WebFinger at Google
Paul E. Jones
paulej at packetizer.com
Tue Mar 23 00:01:30 UTC 2010
John,
I would vote for the proposed rel value. One could use "me", but the whole
webfinger acct: XRD document is about "me". So, I think we need something
specific for OpenID.
You and Chris Messina both raised concerns about the e-mail style: should
RPs remember the email ID or the OpenID value? Can we get all OpenID RPs to
accept an email form?
As for getting consistency: that's very much needed, and I really think this
will happen sooner than later. People are comfortable with e-mail style
addresses and RPs will want to try to resolve it, I would expect.
What concerns me, though, is maintaining one value vs. the other. We should
expect the RPs to remember only the OpenID identifier, since that is the
identifier used by OpenID. The email form is merely used to map to the
OpenID identifier. What happens when a user changes his OP? If the email
form is maintained, then the user could still be able to log in. However,
if only the OpenID ID is stored, the user would need to update that somehow.
But, this is not really a webfinger issue, but a "managing OpenID
identities" problem. Still, if users get used to entering email IDs, then
it might become an issue for Webfinger.
Do we allow more than one OpenID for a user acct:? I prefer to have a 1:1
mapping, otherwise it only delays logging in. It would force OPs to ask
which of several identities a user would like to use. Perhaps there are
arguments for allowing more than one? Would we use a <properties> element
to indicate a priority or indicate which ID is active or inactive?
Paul
From: John Panzer [mailto:jpanzer at google.com]
Sent: Monday, March 22, 2010 4:58 PM
To: Dirk Balfanz
Cc: Paul E. Jones; openid-specs at lists.openid.net; webfinger at googlegroups.com
Subject: Re: WebFinger at Google
So the distinction appears to be in the (conceptual) relations between:
TODAY:
acct:bob at gmail.com <mailto:acct%3Abob at gmail.com> maps with
rel=http://specs.openid.net/auth/2.0/provider to
http://www.google.com/profiles/3922823829347234234
=="My OpenID provider is this OpenID over there" -- this does read weirdly.
PROPOSED:
acct:bob at gmail.com <mailto:acct%3Abob at gmail.com> maps with
rel=http://openid.net/identity to
http://www.google.com/profiles/3922823829347234234
=="My OpenID identity is this OpenID over there" -- reads okay, but wouldn't
rel="me" be the same?
REJECTED:
acct:bob at gmail.com <mailto:acct%3Abob at gmail.com> maps with
rel=http://specs.openid.auth/2.0/server
to http://www.google.com/profiles/3922823829347234234
=="My OpenID provider server is this URL over there" -- would make sense if
you say that an acct: URI _is_ an OpenID.
Seems to me that the last one would make sense iff an acct: URI could be
considered an OpenID in and of itself, and not otherwise. And the middle
one could make sense in that scenario, but would be a bit indirect and
unnecessary.
Thus, my questions :)
I'm purposely using the ugly default Google profile URLs to make a point, of
course.
On Mon, Mar 22, 2010 at 9:01 AM, Dirk Balfanz <balfanz at google.com> wrote:
On Fri, Mar 19, 2010 at 10:17 AM, Paul E. Jones <paulej at packetizer.com>
wrote:
Folks,
Google appears to have Webfinger enabled on some accounts, at least. You
can see it with this:
curl http://gmail.com/.well-known/host-meta
That returns this:
<?xml version='1.0' encoding='UTF-8'?>
<!-- NOTE: this host-meta end-point is a pre-alpha work in progress. Don't
rely on it. -->
<!-- Please follow the list at http://groups.google.com/group/webfinger -->
<XRD xmlns='http://docs.oasis-open.org/ns/xri/xrd-1.0'
xmlns:hm='http://host-meta.net/xrd/1.0'>
<hm:Host xmlns='http://host-meta.net/xrd/1.0'>gmail.com</hm:Host>
<Link rel='lrdd'
template='http://www.google.com/s2/webfinger/?q={uri}
<http://www.google.com/s2/webfinger/?q=%7Buri%7D> '>
<Title>Resource Descriptor</Title>
</Link>
</XRD>
Now, querying the LRDD URL like this:
curl http://www.google.com/s2/webfinger/?q=acct:<user>@gmail.com
will return an XRD document, one of whose members is this:
<Link rel='http://specs.openid.net/auth/2.0/provider'
href='http://www.google.com/profiles/<user>'/>
The href value might vary, but that's what it returned for my account. What
concerns me is the link relation value:
http://specs.openid.net/auth/2.0/provider
Where did that come from? The 2.0 spec defined two possible values:
http://specs.openid.net/auth/2.0/server
http://specs.openid.net/auth/2.0/signon
However, I cannot find the one Google is using defined anywhere, though I
did see it referenced here:
http://code.google.com/p/webfinger/source/browse/wiki/CommonLinkRelations.wi
ki?spec=svn22
<http://code.google.com/p/webfinger/source/browse/wiki/CommonLinkRelations.w
iki?spec=svn22&r=22> &r=22
Is this an error? If not, can somebody point me to the correct
documentation?
If it is an error, what should the value be?
I had assumed that the most logical choice was
http://specs.openid.net/auth/2.0/signon, which is what I configured my
server to return.
"signon" points to the actual OpenID endpoint (the URL that RPs send their
association requests to, that they redirect the users to, etc.) The claimed
id for which signon identifies the OpenID endpoint is the URI on which
discovery is performed. So "signon" wouldn't work for two reasons:
(1) http://www.google.com/profiles/<user> is not Google's OpenID endpoint
(2) acct:<user>@gmail.com (which is what you're performing discovery on) is
not a valid OpenID
http://www.google.com/profiles/<user> is, in fact, the user's OpenID (aka
"claimed id", but as I mentioned, _not_ Google's OpenID endpoint). The
OpenID 2.0 spec doesn't specify a link relation that means "this is my
OpenID", so that's what the "provider" link relation is supposed to convey.
It's not part of any standard (since webfinger itself hasn't been formalized
yet).
Does this make sense?
In a related note, I _would_ like to be able to put "signon" links in
webfinger XRDs, and make OpenID handle acct:URI (which it necessarily would
have to, at that point), but that won't happen until we have a new version
of OpenID.
Dirk.
I made that assumption based on looking at all of the XRDS examples in the
OpenID 2.0 spec.
Paul
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