public sealed class OAuthRequirements : IMessage<OAuthRequirements>, IEquatable<OAuthRequirements>, IDeepCloneable<OAuthRequirements>, IBufferMessage, IMessage
OAuth scopes are a way to define data and permissions on data. For example,
there are scopes defined for "Read-only access to Google Calendar" and
"Access to Cloud Platform". Users can consent to a scope for an application,
giving it permission to access that data on their behalf.
OAuth scope specifications should be fairly coarse grained; a user will need
to see and understand the text description of what your scope means.
In most cases: use one or at most two OAuth scopes for an entire family of
products. If your product has multiple APIs, you should probably be sharing
the OAuth scope across all of those APIs.
When you need finer grained OAuth consent screens: talk with your product
management about how developers will use them in practice.
Please note that even though each of the canonical scopes is enough for a
request to be accepted and passed to the backend, a request can still fail
due to the backend requiring additional scopes or permissions.
[[["Easy to understand","easyToUnderstand","thumb-up"],["Solved my problem","solvedMyProblem","thumb-up"],["Other","otherUp","thumb-up"]],[["Hard to understand","hardToUnderstand","thumb-down"],["Incorrect information or sample code","incorrectInformationOrSampleCode","thumb-down"],["Missing the information/samples I need","missingTheInformationSamplesINeed","thumb-down"],["Other","otherDown","thumb-down"]],["Last updated 2024-10-30 UTC."],[],[]]