.NET Users: I hope this answer saves someone a ton of grief.
As @Christophe Fondacci noted on 2015, the accepted solution worked great a few years ago.
Now it's 2017 2020 and the process is far easier and faster.
My use case is to validate in-app subscriptions, where my mobile app sends subscription purchase information to my RESTful server, which in turn contacts Google to validate a subscription purchase.
The strategy is to create a Service Account that will operate on your behalf.
Sign into your Google Play Dev Console and click the app you're setting up.
Visit Settings->API access
Under Service Accounts, hit the Create Service Account button.
As of Jan 2017 a dialog with directions on setting up a service account appears. The dialog takes you to the Google API Console; from there,
A) Click Create Service Account
B) Create the service account name that makes sense. Since we're interested in accessing Android Publisher Services, I chose "publisher".
C) For Role, just choose something - you can change this later.
D) Choose "Furnish New private key" and choose P12 for .Net implementations. Don't lose this file!
Now you're done with #4, you'll see your new Service Account listed; click "Grant Access" to enable it.
Tap on the link to "View permissions". You should modify permissions based on your needs and API.
To validate in-app purchases, visit the Cog->Change Permissions and enable the GLOBAL "Visibility" and "Manage Orders" permissions.
OK at this point you have configured everything on Google's end. Now to setup your server to server stuff. I recommend creating
a .Net Console App to test out your implementation then offload it where needed.
- Add the Android Publisher Client Library from Nuget[1]
PM> Install-Package Google.Apis.AndroidPublisher.v3
Add the P12 file to your project root
Change the P12 Properties so "Build Action" is "Content" and "Copy To Output Directory" to "Copy if newer".
Implement something like this to test your access and fine tune [1] .
using System.Threading.Tasks;
using System.Security.Cryptography.X509Certificates;
using Google.Apis.Services;
using Google.Apis.Auth.OAuth2;
using Google.Apis.AndroidPublisher.v3;
...
public Task<SubscriptionPurchase> GetSubscriptionPurchase(string packageName, string productId, string purchaseToken)
{
var certificate = new X509Certificate2(
"{{your p12 file name}}",
"{{ your p12 secret }}",
X509KeyStorageFlags.Exportable
);
var credentials = new ServiceAccountCredential(
new ServiceAccountCredential.Initializer("{{ your service account email }}")
{
Scopes = new[] { AndroidPublisherService.Scope.Androidpublisher }
}.FromCertificate(certificate));
var service = new AndroidPublisherService(new BaseClientService.Initializer()
{
HttpClientInitializer = credentials,
ApplicationName = "my server app name",
});
return service.Purchases.Subscriptions.Get(packageName, productId, purchaseToken).ExecuteAsync();
}
Good luck, hope this helps someone.
Sources:
Using OAuth 2.0 for Server to Server Applications
.Net Client Library for Google.Apis.AndroidPublisher.v3[1]
1
Updated 04/11/2020 - Google.Apis.AndroidPublisher.v2 EOL'd, use Google.Apis.AndroidPublisher.v3.
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– Brian White Aug 09 '14 at 18:04