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This version of GitHub Enterprise was discontinued on 2023-01-18. No patch releases will be made, even for critical security issues. For better performance, improved security, and new features, upgrade to the latest version of GitHub Enterprise. For help with the upgrade, contact GitHub Enterprise support.

Identifying and authorizing users for GitHub Apps

Your GitHub App can perform actions on behalf of a user, like creating an issue, creating a deployment, and using other supported endpoints.

Note: Expiring user tokens are currently an optional feature and subject to change. To opt in or out of the user-to-server token expiration feature, see "Activating optional features for apps." For more information, see "Expiring user-to-server access tokens for GitHub Apps."

When your GitHub App acts on behalf of a user, it performs user-to-server requests. These requests must be authorized with a user's access token. User-to-server requests include requesting data for a user, like determining which repositories to display to a particular user. These requests also include actions triggered by a user, like running a build.

To keep user-to-server access tokens more secure, you can use access tokens that will expire after 8 hours, and a refresh token that can be exchanged for a new access token. For more information, see "Refreshing user-to-server access tokens."

Identifying users on your site

To authorize users for standard apps that run in the browser, use the web application flow.

To authorize users for headless apps without direct access to the browser, such as CLI tools or Git credential managers, use the device flow. The device flow uses the OAuth 2.0 Device Authorization Grant.

Web application flow

Using the web application flow, the process to identify users on your site is:

  1. Users are redirected to request their GitHub identity
  2. Users are redirected back to your site by GitHub
  3. Your GitHub App accesses the API with the user's access token

If you select Request user authorization (OAuth) during installation when creating or modifying your app, step 1 will be completed during app installation. For more information, see "Authorizing users during installation."

1. Request a user's GitHub identity

Direct the user to the following URL in their browser:

GET http(s)://HOSTNAME/login/oauth/authorize

When your GitHub App specifies a login parameter, it prompts users with a specific account they can use for signing in and authorizing your app.

Parameters

NameTypeDescription
client_idstringRequired. The client ID for your GitHub App. You can find this in your GitHub App settings when you select your app. Note: The app ID and client ID are not the same, and are not interchangeable.
redirect_uristringThe URL in your application where users will be sent after authorization. This must be an exact match to one of the URLs you provided as a Callback URL when setting up your GitHub App and can't contain any additional parameters.
statestringThis should contain a random string to protect against forgery attacks and could contain any other arbitrary data.
loginstringSuggests a specific account to use for signing in and authorizing the app.
allow_signupstringWhether or not unauthenticated users will be offered an option to sign up for GitHub during the OAuth flow. The default is true. Use false when a policy prohibits signups.

Note: You don't need to provide scopes in your authorization request. Unlike traditional OAuth, the authorization token is limited to the permissions associated with your GitHub App and those of the user.

2. Users are redirected back to your site by GitHub

If the user accepts your request, GitHub redirects back to your site with a temporary code in a code parameter as well as the state you provided in the previous step in a state parameter. If the states don't match, the request was created by a third party and the process should be aborted.

Note: If you select Request user authorization (OAuth) during installation when creating or modifying your app, GitHub returns a temporary code that you will need to exchange for an access token. The state parameter is not returned when GitHub initiates the OAuth flow during app installation.

Exchange this code for an access token. When expiring tokens are enabled, the access token expires in 8 hours and the refresh token expires in 6 months. Every time you refresh the token, you get a new refresh token. For more information, see "Refreshing user-to-server access tokens."

Expiring user tokens are currently an optional feature and subject to change. To opt-in to the user-to-server token expiration feature, see "Activating optional features for apps."

Make a request to the following endpoint to receive an access token:

POST http(s)://HOSTNAME/login/oauth/access_token

Parameters

NameTypeDescription
client_idstringRequired. The client ID for your GitHub App.
client_secretstringRequired. The client secret for your GitHub App.
codestringRequired. The code you received as a response to Step 1.
redirect_uristringThe URL in your application where users will be sent after authorization. This must be an exact match to one of the URLs you provided as a Callback URL when setting up your GitHub App and can't contain any additional parameters.

Response

By default, the response takes the following form. The response parameters expires_in, refresh_token, and refresh_token_expires_in are only returned when you enable expiring user-to-server access tokens.

{
  "access_token": "ghu_16C7e42F292c6912E7710c838347Ae178B4a",
  "expires_in": 28800,
  "refresh_token": "ghr_1B4a2e77838347a7E420ce178F2E7c6912E169246c34E1ccbF66C46812d16D5B1A9Dc86A1498",
  "refresh_token_expires_in": 15811200,
  "scope": "",
  "token_type": "bearer"
}

3. Your GitHub App accesses the API with the user's access token

The user's access token allows the GitHub App to make requests to the API on behalf of a user.

Authorization: Bearer OAUTH-TOKEN
GET http(s)://HOSTNAME/api/v3/user

For example, in curl you can set the Authorization header like this:

curl -H "Authorization: Bearer OAUTH-TOKEN" http(s)://HOSTNAME/api/v3/user

Device flow

Note: The device flow is in public beta and subject to change.

The device flow allows you to authorize users for a headless app, such as a CLI tool or Git credential manager.

For more information about authorizing users using the device flow, see "Authorizing OAuth Apps."

Check which installation's resources a user can access

Once you have an OAuth token for a user, you can check which installations that user can access.

Authorization: Bearer OAUTH-TOKEN
GET /user/installations

You can also check which repositories are accessible to a user for an installation.

Authorization: Bearer OAUTH-TOKEN
GET /user/installations/:installation_id/repositories

More details can be found in: List app installations accessible to the user access token and List repositories accessible to the user access token.

Handling a revoked GitHub App authorization

If a user revokes their authorization of a GitHub App, the app will receive the github_app_authorization webhook by default. GitHub Apps cannot unsubscribe from this event. Anyone can revoke their authorization of a GitHub App from their GitHub account settings page. Revoking the authorization of a GitHub App does not uninstall the GitHub App. You should program your GitHub App so that when it receives this webhook, it stops calling the API on behalf of the person who revoked the token. If your GitHub App continues to use a revoked access token, it will receive the 401 Bad Credentials error.

User-level permissions

You can add user-level permissions to your GitHub App to access user resources, such as user emails, that are granted by individual users as part of the user authorization flow. User-level permissions differ from repository and organization-level permissions, which are granted at the time of installation on an organization or personal account.

You can select user-level permissions from within your GitHub App's settings in the User permissions section of the Permissions & webhooks page. For more information on selecting permissions, see "Editing a GitHub App's permissions."

When a user installs your app on their account, the installation prompt will list the user-level permissions your app is requesting and explain that the app can ask individual users for these permissions.

Because user-level permissions are granted on an individual user basis, you can add them to your existing app without prompting users to upgrade. You will, however, need to send existing users through the user authorization flow to authorize the new permission and get a new user-to-server token for these requests.

User-to-server requests

While most of your API interaction should occur using your server-to-server installation access tokens, certain endpoints allow you to perform actions via the API using a user access token. Your app can make the following requests using GraphQL or REST endpoints.

Supported endpoints

Check Runs

Check Suites

Codes Of Conduct

Deployment Statuses

Deployments

Events

Feeds

Git Blobs

Git Commits

Git Refs

Git Tags

Git Trees

Gitignore Templates

Installations

Issue Assignees

Issue Comments

Issue Events

Issue Timeline

Issues

Labels

Licenses

Markdown

Meta

Milestones

Organization Hooks

Organization Members

Organization Outside Collaborators

Organization Pre Receive Hooks

Organization Team Projects

Organization Team Repositories

Organization Teams

Organizations

Project Collaborators

Projects

Pull Comments

Pull Request Review Events

Pull Request Review Requests

Pull Request Reviews

Pulls

Reactions

Repositories

Repository Activity

Repository Branches

Repository Collaborators

Repository Commit Comments

Repository Commits

Repository Community

Repository Contents

Repository Event Dispatches

Repository Hooks

Repository Invitations

Repository Keys

Repository Pages

Repository Pre Receive Hooks

Repository Releases

Repository Stats

Root

Statuses

Team Discussions

Topics

User Emails

User Followers

User Gpg Keys

User Public Keys

Users

Further reading