Authentication¶
Overview¶
If you’re running in Compute Engine or App Engine, authentication should “just work”.
If you’re developing locally, the easiest way to authenticate is using the Google Cloud SDK:
$ gcloud auth application-default login
Note that this command generates credentials for client libraries. To authenticate the CLI itself, use:
$ gcloud auth login
Previously,
gcloud auth login
was used for both use cases. If yourgcloud
installation does not support the new command, please update it:$ gcloud components update
If you’re running your application elsewhere, you should download a service account JSON keyfile and point to it using an environment variable:
$ export GOOGLE_APPLICATION_CREDENTIALS="/path/to/keyfile.json"
Client-Provided Authentication¶
Every package uses a Client
as a base for interacting with an API.
For example:
from google.cloud import datastore
client = datastore.Client()
Passing no arguments at all will “just work” if you’ve followed the instructions in the Overview. The credentials are inferred from your local environment by using Google Application Default Credentials.
Credential Discovery Precedence¶
When loading the Application Default Credentials,
the library will check for credentials in your environment by following the
precedence outlined by google.auth.default()
.
Explicit Credentials¶
The Application Default Credentials discussed above can be useful if your code needs to run in many different environments or if you just don’t want authentication to be a focus in your code.
However, you may want to be explicit because
your code will only run in one place
you may have code which needs to be run as a specific service account every time (rather than with the locally inferred credentials)
you may want to use two separate accounts to simultaneously access data from different projects
In these situations, you can create an explicit
Credentials
object suited to your environment.
After creation, you can pass it directly to a Client
:
client = Client(credentials=credentials)
Tip
To create a credentials object, follow the google-auth-guide.
Google App Engine Environment¶
To create
credentials
just for Google App Engine:
from google.auth import app_engine
credentials = app_engine.Credentials()
Google Compute Engine Environment¶
To create
credentials
just for Google Compute Engine:
from google.auth import compute_engine
credentials = compute_engine.Credentials()
Service Accounts¶
A service account is stored in a JSON keyfile.
The
from_service_account_json()
factory can be used to create a Client
with
service account credentials.
For example, with a JSON keyfile:
client = Client.from_service_account_json('/path/to/keyfile.json')
Tip
Previously the Google Cloud Console would issue a PKCS12/P12 key for your service account. This library does not support that key format. You can generate a new JSON key for the same service account from the console.
User Accounts (3-legged OAuth 2.0) with a refresh token¶
The majority of cases are intended to authenticate machines or workers rather than actual user accounts. However, it’s also possible to call Google Cloud APIs with a user account via OAuth 2.0.
Tip
A production application should use a service account,
but you may wish to use your own personal user account when first
getting started with the google-cloud-python
library.
The simplest way to use credentials from a user account is via
Application Default Credentials using gcloud auth login
(as mentioned above) and google.auth.default()
:
import google.auth
credentials, project = google.auth.default()
This will still follow the precedence described above, so be sure none of the other possible environments conflict with your user provided credentials.
Advanced users of oauth2client can also use custom flows to
create credentials using client secrets or using a
webserver flow.
After creation, Credentials
can be serialized with
to_json()
and stored in a file and then and deserialized with
from_json()
. In order
to use oauth2client
’s credentials with this library, you’ll need to
convert them.
Troubleshooting¶
Setting up a Service Account¶
If your application is not running on Google Compute Engine, you need a Google Developers Service Account.
Visit the Google Developers Console.
Create a new project or click on an existing project.
Navigate to APIs & auth > APIs and enable the APIs that your application requires.
Note
You may need to enable billing in order to use these services.
BigQuery
BigQuery API
Datastore
Google Cloud Datastore API
Pub/Sub
Google Cloud Pub/Sub
Storage
Google Cloud Storage
Google Cloud Storage JSON API
Navigate to APIs & auth > Credentials.
You should see a screen like one of the following:
Find the “Add credentials” drop down and select “Service account” to be guided through downloading a new JSON keyfile.
If you want to re-use an existing service account, you can easily generate a new keyfile. Just select the account you wish to re-use, and click Generate new JSON key:
Using Google Compute Engine¶
If your code is running on Google Compute Engine, using the inferred Google Application Default Credentials will be sufficient for retrieving credentials.
However, by default your credentials may not grant you access to the services you intend to use. Be sure when you set up the GCE instance, you add the correct scopes for the APIs you want to access:
All APIs
https://www.googleapis.com/auth/cloud-platform
https://www.googleapis.com/auth/cloud-platform.read-only
BigQuery
https://www.googleapis.com/auth/bigquery
https://www.googleapis.com/auth/bigquery.insertdata
Datastore
https://www.googleapis.com/auth/datastore
https://www.googleapis.com/auth/userinfo.email
Pub/Sub
https://www.googleapis.com/auth/pubsub
Storage
https://www.googleapis.com/auth/devstorage.full_control
https://www.googleapis.com/auth/devstorage.read_only
https://www.googleapis.com/auth/devstorage.read_write