# Authentication: Desktop Application How-To

This authentication how-to is for desktop applications only. Web application developers should see the web application how-to.

# 1. Get an API Key

If you don’t already have an API account, please apply for one. For each of your accounts you will have a shared secret which you will require in Section 6. You will also need to set up a callback url which our authentication service will redirect to in Section 4.

# 2. Fetch a request token

Make an API method call to the auth.getToken service. You should send the following arguments to that call:

api_key: Your 32-character API Key.
api_sig: A 32-character API method signature, constructed as explained in Section 6

This will return a token. To see the response format check the method documentation page. The token is not authorized by the user at this stage.

# 2.1 Authentication Tokens

Authentication tokens are API account specific. They are valid for 60 minutes from the moment they are granted.

# 3. Request authorization from the user

Your application needs to open a web browser and send the user to last.fm/api/auth with your API key and auth token as parameters. Use an HTTP GET request. Your request will look like this:

http://www.last.fm/api/auth/?api_key=xxxxxxxxxxx&token=xxxxxxxx

If the user is not logged in to Last.fm, they will be redirected to the login page before being asked to grant your application permission to use their account. On this page they will see the name of your application, along with the application description and logo as supplied in Section 1. Once the user has granted your application permission to use their account, the browser-based process is over and the user is asked to close their browser and return to your application.

# 4. Fetch A Web Service Session

Send your api key along with an api signature and your authentication token as arguments to the auth.getSession API method call. The parameters are defined as such:

api_key: Your 32-character API Key.
token: The authentication token received from the auth.getToken method call.
api_sig: Your 32-character API method signature, as explained in Section 6

Note: You can only use an authentication token once. It will be consumed when creating your web service session.

The response format of this call is shown on the auth.getSession method page.

# 4.1 Session Lifetime

Session keys have an infinite lifetime by default. You are recommended to store the key securely. Users are able to revoke privileges for your application on their Last.fm settings screen, rendering session keys invalid.

# 5. Make authenticated web service calls

You can now sign your web service calls with a method signature, provided along with the session key you received in Section 4 and your API key. You will need to include all three as parameters in subsequent calls in order to be able to access services that require authentication. You can visit individual method call pages to find out if they require authentication. Your three authentication parameters are defined as:

sk (Required) : The session key returned by auth.getSession service.
api_key (Required) : Your 32-character API key.
api_sig (Required) : Your API method signature, constructed as explained in Section 6

# 6. Sign your calls

Construct your api method signatures by first ordering all the parameters sent in your call alphabetically by parameter name and concatenating them into one string using a <name><value> scheme. So for a call to auth.getSession you may have:

**api_key**xxxxxxxx**method**auth.getSession**token**xxxxxxx

Ensure your parameters are utf8 encoded. Now append your secret to this string. Finally, generate an md5 hash of the resulting string. For example, for an account with a secret equal to 'mysecret', your api signature will be:

api signature = md5("api_keyxxxxxxxxmethodauth.getSessiontokenxxxxxxxmysecret")

Where md5() is an md5 hashing operation and its argument is the string to be hashed. The hashing operation should return a 32-character hexadecimal md5 hash.

API Calls

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