oauth2 2.0.10 → 2.0.18

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data/OIDC.md ADDED
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+ # OpenID Connect (OIDC) with ruby-oauth/oauth2
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+
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+ ## OIDC Libraries
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+
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+ Libraries built on top of the oauth2 gem that implement OIDC.
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+
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+ - [gamora](https://github.com/amco/gamora-rb) - OpenID Connect Relying Party for Rails apps
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+ - [omniauth-doximity-oauth2](https://github.com/doximity/omniauth-doximity-oauth2) - OmniAuth strategy for Doximity, supporting OIDC, and using PKCE
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+ - [omniauth-himari](https://github.com/sorah/himari) - OmniAuth strategy to act as OIDC RP and use [Himari](https://github.com/sorah/himari) for OP
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+ - [omniauth-mit-oauth2](https://github.com/MITLibraries/omniauth-mit-oauth2) - OmniAuth strategy for MIT OIDC
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+
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+ If any other libraries would like to be added to this list, please open an issue or pull request.
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+
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+ ## Raw OIDC with ruby-oauth/oauth2
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+
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+ This document complements the inline documentation by focusing on OpenID Connect (OIDC) 1.0 usage patterns when using this gem as an OAuth 2.0 client library.
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+
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+ Scope of this document
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+
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+ - Audience: Developers building an OAuth 2.0/OIDC Relying Party (RP, aka client) in Ruby.
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+ - Non-goals: This gem does not implement an OIDC Provider (OP, aka Authorization Server); for OP/server see other projects (e.g., doorkeeper + oidc extensions).
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+ - Status: Informational documentation with links to normative specs. The gem intentionally remains protocol-agnostic beyond OAuth 2.0; OIDC specifics (like ID Token validation) must be handled by your application.
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+
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+ Key concepts refresher
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+
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+ - OAuth 2.0 delegates authorization; it does not define authentication of the end-user.
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+ - OIDC layers an identity layer on top of OAuth 2.0, introducing:
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+ - ID Token: a JWT carrying claims about the authenticated end-user and the authentication event.
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+ - Standardized scopes: openid (mandatory), profile, email, address, phone, offline_access, and others.
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+ - UserInfo endpoint: a protected resource for retrieving user profile claims.
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+ - Discovery and Dynamic Client Registration (optional for providers/clients that support them).
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+
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+ What this gem provides for OIDC
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+
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+ - All OAuth 2.0 client capabilities required for OIDC flows: building authorization requests, exchanging authorization codes, refreshing tokens, and making authenticated resource requests.
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+ - Transport and parsing conveniences (snaky hash, Faraday integration, error handling, etc.).
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+ - Optional client authentication schemes useful with OIDC deployments:
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+ - basic_auth (default)
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+ - request_body (legacy)
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+ - tls_client_auth (MTLS)
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+ - private_key_jwt (OIDC-compliant when configured per OP requirements)
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+
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+ What you must add in your app for OIDC
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+
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+ - ID Token validation: This gem surfaces id_token values but does not verify them. Your app should:
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+ 1) Parse the JWT (header, payload, signature)
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+ 2) Fetch the OP JSON Web Key Set (JWKS) from discovery (or configure statically)
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+ 3) Select the correct key by kid (when present) and verify the signature and algorithm
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+ 4) Validate standard claims (iss, aud, exp, iat, nbf, azp, nonce when used, at_hash/c_hash when applicable)
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+ 5) Enforce expected client_id, issuer, and clock skew policies
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+ - Nonce handling for Authorization Code flow with OIDC: generate a cryptographically-random nonce, bind it to the user session before redirect, include it in authorize request, and verify it in the ID Token on return.
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+ - PKCE is best practice and often required by OPs: generate/verifier, send challenge in authorize, send verifier in token request.
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+ - Session/state management: continue to validate state to mitigate CSRF; use exact redirect_uri matching.
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+
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+ Minimal OIDC Authorization Code example
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+
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+ ```ruby
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+ require "oauth2"
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+ require "jwt" # jwt/ruby-jwt
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+ require "net/http"
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+ require "json"
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+
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+ client = OAuth2::Client.new(
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+ ENV.fetch("OIDC_CLIENT_ID"),
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+ ENV.fetch("OIDC_CLIENT_SECRET"),
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+ site: ENV.fetch("OIDC_ISSUER"), # e.g. https://accounts.example.com
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+ authorize_url: "/authorize", # or discovered
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+ token_url: "/token", # or discovered
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+ )
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+
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+ # Step 1: Redirect to OP for consent/auth
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+ state = SecureRandom.hex(16)
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+ nonce = SecureRandom.hex(16)
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+ pkce_verifier = SecureRandom.urlsafe_base64(64)
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+ pkce_challenge = Base64.urlsafe_encode64(Digest::SHA256.digest(pkce_verifier)).delete("=")
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+
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+ authz_url = client.auth_code.authorize_url(
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+ scope: "openid profile email",
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+ state: state,
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+ nonce: nonce,
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+ code_challenge: pkce_challenge,
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+ code_challenge_method: "S256",
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+ redirect_uri: ENV.fetch("OIDC_REDIRECT_URI"),
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+ )
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+ # redirect_to authz_url
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+
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+ # Step 2: Handle callback
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+ # params[:code], params[:state]
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+ raise "state mismatch" unless params[:state] == state
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+
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+ token = client.auth_code.get_token(
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+ params[:code],
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+ redirect_uri: ENV.fetch("OIDC_REDIRECT_URI"),
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+ code_verifier: pkce_verifier,
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+ )
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+
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+ # The token may include: access_token, id_token, refresh_token, etc.
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+ id_token = token.params["id_token"] || token.params[:id_token]
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+
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+ # Step 3: Validate the ID Token (simplified – add your own checks!)
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+ # Discover keys (example using .well-known)
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+ issuer = ENV.fetch("OIDC_ISSUER")
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+ jwks_uri = JSON.parse(Net::HTTP.get(URI.join(issuer, "/.well-known/openid-configuration"))).
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+ fetch("jwks_uri")
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+ jwks = JSON.parse(Net::HTTP.get(URI(jwks_uri)))
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+ keys = jwks.fetch("keys")
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+
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+ # Use ruby-jwt JWK loader
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+ jwk_set = JWT::JWK::Set.new(keys.map { |k| JWT::JWK.import(k) })
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+
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+ decoded, headers = JWT.decode(
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+ id_token,
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+ nil,
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+ true,
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+ algorithms: ["RS256", "ES256", "PS256"],
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+ jwks: jwk_set,
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+ verify_iss: true,
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+ iss: issuer,
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+ verify_aud: true,
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+ aud: ENV.fetch("OIDC_CLIENT_ID"),
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+ )
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+
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+ # Verify nonce
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+ raise "nonce mismatch" unless decoded["nonce"] == nonce
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+
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+ # Optionally: call UserInfo
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+ userinfo = token.get("/userinfo").parsed
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+ ```
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+
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+ Notes on discovery and registration
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+
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+ - Discovery: Most OPs publish configuration at `{issuer}/.well-known/openid-configuration` (OIDC Discovery 1.0). From there, resolve authorization_endpoint, token_endpoint, jwks_uri, userinfo_endpoint, etc.
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+ - Dynamic Client Registration: Some OPs allow registering clients programmatically (OIDC Dynamic Client Registration 1.0). This gem does not implement registration; use a plain HTTP client or Faraday and store credentials securely.
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+ Common pitfalls and tips
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+ - Always request the openid scope when you expect an ID Token. Without it, the OP may behave as vanilla OAuth 2.0.
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+ - Validate ID Token signature and claims before trusting any identity data. Do not rely solely on the presence of an id_token field.
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+ - Prefer Authorization Code + PKCE. Avoid Implicit; it is discouraged in modern guidance and may be disabled by providers.
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+ - Use exact redirect_uri matching, and keep your allow-list short.
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+ - For public clients that use refresh tokens, prefer sender-constrained tokens (DPoP/MTLS) or rotation with one-time-use refresh tokens, per modern best practices.
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+ - When using private_key_jwt, ensure the "aud" (or token_url) and "iss/sub" claims are set per the OP’s rules, and include kid in the JWT header when required so the OP can select the right key.
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+ Relevant specifications and references
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+ - OpenID Connect Core 1.0: https://openid.net/specs/openid-connect-core-1_0.html
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+ - OIDC Core (final): https://openid.net/specs/openid-connect-core-1_0-final.html
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+ - How OIDC works: https://openid.net/developers/how-connect-works/
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+ - OpenID Connect home: https://openid.net/connect/
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+ - OIDC Discovery 1.0: https://openid.net/specs/openid-connect-discovery-1_0.html
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+ - OIDC Dynamic Client Registration 1.0: https://openid.net/specs/openid-connect-registration-1_0.html
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+ - OIDC Session Management 1.0: https://openid.net/specs/openid-connect-session-1_0.html
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+ - OIDC RP-Initiated Logout 1.0: https://openid.net/specs/openid-connect-rpinitiated-1_0.html
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+ - OIDC Back-Channel Logout 1.0: https://openid.net/specs/openid-connect-backchannel-1_0.html
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+ - OIDC Front-Channel Logout 1.0: https://openid.net/specs/openid-connect-frontchannel-1_0.html
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+ - Auth0 OIDC overview: https://auth0.com/docs/authenticate/protocols/openid-connect-protocol
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+ - Spring Authorization Server’s list of OAuth2/OIDC specs: https://github.com/spring-projects/spring-authorization-server/wiki/OAuth2-and-OIDC-Specifications
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+ See also
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+
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+ - README sections on OAuth 2.1 notes and OIDC notes
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+ - Strategy classes under lib/oauth2/strategy for flow helpers
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+ - Specs under spec/oauth2 for concrete usage patterns
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+ Contributions welcome
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+ - If you discover provider-specific nuances, consider contributing examples or clarifications (without embedding provider-specific hacks into the library).