Feb. 15, 2017, 11:44 a.m.

AMP Authentication

By : Eric A. Scuccimarra

https://greenido.files.wordpress.com/2016/06/amp-logo.png?w=696

I finally got the AMP forms working as expected. It was a bit tricky to figure out so I will outline the issues I encountered and how I solved them. The situation I was working with was making a comments form for the AMP version of my blog pages.

The first issue I had to deal with was that a user can't leave a comment unless they are logged in. In the rest of the app I use the session to determine if the user is logged in, but AMP has it's own protocol for doing that, which involves making AJAX requests to a page which returns a JSON response to determine if the user is logged in. In this case, in the controller I simply do an Auth::check() and return a JSON response depending on the results of the check(). 

The issues arose from the fact that AMP requires specific response headers, which took me a while to figure out how to set properly. I wasn't able to find much documentation on the values of these headers, but I was able to figure out the proper values.

The headers required were:

  • Access-Control-Allow-Credentials: true
  • Access-Control-Expose-Headers: AMP-Access-Control-Allow-Source-Origin
  • Access-Control-Allow-Origin
  • AMP-Access-Control-Allow-Source-Origin

The latter two headers need to have specific values, and although they ended up being the same in most cases, I set them to the separate values to make sure errors won't occur.

The value for Access-Control-Allow-Origin needs to be the "origin" header made in the request, which I get with:

$request->header('origin')

The value for the AMP-Access-Control-Allow-Source-Origin needs reflect the value passed in the URL to the request, which is a parameter named:  __amp_source_origin.

The authorization page can return a variety of values to indicate whether the user has a subscription, if they can view a specific number of free articles, and what they have access to. But in my case all I need to know is whether they are logged in or not, so I just return the JSON data:

{loggedIn: true}

To enable content being displayed differently based on authorization you need to include the following scripts:

<script async custom-element="amp-access" src="https://cdn.ampproject.org/v0/amp-access-0.1.js"></script>
<script async custom-element="amp-analytics" src="https://cdn.ampproject.org/v0/amp-analytics-0.1.js"></script>

You also need to include the following in a script to tell the scripts what to do and where to get the info from:
{
    "authorization": "[Auth URI]",
    "noPingback": "true",
    "login": {
        "sign-in": "[Login URI]",
        "sign-out": "[Logout URI]"
    },
    "authorizationFallbackResponse": {
        "error": true,
        "loggedIn": false
    }
}

Where [Auth URI] is the URI detailed above which returns whether the user is logged in or not; [login URI] is the URI to allow the user to login; and [logout URI] is the URI to allow the user to logout. All URIs must either be HTTPS or // or AMP will complain about them and won't function properly.

Then the following code is included in the template:

<span amp-access="NOT loggedIn" role="button" tabindex="0" amp-access-hide>
    <button on="tap:amp-access.login-sign-in" class="btn btn-xs btn-primary comment-button">Login</button>
    Please login to comment<br><BR>
</span>
<span amp-access="loggedIn">
    @include('amp._commentForm')
</span>

The amp-access attribute in the span tells the page NOT to display the section if the user is loggedIn - presumably you could vary this to reference other data returned by the auth page. The on attribute of the button tells the page to reference the login:sign-in attribute of the amp-access script when it is tapped, so it will launch the [login URI] when the button is clicked. And finally the amp-access="loggedIn" attribute says that if the user IS logged in the commentForm will be included.

For me the most complicated part was figuring out the response headers required and their values, once I got that figured out the rest worked pretty easily. The next step was getting the actual form to submit and update the page properly. I'll write about that in the next post.

Labels: coding , laravel , amp

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