Prepare for the PgBouncer and IPv4 deprecations on 26th January 2024

Learn more

GitHub OAuth in your Python Flask app

2023-11-21

5 minute read

In this guide we'll learn how to quickly build an OAuth2.0 integration into a simple Flask app using Supabase-py. This will enable your users to login to your web app using their GitHub account.

Prerequisites

This article assumes you are familiar with creating an application in Flask. It also assumes that you have read the Supabase documentation and are familiar the with concept of Authentication.

We'll use the following tools:

  • Flask - we used version 2.3.3 for this article
  • Supabase Dashboard - create an account if you don't have one already

Getting started

To begin, inside your Flask application install the supabase library using the following command in the terminal:


_10
pip install supabase

Session storage

Open the project in your preferred code editor and create a file called flask_storage.py with the following content:


_17
from gotrue import SyncSupportedStorage
_17
from flask import session
_17
_17
class FlaskSessionStorage(SyncSupportedStorage):
_17
def __init__(self):
_17
self.storage = session
_17
_17
def get_item(self, key: str) -> str | None:
_17
if key in self.storage:
_17
return self.storage[key]
_17
_17
def set_item(self, key: str, value: str) -> None:
_17
self.storage[key] = value
_17
_17
def remove_item(self, key: str) -> None:
_17
if key in self.storage:
_17
self.storage.pop(key, None)

In this file, we're extending the SyncSupportedStorage class from the gotrue library which comes bundled with the supabase library. Here we're telling the Supabase authentication library (gotrue) how to retrieve, store and remove a session that will store our JSON Web Token (JWT).

Initiate the client

Create another file called supabase_client.py and in this file, we'll initiate our Supabase client.


_22
import os
_22
from flask import g
_22
from werkzeug.local import LocalProxy
_22
from supabase.client import Client, ClientOptions
_22
from flask_storage import FlaskSessionStorage
_22
_22
url = os.environ.get("SUPABASE_URL", "")
_22
key = os.environ.get("SUPABASE_KEY", "")
_22
_22
def get_supabase() -> Client:
_22
if "supabase" not in g:
_22
g.supabase = Client(
_22
url,
_22
key,
_22
options=ClientOptions(
_22
storage=FlaskSessionStorage(),
_22
flow_type="pkce"
_22
),
_22
)
_22
return g.supabase
_22
_22
supabase: Client = LocalProxy(get_supabase)

Let's focus on the get_supabase function. Here we are checking if we have an instance of the client stored in our global object g, if not we create the client and store it in the global object under the supabase name. You will notice in the ClientOptions that we are specifying the FlaskSessionStorage class we created earlier and we are also specifying a very important option that allows us to handle the OAuth flow on the server side, the flow_type="pkce".

Sign in with GitHub

Supabase Auth supports Sign in with GitHub on the web, native Android applications, and Chrome extensions.

For detailed set up and implementation instructions please refer to the docs.

Create sign-in route

Inside our application code app.py, we can create the sign-in route to trigger the OAuth sign-in request.


_11
@app.route("/signin/github")
_11
def signin_with_github():
_11
res = supabase.auth.sign_in_with_oauth(
_11
{
_11
"provider": "github",
_11
"options": {
_11
"redirect_to": f"{request.host_url}callback"
_11
},
_11
}
_11
)
_11
return redirect(res.url)

In this function options object we specify a redirect_to parameter which will point to the callback route we will create in the next step. This function will generate a url for us to use to redirect the user to, in this case we are using github as our OAuth provider so we will be redirected to the GitHub OAuth consent screen.

Create callback route

Let's add another route to our app.py file for the callback endpoint we specified in our sign in route.


_10
@app.route("/callback")
_10
def callback():
_10
code = request.args.get("code")
_10
next = request.args.get("next", "/")
_10
_10
if code:
_10
res = supabase.auth.exchange_code_for_session({"auth_code": code})
_10
_10
return redirect(next)

Here we're getting the code query parameter from the request object, if this is available we then exchange the code for a session so that the user will be signed in. Under the hood the supabase python library will handle storing this session (JWT) into a cookie and sign the user in.

Conclusion

In this post we explained how to setup a flask session storage to work with the Supabase python library, setting the flow_type to use Proof Key for Code Exchange (PKCE) and creating a sign in and a callback route to handle the user authentication.

More Resources

Share this article

Build in a weekend, scale to millions