileDropDown">Welcome Guest</h1>
    <p><a href="/login" id="qsLoginBtn">Login</a></p>
    </div>
  </body>
</html>

Step 5: Run the application

Run the application from the project root directory:

python server.py

The application should now be accessible to open from a browser at http://localhost:3000.

Next steps

There is so much more you can do with Authgear. Explore other means of login methods such as using Magic links in an email, social logins, or WhatsApp OTP. For the current application, you can also add more users from the Authgear portal.

Last updated

#311: Include export users api in api reference doc page

Change request updated