Tuesday December 22, 2009
Grails OAuth and LinkedIn APIs Back in November, I wrote about how to talk to LinkedIn APIs with GWT. A week later, I figured out how to do it with Grails and contributed a patch to the grails-oauth plugin.
Since then, a few folks have asked how I did it. Since code speaks louder than words, I took some time and 1) verified the oauth plugin works as expected and 2) created an example application demonstrating functionality. You can find the results in my fork of grails-oauth on GitHub. You can also view the example online.
Below is a quick tutorial explaining how to integrate LinkedIn into your Grails application.
- Download and install Grails 1.1.2.
- Run grails create-app to create your application.
- Add the following to the bottom of grails-app/conf/Config.groovy:
oauth { linkedin { requestTokenUrl="https://api.linkedin.com/uas/oauth/requestToken" accessTokenUrl="https://api.linkedin.com/uas/oauth/accessToken" authUrl="https://api.linkedin.com/uas/oauth/authorize" consumer.key="XXX" consumer.secret="XXX" } }You can get your consumer.key and consumer.secret at https://www.linkedin.com/secure/developer. Make sure to set the OAuth Redirect URL to http://localhost:8080/{your.app.name}/oauth/callback for testing. - Download the oauth-plugin, extract it and build it using grails package-plugin. Install it in your project using grails install-plugin path/to/zip.
- Add a link to the GSP you want to invoke LinkedIn Authentication from:
<g:oauthLink consumer='linkedin' returnTo="[controller:'profile']"> Login with LinkedIn </g:oauthLink> - Create grails-app/controllers/ProfileController.groovy to access your LinkedIn Profile.
class ProfileController { def apiUrl = "http://api.linkedin.com/v1/people/~" def oauthService def index = { if (session.oauthToken == null) { redirect(uri:"/") } if (params?.apiUrl) apiUrl = params.apiUrl def response = oauthService.accessResource( apiUrl, 'linkedin', [key:session.oauthToken.key, secret:session.oauthToken.secret], 'GET') render(view: 'index', model: [profileXML: response, apiUrl: apiUrl]) } def change = { if (params?.apiUrl) { println("Setting api url to " + params.apiUrl) apiUrl = params.apiUrl } redirect(action:index,params:params) } } - Create grails-app/views/profile/index.gsp to display the retrieved profile and allow subsequent API calls.
<html> <head><title>Your Profile</title></head> <body> <a class="home" href="${createLinkTo(dir:'')}">Home</a> <g:hasOauthError> <div class="errors"> <g:renderOauthError/> </div> </g:hasOauthError> <g:form url="[action:'change',controller:'profile']" method="get"> Your LinkedIn Profile: <textarea id="payload" style="width: 100%; height: 50%; color: red">${profileXML}</textarea> <p> <g:textField name="apiUrl" value="${apiUrl}" size="100%"/> <br/> <g:submitButton name="send" value="Send Request"/> </p> </g:form> </body> </html> - Start your app using grails run-app and enjoy.
As mentioned earlier, you can download the grails-oauth-example or view it online.
One improvement I'd like to see is to simplify the parsing of XML into a Profile object, much like the linkedin gem does for Rails.
If you're interested in learning more about LinkedIn and OAuth, I encourage you to checkout Taylor Singletary's presentation LinkedIn OAuth: Zero to Hero.
Update: I updated the oauth-plugin so it's backwards-compatible with OAuth 1.0 and added Twitter to the example application to prove it. If you're seeing "Cannot invoke method remove() on null object", it's likely caused by your redirect URL pointing to an application on a different domain. Posted in Java at Dec 22 2009, 03:37:57 PM MST 3 Comments
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Posted by uberVU - social comments on December 22, 2009 at 05:36 PM MST #
We're having a similar problem. We get intermittent failure of OAuth from grails. We get a NullPointerException: 2010-04-30 19:30:58,245 ERROR [GrailsExceptionResolver] (http-8080-32) [] ip-10-244-51-228/10.244.51.228 Cannot invoke method remove() on null object
java.lang.NullPointerException: Cannot invoke method remove() on null object at OauthController$_closure2.doCall(OauthController.groovy:70)when doing:
def returnController = params.remove('return_controller')?:session.cbparams.remove('return_controller')Apparently the session is null at this point. This only happens occasionally, and the user can usually recover by trying again. It is a mystery why it is happening, though.
Posted by 216.49.181.254 on May 07, 2010 at 05:07 PM MDT #
(I forgot to include my contact information). So we get all the way to where the callback is called, but then the session is null when we try to access it.
Any ideas?
Posted by ranbo on May 07, 2010 at 05:09 PM MDT #