Every time I read https://developers.facebook.com/roadmap/offline-access-removal/, I'm left more confused than the time before. I'm looking for some clarification on some items under scenarios 3 and 4 (server-side apps and client-side apps)
For server-side apps, it states "If the call is made while there is still a valid 60-day access_token for that user, the returned access_token from this second call may be the same or may have changed, but in either case the expiration time will be a fresh 60 days."
- What is "the call" that is referred to here?
- Is it the same exchange of an authorization code for the access token that takes place during the initial OAuth flow?
- Or is it the endpoint call described under the client-side section to freshen the token to 60 days?
- If it's the former, then where does the authorization code come from when trying to renew the token?
- Is it the same authorization code from the original callback or do I have to go through the authorization flow again?
In short, can a server-side app keep freshening the life of a 60-day token and, if so then how?
Regarding client-side use, the document indicates that the client must make that endpoint call passing in (among other things) the application's client ID and client secret.
- My interpretation of "client-side" may be wrong, but I'm thinking in terms of a JavaScript-based client running in a web-browser.
- If that's what Facebook has in mind here, then should the JavaScript code really ever know about the client secret? (It won't be much of a secret if it's sent to the client.)
Even then, it indicates that 60-day tokens cannot have their life extended and that a new 2-hour token must first be acquired and used to get a 60-day token. This is under the client-side portion of the document, but does this rule apply to server-side 60-day tokens, too? If not, then I ask again: How do I freshen the life of a 60-day token on the server-side?
Finally, the question that has been burning in my mind for some time: Why has Facebook adopted this strategy and not adopted the refresh token as defined in the OAuth 2 specification (a specification that Facebook is helping define)???
EDIT: Further thoughts/questions after re-reading the document again:
At the beginning it says "a long-lived expiration time that can be renewed each time the user revists your app". My initial assumption is that the way to renew it would be to make a call to the endpoint later in the document. But, aside from the fact that the endpoint is described under the "client-side" heading, it also states "Please note, the endpoint can only be used to extend the short-lived user access_tokens. If you pass an access_token that had a long-lieved expiration time, the endpoint will simply pass that same access_token back to you without altering or extending the expiration time." (The typo on "long-lieved" is from FB's own documentation.)
Okay, so if that endpoint cannot be used to renew the expiration time (and my own attempts to renew a long-lived token with that endpoint prove this out), then how can I renew the expiration time on a long-lived token each time they visit my app?
Is there no one who understands how this is supposed to work?