Adding restrictions to API keys

API keys identify your application or website to Google Cloud. API key restrictions ensure that only your apps and websites can use your keys. For security reasons, we recommend that you add restrictions that specify:

If a client uses a restricted API key to issue a request that doesn't satisfy the API key restrictions, then the request fails. For example, if an API key requires HTTP requests to be issued from a specific domain but an HTTP request is received from a different domain, the request will be rejected with an error.

You can add restrictions when you create an API key with the CreateKey method, or you can add the restrictions after the key is created using the UpdateKey method. This page describes the restrictions that you can add to an API key, and it shows you how to add those restrictions.

Before you begin

The page uses curl and the Google Cloud CLI to send requests to the API Keys API. See Getting started with the API Keys for details on getting set up to experiment with the API.

Adding client restrictions

Client restrictions specify which websites, IP addresses, or apps can use an API key. You add client restrictions based on the type of client that calls your API. You can specify one of the following types of client restrictions:

  • browserKeyRestrictions: The HTTP referrers (websites) that are allowed to use the key.
  • serverKeyRestrictions: The IP addresses of callers that are allowed to use the key.
  • androidKeyRestrictions: The Android apps that are allowed to use the key.
  • iosKeyRestrictions: The iOS apps that are allowed to use the key.

Adding browser restrictions

The following example shows how to call the UpdateKey method to restrict the HTTP referrer to www.example.com:

gcurl https://apikeys.googleapis.com/v2/projects/PROJECT_NUMBER/locations/global/keys/KEY_ID?updateMask=restrictions \
  --request PATCH \
  --data '{
    "restrictions" : {
      "browserKeyRestrictions": {
        "allowedReferrers": "www.example.com"
      }
    },
    "etag": "ETAG"
  }'

When the response from operations.get contains "done": true, the response contains the updated Key with the restrictions.

The following example shows how to create a new API key that only allows HTTP requests from a list of specific URLs.

gcurl https://apikeys.googleapis.com/v2/projects/PROJECT_NUMBER/locations/global/keys \
  --request POST \
  --data '{
    "displayName" : "API key with browser restrictions",
    "restrictions" : {
      "browserKeyRestrictions": {
        "allowedReferrers": ["www.example.com", "www.example-2.com"]
      }
    }
  }'

The following table shows some example scenarios and browser restrictions:

Scenario Restrictions
Allow any URL in your site You must set two URLs in the allowedReferers list.
  1. URL for the domain, without a subdomain, and with a wildcard for the path. For example:
    example.com/*
  2. A second URL that includes a wildcard for the subdomain and a wildcard for the path. For example:
    *.example.com/*
Allow a specific URL Add a URL with an exact path. For example:
www.example.com/path
www.example.com/path/path
Allow any URL in a single subdomain or naked domain You must set two URLs in the `allowedReferers` list to allow an entire domain.
  1. URL for the domain, without a trailing slash. For example:
    www.example.com
    sub.example.com
    example.com
  2. A second URL for the domain that includes a wildcard for the path. For example:
    www.example.com/*
    sub.example.com/*
    example.com/*

Adding server restrictions

You can specify one or more IP addresses of the callers, for example web servers or cron jobs, that are allowed to use your API key. You can specify the IP addresses in any of the following formats:

  • IPv4 (198.51.100.1)
  • IPv6 (2001:db8::1)
  • A subnet using CIDR notation (198.51.100.0/24, 2001:db8::/64)

The following example shows how to create an API key with a list of allowedIps:

gcurl https://apikeys.googleapis.com/v2/projects/PROJECT_NUMBER/locations/global/keys  \
  --request POST \
  --data  '{
    "displayName" : "API key with server restrictions with IPv4, IPv6 and CIDR",
    "restrictions" : {
      "serverKeyRestrictions": {
        "allowedIps": ["198.51.100.1","198.51.100.0/24","2001:db8::1","2001:db8::/64"]
      }
    }
  }'

Adding Android restrictions

You can restrict usage of an API key to only your Android apps. When you create or update an API key, provide the package name and the 20 byte SHA-1 fingerprint for each app.

For example, assume that you ran the keytool utility and it created the following fingerprint:

  Certificate fingerprint: SHA1: DA:39:A3:EE:5E:6B:4B:0D:32:55:BF:EF:95:60:18:90:AF:D8:07:09

The following example shows how to create an API key with the fingerprint and and package name to the androidKeyRestrictions:

gcurl https://apikeys.googleapis.com/v2/projects/PROJECT_NUMBER/locations/global/keys  \
  --request POST \
  --data  '{
    "displayName" : "API key with Android restrictions",
    "restrictions" : {
      "androidKeyRestrictions": {
        "allowedApplications": [
          {
            "sha1Fingerprint": "DA:39:A3:EE:5E:6B:4B:0D:32:55:BF:EF:95:60:18:90:AF:D8:07:09",
            "packageName": "com.example.my.app"
          }
        ]
      }
    }
  }'

Adding iOS restrictions

You can restrict usage of an API key to only your iOS apps by providing the bundle ID of each app when you create or update a key. The following example shows how to set the iosKeyRestrictions when creating an API key:

gcurl https://apikeys.googleapis.com/v2/projects/PROJECT_NUMBER/locations/global/keys  \
  --request POST \
  --data  '{
    "displayName" : "API key with iOS restrictions",
    "restrictions" : {
      "iosKeyRestrictions": {
        "allowedBundleIds": ["com.example.my.app1", "com.example.my.app2"]
      }
    }
  }'

Adding API restrictions

API restrictions allow you to specify which Google Cloud APIs can be called using the API key. We recommend that you add both client and API restrictions to all your API keys.

You can specify one or more services in the API restrictions. The following example shows how to restrict the usage of a new API key to only the services translate.googleapis.com and datastore.googleapis.com:

gcurl https://apikeys.googleapis.com/v2/projects/PROJECT_NUMBER/locations/global/keys  \
  --request POST \
  --data '{
    "restrictions": {
      "api_targets": [
        {
          "service": "translate.googleapis.com"
        },
        {
          "service" : "datastore.googleapis.com"
        }
      ]
    },
  }'

To get a list of services that are enabled in your Google Cloud project, use the gcloud services list command.

In addition to restricting the API key for use to specific services, you can optionally specify the methods in each service to further restrict the API key. The following example shows how to restrict the previous key to only allowed methods of translate.googleapis.com:

gcurl https://apikeys.googleapis.com/v2/projects/PROJECT_NUMBER/locations/global/keys/KEY_ID?updateMask=restrictions  \
  --request PATCH \
  --data '{
    "restrictions": {
      "api_targets": [
        {
          "service": "translate.googleapis.com"
          "methods": [
            "Get*",
            "DetectLanguage"
          ]
        },
        {
          "service" : "datastore.googleapis.com"
        }
      ]
    },
    "etag": "ETAG"
  }'

What's next