===================================================
ska
===================================================
Lets you easily sign data, using symmetric-key algorithm encryption. Allows you to validate signed data
and identify possible validation errors. Uses sha1/hmac for signature encryption. Comes with
shortcut functions for signing (and validating) dictionaries and URLs.

Key concepts
===================================================
Hosts, that communicate with each other, share the Secret Key, which is used to sign data (requests).
Secret key is never sent around.

One of the cases is signing of HTTP requests. Each (HTTP) request is signed on the sender side using the
shared Secret Key and as an outcome produces the triple (``signature``, ``auth_user``, ``valid_until``)
which are used to sign the requests.

- `signature` (str): Signature generated.
- `auth_user` (str): User making the request. Can be anything.
- `valid_until` (float|str): Signature expiration time (Unix timestamp).

On the recipient side, (HTTP request) data is validated using the shared Secret Key. It's being checked
whether signature is valid and not expired.

.. code-block:: none

    ┌─────────────┐           Data              ┌─────────────┐
    │   Host 1    ├────────────────────────────>│   Host 2    │
    │ ─────────── │                             │ ─────────── │
    │ secret key  │                             │ secret key  │
    │ 'my-secret' │<────────────────────────────┤ 'my-secret' │
    └─────────────┘           Data              └─────────────┘

Features
===================================================
Core `ska` module
---------------------------------------------------
- Sign dictionaries.
- Validate signed dictionaries.
- Sign URLs. Append and sign additional URL data.
- Validate URLs.
- Use one of the built-in algorythms (HMAC SHA-1, HMAC SHA-224, HMAC SHA-256, HMAC SHA-384 or
  HMAC SHA-512) or define a custom one.

Django `ska` module (`ska.contrib.django.ska`)
---------------------------------------------------
- Model decorators for signing absolute URLs. View (including class-based views) decorators for protecting
  views to authorised parties only (no authentication required).
- Authentication backend for Django based on the signatures (tokens) generated using `ska`, which
  allows you to get a password-less login to Django web site. Multiple Secret Keys (per provider)
  supported. Comes with handy callbacks (possible to customise per provider) for various states of
  authentication.

Prerequisites
===================================================
- Core `ska` module requires Python 2.6.8+, 2.7.+, 3.3.+
- Django `ska` module (`ska.contrib.django.ska`) requires the mentioned above plus Django 1.5.+

Installation
===================================================
Latest stable version from PyPI.

.. code-block:: none

    $ pip install ska

Latest stable version from bitbucket.

.. code-block:: none

    $ pip install -e hg+https://bitbucket.org/barseghyanartur/ska@stable#egg=ska

Latest stable version from github.

.. code-block:: none

    $ pip install -e git+https://github.com/barseghyanartur/ska@stable#egg=ska

Usage examples
===================================================
For integration with Django, see the `Django integration` section.

Basic usage
---------------------------------------------------
Pure Python usage.

Sender side
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Signing URLs is as simple as follows.

Required imports.

.. code-block:: python

    from ska import sign_url

Producing a signed URL.

.. code-block:: python

    signed_url = sign_url(
        auth_user='user', secret_key='your-secret_key', url='http://e.com/api/'
        )

.. code-block:: none

    http://e.com/api/?valid_until=1378045287.0&auth_user=user&signature=YlZpLFsjUKBalL4x5trhkeEgqE8%3D

Default lifetime of a signature is 10 minutes (600 seconds). If you want it to be different, provide a
``lifetime`` argument to ``sign_url`` function.

Default name of the (GET) param holding the generated signature value is `signature`. If you want it
to be different, provide a ``signature_param`` argument to ``sign_url`` function.

Default name of the (GET) param holding the ``auth_user`` value is `auth_user`. If you want it
to be different, provide a ``auth_user_param`` argument to ``sign_url`` function.

Default name of the (GET) param holding the ``valid_until`` value is `valid_until`. If you want it
to be different, provide a ``valid_until_param`` argument to ``sign_url`` function.

Note, that by default a suffix '?' is added after the given ``url`` and generated signature params.
If you want that suffix to be custom, provide a ``suffix`` argument to the ``sign_url``
function. If you want it to be gone, set its' value to empty string.

With all customisations, it would look as follows:

.. code-block:: python

    from ska import HMACSHA512Signature # Use HMAC SHA-512 algorithm

    signed_url = sign_url(
        auth_user='user', secret_key='your-secret_key', lifetime=120,
        url='http://e.com/api/', signature_param='signature',
        auth_user_param='auth_user', valid_until_param='valid_until',
        signature_cls = HMACSHA512Signature
        )

It's also possible to add additional data to the signature by providing a ``extra`` argument (dict).
Note, that additional data is signed as well. If request is somehow tampered (values vary from
originally provided ones), signature becomes invalid.

.. code-block:: python

    sign_url(
        auth_user='user', secret_key='your-secret_key', url='http://e.com/api/',
        extra={'email': 'doe@example.com', 'last_name': 'Doe', 'first_name': 'Joe'}
        )

You may now proceed with the signed URL request. If you use the famous ``requests`` library, it would
be as follows.

.. code-block:: python

    import requests
    requests.get(signed_url)

If you want to use POST method instead, you would likely want to get a dictionary back,
in order to append it to the POST data later.

Required imports.

.. code-block:: python

    from ska import signature_to_dict

Producing a dictionary containing the signature data, ready to be put into the request (for
example POST) data. All customisations mentioned above for the ``sign_url`` function, also
apply to the ``signature_to_dict``:

.. code-block:: python

    signature_dict = signature_to_dict(
        auth_user='user', secret_key='your-secret_key'
        )

.. code-block:: none

    {
        'signature': 'YlZpLFsjUKBalL4x5trhkeEgqE8=',
        'auth_user': 'user',
        'valid_until': '1378045287.0'
    }

Adding of additional data to the signature works in the same way:

.. code-block:: python

    signature_dict = signature_to_dict(
        auth_user = 'user',
        secret_key = 'your-secret_key',
        extra = {
            'email': 'john.doe@mail.example.com',
            'first_name': 'John',
            'last_name': 'Doe'
        }
        )

.. code-block:: none

    {
        'auth_user': 'user',
        'email': 'john.doe@mail.example.com',
        'extra': 'email,first_name,last_name',
        'first_name': 'John',
        'last_name': 'Doe',
        'signature': 'cnSoU/LnJ/ZhfLtDLzab3a3gkug=',
        'valid_until': 1387616469.0
    }

If you for some reason prefer a lower level implementation, read the same section in the
`Advanced usage` chapter.

Recipient side
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Validating the signed request data is as simple as follows.

Required imports.

.. code-block:: python

    from ska import validate_signed_request_data

Validating the signed request data. Note, that ``data`` value is expected to be a dictionary;
``request.GET`` is given as an example. It will most likely vary from what's used in your
framework (unless you use Django).

.. code-block:: python

    validation_result = validate_signed_request_data(
        data = request.GET, # Note, that ``request.GET`` is given as example.
        secret_key = 'your-secret_key'
        )

The ``validate_signed_request_data`` produces a ``ska.SignatureValidationResult`` object,
which holds the following data.

- `result` (bool): True if data is valid. False otherwise.
- `reason` (list): List of strings, indicating validation errors. Empty list in case if ``result``
  is True.

Default name of the (GET) param holding the signature value is `signature`. If you want it
to be different, provide a ``signature_param`` argument to ``validate_signed_request_data``
function.

Default name of the (GET) param holding the ``auth_user`` value is `auth_user`. If you want it
to be different, provide a ``auth_user_param`` argument to ``validate_signed_request_data``
function.

Default name of the (GET) param holding the ``valid_until`` value is `valid_until`. If you want it
to be different, provide a ``valid_until_param`` argument to ``validate_signed_request_data``
function.

With all customisations, it would look as follows. Note, that ``request.GET`` is given as example.

.. code-block:: python

    from ska import HMACSHA256Signature # Use HMAC SHA-256 algorithm

    validation_result = validate_signed_request_data(
        data = request.GET,
        secret_key = 'your-secret_key',
        signature_param = 'signature',
        auth_user_param = 'auth_user',
        valid_until_param = 'valid_until',
        signature_cls = HMACSHA256Signature
        )

If you for some reason prefer a lower level implementation, read the same section in the
`Advanced usage` chapter.

Command line usage
---------------------------------------------------
It's possible to generate a signed URL from command line using the `ska.generate_signed_url`
module.

:Arguments:

.. code-block:: none

    -h, --help            show this help message and exit

    -au AUTH_USER, --auth-user AUTH_USER
                          `auth_user` value

    -sk SECRET_KEY, --secret-key SECRET_KEY
                          `secret_key` value

    -vu VALID_UNTIL, --valid-until VALID_UNTIL
                          `valid_until` value

    -l LIFETIME, --lifetime LIFETIME
                          `lifetime` value

    -u URL, --url URL     URL to sign

    -sp SIGNATURE_PARAM, --signature-param SIGNATURE_PARAM
                          (GET) param holding the `signature` value

    -aup AUTH_USER_PARAM, --auth-user-param AUTH_USER_PARAM
                          (GET) param holding the `auth_user` value

    -vup VALID_UNTIL_PARAM, --valid-until-param VALID_UNTIL_PARAM
                          (GET) param holding the `auth_user` value

:Example:

.. code-block:: none

    $ ska-sign-url -au user -sk your-secret-key

Advanced usage (low-level)
---------------------------------------------------
Sender side
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

Required imports.

.. code-block:: python

    from ska import Signature, RequestHelper

Generate a signature.

.. code-block:: python

    signature = Signature.generate_signature(
        auth_user = 'user',
        secret_key = 'your-secret-key'
        )

Default lifetime of a signature is 10 minutes (600 seconds). If you want it to be different, provide a
``lifetime`` argument to ``generate_signature`` method.

.. code-block:: python

    signature = Signature.generate_signature(
        auth_user = 'user',
        secret_key = 'your-secret-key',
        lifetime = 120 # Signatre lifetime set to 120 seconds.
        )

Adding of additional data to the signature works in the same way as in `sign_url`.

.. code-block:: python

    signature = Signature.generate_signature(
        auth_user = 'user',
        secret_key = 'your-secret-key',
        extra = {'email': 'doe@example.com', 'last_name': 'Doe', 'first_name': 'Joe'}
        )

For HMAC SHA-384 algorityhm it would look as follows.

.. code-block:: python

    from ska import HMACSHA384Signature

    signature = HMACSHA384Signature.generate_signature(
        auth_user = 'user',
        secret_key = 'your-secret-key'
        )

Your endpoint operates with certain param names and you need to wrap generated signature params into
the URL. In order to have the job done in an easy way, create a request helper. Feed names of the
(GET) params to the request helper and let it make a signed endpoint URL for you.

.. code-block:: python

    request_helper = RequestHelper(
        signature_param = 'signature',
        auth_user_param = 'auth_user',
        valid_until_param = 'valid_until'
        )

Append signature params to the endpoint URL.

.. code-block:: python

    signed_url = request_helper.signature_to_url(
        signature = signature,
        endpoint_url = 'http://e.com/api/'
        )

.. code-block:: none

    http://e.com/api/?valid_until=1378045287.0&auth_user=user&signature=YlZpLFsjUKBalL4x5trhkeEgqE8%3D

Make a request.

.. code-block:: python

    import requests
    r = requests.get(signed_url)


For HMAC SHA-384 algorityhm it would look as follows.

.. code-block:: python

    from ska import HMACSHA384Signature

    request_helper = RequestHelper(
        signature_param = 'signature',
        auth_user_param = 'auth_user',
        valid_until_param = 'valid_until',
        signature_cls = HMACSHA384Signature
        )

    signed_url = request_helper.signature_to_url(
        signature = signature,
        endpoint_url = 'http://e.com/api/'
        )

Recipient side
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Required imports.

.. code-block:: python

    from ska import RequestHelper

Create a request helper. Your endpoint operates with certain param names. In order to have the job done
in an easy way, we feed those params to the request helper and let it extract data from signed request
for us.

.. code-block:: python

    request_helper = RequestHelper(
        signature_param = 'signature',
        auth_user_param = 'auth_user',
        valid_until_param = 'valid_until'
        )

Validate the request data. Note, that ``request.GET`` is given just as an example.

.. code-block:: python

    validation_result = request_helper.validate_request_data(
        data = request.GET,
        secret_key = 'your-secret-key'
        )

Your implementation further depends on you, but may look as follows.

.. code-block:: python

    if validation_result.result:
        # Validated, proceed further
        # ...
    else:
        # Validation not passed.
        raise Http404(validation_result.reason)

You can also just validate the signature by calling ``validate_signature`` method of
the ``ska.Signature``.

.. code-block:: python

    Signature.validate_signature(
        signature = 'EBS6ipiqRLa6TY5vxIvZU30FpnM=',
        auth_user = 'user',
        secret_key = 'your-secret-key',
        valid_until = '1377997396.0'
        )

Django integration
---------------------------------------------------
`ska` comes with Django model- and view-decorators for producing signed URLs and and validating the
endpoints, as well as with authentication backend, which allows password-less login into Django
web site using `ska` generated signature tokens.

Demo
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
In order to be able to quickly evaluate the `ska`, a demo app (with a quick installer) has been created
(works on Ubuntu/Debian, may work on other Linux systems as well, although not guaranteed). Follow the
instructions below for having the demo running within a minute.

Grab the latest `ska_example_app_installer.sh`:

.. code-block:: none

    $ wget https://raw.github.com/barseghyanartur/ska/stable/example/ska_example_app_installer.sh

Assign execute rights to the installer and run the `django_dash_example_app_installer.sh`:

.. code-block:: none

    $ chmod +x ska_example_app_installer.sh

    $ ./ska_example_app_installer.sh

Open your browser and test the app.

Foo listing (ska protected views):

- URL: http://127.0.0.1:8001/foo/

Authentication page (ska authentication backend):

- URL: http://127.0.0.1:8001/foo/authenticate/

Django admin interface:

- URL: http://127.0.0.1:8001/admin/
- Admin username: test_admin
- Admin password: test

Configuration
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Secret key (str) must be defined in `settings` module of your project.

.. code-block:: python

    SKA_SECRET_KEY = 'my-secret-key'

The following variables can be overridden in `settings` module of your project.

- `SKA_UNAUTHORISED_REQUEST_ERROR_MESSAGE` (str): Plain text error message. Defaults to
  "Unauthorised request. {0}".
- `SKA_UNAUTHORISED_REQUEST_ERROR_TEMPLATE` (str): Path to 401 template that should be rendered in
  case of 401
  responses. Defaults to empty string (not provided).
- `SKA_AUTH_USER` (str): The ``auth_user`` argument for ``ska.sign_url`` function. Defaults to
  "ska-auth-user".

See the working `example project <https://github.com/barseghyanartur/ska/tree/stable/example>`_.

Django model method decorator ``sign_url``
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
This is most likely be used in module `models` (models.py).

Imagine, you have a some objects listing and you want to protect the URLs to be viewed by authorised
parties only. You would then use ``get_signed_absolute_url`` method when rendering the listing (HTML).

.. code-block:: python

    from django.db import models
    from django.utils.translation import ugettext_lazy as _
    from django.core.urlresolvers import reverse

    from ska.contrib.django.ska.decorators import sign_url

    class FooItem(models.Model):
        title = models.CharField(_("Title"), max_length=100)
        slug = models.SlugField(unique=True, verbose_name=_("Slug"))
        body = models.TextField(_("Body"))

        # Unsigned absolute URL, which goes to the foo item detail page.
        def get_absolute_url(self):
            return reverse('foo.detail', kwargs={'slug': self.slug})

        # Signed absolute URL, which goes to the foo item detail page.
        @sign_url()
        def get_signed_absolute_url(self):
            return reverse('foo.detail', kwargs={'slug': self.slug})

Note, that ``sign_url`` decorator accepts the following optional arguments.

- `auth_user` (str): Username of the user making the request.
- `secret_key`: The shared secret key. If set, overrides the ``SKA_SECRET_KEY`` variable set in
  the `settings` module of your project.
- `valid_until` (float or str ): Unix timestamp. If not given, generated automatically (now + lifetime).
- `lifetime` (int): Signature lifetime in seconds.
- `suffix` (str): Suffix to add after the ``endpoint_url`` and before the appended signature params.
- `signature_param` (str): Name of the GET param name which would hold the generated signature value.
- `auth_user_param` (str): Name of the GET param name which would hold the ``auth_user`` value.
- `valid_until_param` (str): Name of the GET param name which would hold the ``valid_until`` value.

Django view decorator ``validate_signed_request``
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
To be used to protect views (file views.py). Should be applied to views (endpoints) that require
signed requests. If checks are not successful, a ``ska.contrib.django.ska.http.HttpResponseUnauthorized``
is returned, which is a subclass of Django's ``django.http.HttpResponse``. You can provide your own
template for 401 error. Simply point the ``SKA_UNAUTHORISED_REQUEST_ERROR_TEMPLATE`` in `settings`
module to the right template. See `ska/contrib/django/ska/templates/ska/401.html` as a template
example.

.. code-block:: python

    from ska.contrib.django.ska.decorators import validate_signed_request

    # Your view that shall be protected
    @validate_signed_request()
    def detail(request, slug, template_name='foo/detail.html'):
        # Your code

Note, that ``validate_signed_request`` decorator accepts the following optional arguments.

- `secret_key` (str) : The shared secret key. If set, overrides the ``SKA_SECRET_KEY`` variable 
  set in the `settings` module of your project.
- `signature_param` (str): Name of the (for example GET or POST) param name which holds
  the ``signature`` value.
- `auth_user_param` (str): Name of the (for example GET or POST) param name which holds
  the ``auth_user`` value.
- `valid_until_param` (str): Name of the (foe example GET or POST) param name which holds
  the ``valid_until`` value.

If you're using class based views, use the ``m_validate_signed_request`` decorator instead
of ``validate_signed_request``.

Authentication backend
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Allows you to get a password-less login to Django web site.

By default, number of logins using the same token is not limited. If you wish that single
tokens become invalid after first use, set the following variables to True in your
projects' Django settings module.

.. code-block:: python

    SKA_DB_STORE_SIGNATURES = True
    SKA_DB_PERFORM_SIGNATURE_CHECK = True

Recipient side
+++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++
Recipient is the host (Django site), to which the sender tries to get authenticated (log in). On the
recipient side the following shall be present.

settings.py
^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
.. code-block:: python

    AUTHENTICATION_BACKENDS = (
        'ska.contrib.django.ska.backends.SkaAuthenticationBackend',
        'django.contrib.auth.backends.ModelBackend',
    )

    INSTALLED_APPS = (
        # ...
        'ska.contrib.django.ska',
        # ...
    )

    SKA_SECRET_KEY = 'secret-key'
    SKA_UNAUTHORISED_REQUEST_ERROR_TEMPLATE = 'ska/401.html'
    SKA_REDIRECT_AFTER_LOGIN = '/foo/logged-in/'

urls.py
^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
.. code-block:: python

    urlpatterns = patterns('',
        url(r'^ska/', include('ska.contrib.django.ska.urls')),
        url(r'^admin/', include(admin.site.urls)),
        )

Callbacks
^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
There are several callbacks implemented in authentication backend.

- `USER_GET_CALLBACK` (string): Fired if user was successfully fetched from database (existing user).
- `USER_CREATE_CALLBACK` (string): Fired right after user has been created (user didn't exist).
- `USER_INFO_CALLBACK` (string): Fired upon successful authentication.

Example of a callback function (let's say, it resides in module `my_app.ska_callbacks`):

.. code-block:: python

    def my_callback(user, request, signed_request_data)
        # Your code

...where:

- `user` is ``django.contrib.auth.models.User`` instance.
- `request` is ``django.http.HttpRequest`` instance.
- `signed_request_data` is dictionary with signed request data.

For example, if you need to assign user to some local Django group, you could specify the group
name on the client side (add it to the ``extra`` dictionary) and based on that, add the user to
the group in the callback.

The callback is a path qualifier of the callback function. Considering the example above, it would
be "my_app.ska_callbacks.my_callback".

Prefix names of each callback variable with `SKA_` in your projects' settings module.

Example:

.. code-block:: python

    SKA_USER_GET_CALLBACK = 'my_app.ska_callbacks.my_get_callback'
    SKA_USER_CREATE_CALLBACK = 'my_app.ska_callbacks.my_create_callback'

Purging of old signature data
^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
If you have lots of visitors and the ``SKA_DB_STORE_SIGNATURES`` set to True, your database
grows. If you wish to get rid of old signature token data, you may want to execute the following
command using a cron job.

.. code-block:: none

    $ ./manage.py ska_purge_stored_signature_data

Sender side
+++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++
Sender is the host (another Django web site) from which users authenticate to the Recipient using signed
URLs.

On the sender side, the only thing necessary to be present is the `ska` module for Django and
of course the same ``SECRET_KEY`` as on the server side. Further, the server `ska` login URL (in our case
"/ska/login/") shall be signed using `ska` (for example, using `sign_url` function). The `auth_user` param
would be used as a Django username. See the example below.

.. code-block:: python

    from ska import sign_url
    from ska.contrib.django.ska.settings import SECRET_KEY

    server_ska_login_url = 'https://server-url.com/ska/login/'

    signed_url = sign_url(
        auth_user = 'test_ska_user_0',
        secret_key = SECRET_KEY,
        url = server_ska_login_url
        extra = {
            'email': 'john.doe@mail.example.com',
            'first_name': 'John',
            'last_name': 'Doe',
        }
        )

Note, that you ``extra`` dictionary is optional! If `email`, `first_name` and `last_name` keys are present,
upon successul validation, the data would be saved into users' profile.

Put this code, for instance, in your view and then make the generated URL available in template context 
and render it as a URL so that user can click on it for authenticating to the server.

.. code-block:: python

    def auth_to_server(request, template_name='auth_to_server.html'):
        # Some code + obtaining the `signed_url` (code shown above)
        context = {
            'signed_url': signed_url,
        }

        return render_to_response(
            template_name,
            context,
            context_instance = RequestContext(request)
            )

Security notes
+++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++
From point of security, you should be serving the following pages via HTTP secure connection:

- The server login page (/ska/login/).
- The client page containing the authentication links.

Multiple secret keys
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Imagine, you have a site to which you want to offer a password-less login for various clients/senders
and you don't want them all to have one shared secret key, but rather have their own one. Moreover,
you specifically want to execute very custom callbacks not only for each separate client/sender, but
also for different sort of users authenticating.

.. code-block:: none

                              ┌────────────────┐
                              │ Site providing │
                              │ authentication │
                              │ ────────────── │
                              │ custom secret  │
                              │    keys per    │
                              │     client     │
                              │ ────────────── │
                              │ Site 1: 'sk-1' │
                 ┌───────────>│ Site 2: 'sk-2' │<───────────┐
                 │            │ Site 3: 'sk-3' │            │
                 │      ┌────>│ Site 4: 'sk-4' │<────┐      │
                 │      │     └────────────────┘     │      │
                 │      │                            │      │
                 │      │                            │      │
    ┌────────────┴─┐  ┌─┴────────────┐  ┌────────────┴─┐  ┌─┴────────────┐
    │    Site 1    │  │    Site 2    │  │    Site 3    │  │    Site 4    │
    │ ──────────── │  │ ──────────── │  │ ──────────── │  │ ──────────── │
    │  secret key  │  │  secret key  │  │  secret key  │  │  secret key  │
    │    'sk-1'    │  │    'sk-2'    │  │    'sk-3'    │  │    'sk-4'    │
    └──────────────┘  └──────────────┘  └──────────────┘  └──────────────┘

In order to make the stated above possible, the concept of providers is introduced. You can define
a secret key, callbacks or redirect URL. See an example below. Note, that keys of
the ``SKA_PROVIDERS`` ("client_1", "client_2", etc.) are the provider keys.

.. code-block:: python

    SKA_PROVIDERS = {
        # ********************************************************
        # ******************** Basic gradation *******************
        # ********************************************************
        # Site 1
        'client_1': {
            'SECRET_KEY': 'sk-1',
        },

        # Site 2
        'client_2': {
            'SECRET_KEY': 'sk-2',
        },

        # Site 3
        'client_3': {
            'SECRET_KEY': 'sk-3',
        },

        # Site 4
        'client_4': {
            'SECRET_KEY': 'sk-4',
        },

        # ********************************************************
        # ******* You make gradation as complex as you wish ******
        # ********************************************************
        # Client 1, group users
        'client_1.users': {
            'SECRET_KEY': 'client-1-users-secret-key',
        },

        # Client 1, group power_users
        'client_1.power_users': {
            'SECRET_KEY': 'client-1-power-users-secret-key',
            'USER_CREATE_CALLBACK': 'foo.ska_callbacks.client1_power_users_create',
        },

        # Client 1, group admins
        'client_1.admins': {
            'SECRET_KEY': 'client-1-admins-secret-key',
            'USER_CREATE_CALLBACK': 'foo.ska_callbacks.client1_admins_create',
            'REDIRECT_AFTER_LOGIN': '/admin/'
        },
    }

See the "Callbacks" section for the list of callbacks.

Obviously, server would have to have the full list of providers defined. On the client side
you would only have to store the general secret key and of course the provider UID(s).

When making a signed URL on the sender side, you should be providing the "provider" key in
the ``extra`` argument. See the example below for how you would do it for "client_1.power_users".

.. code-block:: python

    from ska import sign_url
    from ska.defaults import DEFAULT_PROVIDER_PARAM

    server_ska_login_url = 'https://server-url.com/ska/login/'

    signed_remote_ska_login_url = sign_url(
        auth_user = 'test_ska_user',
        # Using provider-specific secret key. This value shall be equal to
        # the value of SKA_PROVIDERS['client_1.power_users']['SECRET_KEY'],
        # defined in your projects' Django settings module.
        secret_key = 'client-1-power-users-secret-key',
        url = server_ska_login_url,
        extra = {
            'email': 'test_ska_user@mail.example.com',
            'first_name': 'John',
            'last_name': 'Doe',
            # Using provider specific string. This value shall be equal to
            # the key string "client_1.power_users" of SKA_PROVIDERS,
            # defined in your projcts' Django settings module.
            DEFAULT_PROVIDER_PARAM: 'client_1.power_users',
        }
        )

License
===================================================
GPL 2.0/LGPL 2.1

Support
===================================================
For any issues contact me at the e-mail given in the `Author` section.

Author
===================================================
Artur Barseghyan <artur.barseghyan@gmail.com>

.. image:: https://d2weczhvl823v0.cloudfront.net/barseghyanartur/ska/trend.png
   :alt: Bitdeli badge
   :target: https://bitdeli.com/free


Documentation
===================================================
Contents:

.. toctree::
   :maxdepth: 20

   ska

Indices and tables
===================================================

* :ref:`genindex`
* :ref:`modindex`
* :ref:`search`
