I have accomplished this using ClientLogin. A basic class is below. This class returns an instance of Zend HTTP Client that is ready to make authenticated requests.
<?php
class GoogleAuthenticator {
public static function authenticate($logger) {
$tokenObj = new Token();
try {
$token = $tokenObj->get($token_name);
if(!empty($token)) {
//load a new HTTP client with our token
$logger->info('Using cached token: ' . $token);
$httpClient = new Zend_Gdata_HttpClient();
$httpClient->setConfig(array(
'maxredirects' => 0,
'strictredirects' => true,
'useragent' => 'uploader/v1' . ' Zend_Framework_Gdata/' . Zend_Version::VERSION
)
);
$httpClient->setClientLoginToken($token);
//attempt to use our token to make an authenticated request. If the token is invalid
// an exception will be raised and we can catch this below
$yt = new Zend_Gdata_YouTube($httpClient, 'uploader/v1', '', $youtube_api_key);
$query = new Zend_Gdata_YouTube_VideoQuery();
$query->setFeedType('top rated');
$query->setMaxResults(1);
$yt->getPlaylistListFeed(null, $query); //ignore the response!
} else {
$logger->info('Generating new HTTP client');
// Need to create a brand new client+authentication
$authenticationURL= 'https://www.google.com/youtube/accounts/ClientLogin';
$httpClient =
Zend_Gdata_ClientLogin::getHttpClient(
$username = YOUTUBE_USERNAME_PROD,
$password = YOUTUBE_PASSWORD_PROD,
$service = 'youtube',
$client = null,
$source = 'uploader/v1',
$loginToken = null,
$loginCaptcha = null,
$authenticationURL);
// get the token so we can cache it for later
$token = $httpClient->getClientLoginToken();
$tokenObj->destroy($token_name);
$tokenObj->insert($token, $token_name);
}
return $httpClient;
}catch(Zend_Gdata_App_AuthException $e) {
$tokenObj->destroy($token_name);
die("Google Authentication error: " . $e->getMessage());
}catch(Exception $e) {
$tokenObj->destroy($token_name);
die("General error: " . $e->getMessage());
}
} // authenticate()
} // GoogleAuthenticator
?>
You'll need to have these constants defined:
YOUTUBE_USERNAME_PROD
YOUTUBE_PASSWORD_PROD
Or modify the class to pass them in. The try/catch is needed because tokens can expire, so you need to a way to refresh them. Also, you need to make a dummy request to ensure the Token is valid even after you create it.
Keep in mind that YouTube (well, as of 2 years ago or so) prevented you from uploading a video more of than every 10 minutes, which makes your use-case pretty difficult. That is, you cannot allow multiple videos being uploaded on a single accounts behalf, more of than every 10 min. But YouTube might have lifted this since then. Good luck