One viable method for detecting “inactivity for one month” would be to have a one month expiration on the refresh token, but reset that counter every time the refresh token is used to get a new access token. You can do this by manipulating the expiration of the token object itself on your authorization server, or you can just throw away the old refresh token and create a new one with an expiration one month out. Each of these methods has its benefits and pitfalls.
— Justin > On Aug 28, 2015, at 10:21 AM, Donghwan Kim <flowersinthes...@gmail.com> wrote: > > I'm sorry to introduce a common topic. > > As John has suggested, I'm going to design that > > * An access token should be short lived e.g. 5 minutes (not to hit the AS to > verify the token or 1 hour (to hit the AS to verify the token). I'm inclined > to 5 minutes for stateless architecture of RSs. > * A refresh token should have 1 month of expiration time by default. If it > turns out that some access token expired, its refresh token should refresh > the token. Then, so called persistent login can be implemented regardless of > the form of authentication. Only if it fails for some reason e.g. token > revocation or inactivity for 1 month, a user is logged out automatically and > should log in again. > * A refresh token should be able to be revoked somehow. With 5 minutes > approach, it will invalidate only the refresh token (Yes the attacker can > have 5 minutes at most), and with 1 hour approach, it will invalidate the > refresh token as well as the corresponding access token. > > Thanks, > > -- Donghwan > > On Fri, Aug 28, 2015 at 5:43 PM, Torsten Lodderstedt <tors...@lodderstedt.net > <mailto:tors...@lodderstedt.net>> wrote: > Refresh tokens are also used by public clients, e.g. native apps. OIDC allows > to acquire a new id token from a refresh token as well. Note: this does not > mean a fresh authentication but a refreshed id token containing the data of > the original authentication transaction. > > Am 24. August 2015 17:08:21 MESZ, schrieb John Bradley <ve7...@ve7jtb.com > <mailto:ve7...@ve7jtb.com>>: > I think Nat’s diagram about the problems of doing pseudo authentication with > OAuth is being taken out of context. > > The refresh token dosen’t expire, it is revoked by the user or system. In > some cases refresh tokens are automatically revoked if the users session to > the AS ends. I think AOL typically revokes refresh tokens when sessions > terminate. > > OpenID Connect provides a separate id_token with a independent lifetime from > the refresh token. A client may keep a refresh token for a much longer time > than the user has a login session with the AS. > > Refresh tokens are typically used by confidential clients that are using a > client secret in combination with the refresh token for getting a new access > token. > > By design access tokens should be short lived as the AS is expected to have a > way of revoking refresh tokens but not access tokens. > A access token that dosen't expire , and can’t be revoked is not a good idea. > > John B. > > >> On Aug 24, 2015, at 2:41 AM, Donghwan Kim <flowersinthes...@gmail.com >> <mailto:flowersinthes...@gmail.com>> wrote: >> >> Hi, >> >> According to Figure 2 from http://tools.ietf.org/html/rfc6749#section-1.5 >> <http://tools.ietf.org/html/rfc6749#section-1.5>, refresh token can be used >> to refresh an expired access token without requesting resource owner to sign >> in again (uncomfortable experience). However, if it's true, isn't it that >> refresh token might be used to request a new access token even years later? >> and then isn't refresh token the same with access token which never expires? >> >> I intended to use refresh token to implement persistent login by sending a >> refresh request before issued access token expires (expires_in runs out). >> But if refresh token works even if access token expired already, sending a >> refresh request on application start up would be enough. >> >> So I'm not sure what I'm missing about refresh token as well as how to >> implement persistent login using it (you can regard authentication here >> pseudo-authentication illustrated in >> https://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/3/32/OpenIDvs.Pseudo-AuthenticationusingOAuth.svg >> >> <https://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/3/32/OpenIDvs.Pseudo-AuthenticationusingOAuth.svg>). >> What is the lifetime of refresh token? >> >> Thanks, >> >> -- Donghwan >> _______________________________________________ >> OAuth mailing list >> OAuth@ietf.org <mailto:OAuth@ietf.org> >> https://www.ietf.org/mailman/listinfo/oauth >> <https://www.ietf.org/mailman/listinfo/oauth> > > > > OAuth mailing list > OAuth@ietf.org <mailto:OAuth@ietf.org> > https://www.ietf.org/mailman/listinfo/oauth > <https://www.ietf.org/mailman/listinfo/oauth> > > _______________________________________________ > OAuth mailing list > OAuth@ietf.org > https://www.ietf.org/mailman/listinfo/oauth
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