calendarwatch_frontend/server/googleHandler.py
Raphael Maenle 4a8ac52201 backend now uses calendar_id and this is the frontend upgrade
- calendar_id is unique and therefore creates less problems
- changing id of DOM from item.name to calendar_id
2020-05-18 23:52:18 +02:00

165 lines
5.7 KiB
Python

import google.oauth2.credentials
import google_auth_oauthlib.flow
import googleapiclient.discovery
import backend.caltojson as caltojson
from oauthlib.oauth2 import WebApplicationClient
import flask
# Python standard libraries
import json
import os
import sqlite3
# Third-party libraries
import flask
from flask import Flask, redirect, request, url_for
from flask_login import (
LoginManager,
current_user,
login_required,
login_user,
logout_user,
)
import requests
from server.models import Calendar as dbCalendar
# Configuration
CLIENT_SECRETS_FILE = "certificate/client_secret.json"
# This OAuth 2.0 access scope allows for full read/write access to the
# authenticated user's account and requires requests to use an SSL connection.
SCOPES = ["https://www.googleapis.com/auth/userinfo.email", "https://www.googleapis.com/auth/userinfo.profile", "https://www.googleapis.com/auth/calendar.readonly", "openid"]
API_SERVICE_NAME = 'calendar'
API_VERSION = 'v3'
GOOGLE_CLIENT_ID ="377787187748-shuvi4iq5bi4gdet6q3ioataimobs4lh.apps.googleusercontent.com"
GOOGLE_CLIENT_SECRET = "Hu_YWmKsVKUcLwyeINYzdKfZ"
GOOGLE_DISCOVERY_URL = (
"https://accounts.google.com/.well-known/openid-configuration"
)
# OAuth 2 client setup
client = WebApplicationClient(GOOGLE_CLIENT_ID)
def login():
# Create flow instance to manage the OAuth 2.0 Authorization Grant Flow steps.
flow = google_auth_oauthlib.flow.Flow.from_client_secrets_file(
CLIENT_SECRETS_FILE, scopes=SCOPES)
# The URI created here must exactly match one of the authorized redirect URIs
# for the OAuth 2.0 client, which you configured in the API Console. If this
# value doesn't match an authorized URI, you will get a 'redirect_uri_mismatch'
# error.
flow.redirect_uri = request.base_url + "/callback"
authorization_url, state = flow.authorization_url(
# Enable offline access so that you can refresh an access token without
# re-prompting the user for permission. Recommended for web server apps.
access_type='offline',
# Enable incremental authorization. Recommended as a best practice.
include_granted_scopes='true')
# Store the state so the callback can verify the auth server response.
flask.session['state'] = state
# Flask-Login helper to retrieve a user from our db
return authorization_url
def verifyResponse():
# Specify the state when creating the flow in the callback so that it can
# verified in the authorization server response.
state = flask.session['state']
flow = google_auth_oauthlib.flow.Flow.from_client_secrets_file(
CLIENT_SECRETS_FILE, scopes=SCOPES, state=state)
flow.redirect_uri = flask.url_for('callback', _external=True)
# Use the authorization server's response to fetch the OAuth 2.0 tokens.
authorization_response = flask.request.url
flow.fetch_token(authorization_response=authorization_response)
# Store credentials in the session.
# ACTION ITEM: In a production app, you likely want to save these
# credentials in a persistent database instead.
credentials = flow.credentials
flask.session['credentials'] = credentials_to_dict(credentials)
print(credentials_to_dict(credentials), flush=True)
session = flow.authorized_session()
return session, credentials_to_dict(credentials)
def get_google_provider_cfg():
return requests.get(GOOGLE_DISCOVERY_URL).json()
class Calendar:
def __init__(self, name, calendarId, toggle='False', color="#000000"):
self.name = name
self.color = color
self.toggle=toggle
self.calendarId = calendarId
def calendarsFromDb():
calendars = dbCalendar.getCalendars(dbCalendar, current_user.id)
pyCalendars = []
for calendar in calendars:
name = calendar.name
calendarId = calendar.calendar_id
toggle = calendar.toggle
color = calendar.color
pyCalendars.append(Calendar(name, calendarId, toggle, color))
return pyCalendars
def getCalendarJson():
if 'credentials' not in flask.session:
return flask.redirect('login/google')
# Load credentials from the session.
credentials = google.oauth2.credentials.Credentials(
**flask.session['credentials'])
with open('./userinfo/' + current_user.id + '/calendarevents.json', 'w') as outfile:
json.dump(todaysCal, outfile)
return todaysCal
def updateCalendars():
if 'credentials' not in flask.session:
return flask.redirect('login/google')
# Load credentials from the session.
# credentials = google.oauth2.credentials.Credentials(
# **flask.session['credentials'])
# a = flask.session['credentials']
# print(a, flush=True)
# print(current_user.getGoogleCredentials(), flush=True)
credentials = google.oauth2.credentials.Credentials(**current_user.getGoogleCredentials())
calendars = caltojson.getCalendarList(credentials)
for calendar in calendars:
if dbCalendar.getCalendar(dbCalendar, current_user.id, calendar.calendarId) == None:
dbCalendar.create(dbCalendar, current_user.id, calendar.calendarId, calendar.summary, calendar.color)
print("updated Calendars")
# Save credentials back to session in case access token was refreshed.
# ACTION ITEM: In a production app, you likely want to save these
# credentials in a persistent database instead.
flask.session['credentials'] = credentials_to_dict(credentials)
def credentials_to_dict(credentials):
return {'token': credentials.token,
'refresh_token': credentials.refresh_token,
'token_uri': credentials.token_uri,
'client_id': credentials.client_id,
'client_secret': credentials.client_secret,
'scopes': credentials.scopes}