facebook open graph retrieve data retroactively - facebook

We have an app on facebook for login on our website. I'd like to retrieve open graph data (simple things such as likes, interests, etc) combine it with our own database, to run some analysis to gage customer behavior.
I'm running into some issues with the auth token and it seems like even though the user approved the app, you cannot retroactively pull the customer data. Is this correct, or am I missing something?

To fetch data that occurred in the past (e.g. using a script) then you'll need to make use of long term access tokens. Facebook's documentation gives a great overview on how these work, but in short:
Short term access tokens are usually perfect for actions the user takes while on your website/app.
Long term access tokens are great for providing access to the user's profile when they're not actively logged in to your website/app (the short term access token will have expired & changed)
If you save a permanent access token for the user, you'll be able to pull data for all users retroactively.

Related

Facebook Graph App Access Token Limitations

I am trying to build a miner to pull some statistics from public Facebook pages using Graph. This is easy enough going through the developer documentation and generating a short-term user access token. With the short-term user access token I am able to pull everything that I need.
Easy Problem:
I would like to get a long-term access token for obvious reasons, and I was able to do this following several other answers through this site. So I created an app and used the app to create a 60 day user access token. This ended up being pretty straightforward.
Harder Problem:
With this long-term user access token I am not able to pull the same public information that I could pull with my basic user access token. For example, "category" is not available when pulling information about a public page. Also, I cannot see the number of likes for a given public post. I have a feeling that there is something with the App permissions but I'm not sure what I should do.
App Specifications/Information:
I added a logo, privacy policy and I have the basic permission set for e-mail, public_profile and user_friends. I have not added a platform or any additional permissions.
I would really appreciate it if someone could let me know how to either keep my user account logged in while I make the get requests or give my app user token the permissions to mine posts on public accounts.

How to get and use Graph User Access Token for use in personal scripts?

I have written a Python script that makes some statistics for me and a couple of friends based on our posts and comments in them. I've been using it by getting a temporary token in Graph Explorer and copying it to the script before running it. So far I've been able to access friends' posts with API 1.0 (and for some time with 2.0, I assume that was a bug) but now the 1.0 API is getting closed and I'm running into an issue - while some of the /post requests are still accessible to me, many return an "Unsupported get request" error. I can only assume that I can't access these anymore unless I'm using their User Access Token.
I'm not sure what I can do now:
ask them to use Graph Explorer to provide me a temporary token. It works, is pretty secure with default permissions but I would have to do it every time I wanted to update the data.
make some sort of dummy app that they will log into once. I don't know if that violates any rules and if it will be removed immidetaly, I hope not. But I have no idea how to extract the user access token out of the app so I can use it in the script.
What's the "correct" way of doing this?
If the App is only for a specific group of people, it should be no problem. Just add your friends as Tester in the App so they can authorize it with the read_stream permission. Else you would need to go through a review process, and Facebook usually does not approve read_stream.
You don´t really need to handle the Access Token, just use the JavaScript SDK and read the stream of your friends whenever they visit your App.
Btw, you can get the Access Token in the callback response of FB.login. But it will only be valid for 2 hours, you can extend it to 60 days though. More information about extending Access Tokens: https://developers.facebook.com/docs/facebook-login/access-tokens
Easy solution: Create an entry page where your friends (who are Testers in the App) can authorize with read_stream. Right after authorization or refreshing the Token with FB.getLoginStatus, read their posts and store them.
Here´s some code to get you started on that entry page: http://www.devils-heaven.com/facebook-javascript-sdk-login/
...of course you can also just let your friends generated the Access Token manually. Information about that can be found in the Facebook docs (see Link above) or (for example) here: http://www.devils-heaven.com/facebook-access-tokens/ - they can then give you the Token, it will be valid for 60 days if it´s an extended one, or only 2 hours if it´s a default User Token.

How to retrieve posts of user after he logged out from FB

I'm trying to figure out a core concept in FB that even after reading a lot of FB documentation, couldn't understand.
Let's say I'm building an app (that will reside in a tab), in which I want to see the last post of a user. I want to do this approximately one month after the user approved my app, without him using the app again.
I assume I will need to use a long-lived expiration token that will be saved to my DB.
A month after I will run a procedure that will use this token and check the user posts.
Is this correct?
What about a situation in which the user logged out? The token is no longer valid.. does this mean I will never be able to access user posts unless he will access my app?
Isn't this a bit weird (since he already approved my app)?
Not necessarily.
Firstly, you need the read_stream permission from the user when they authenticate your app. Then, because you are intending to use Facebook as the app, rather than as the user, you need to authenticate as an app, which is a simple process:
In order to get an access token for the app, all you need to do is use the following URL:
https://graph.facebook.com/oauth/access_token?client_id=YOUR_APP_ID&client_secret=YOUR_APP_SECRET&grant_type=client_credentials
Because these tokens are time-limited, it may be easier to request a token each time you use the Graph API, rather than storing it in a database and waiting for it to expire.
Then, all you need to do is use the following request:
https://graph.facebook.com/USER_ID/feed?access_token=YOUR_ACCESS_TOKEN
The upside to this is that it does not matter whether or not the user is logged into Facebook.
See here for more details:
https://developers.facebook.com/docs/authentication/applications/

Long-lasting FB access-token for server to pull FB page info

I'm aware that there are many questions about Facebook access-tokens and the grief they cause, but despite much experimentation and reading many frustratingly vague blog articles (FB and otherwise), I'm still struggling to get a clear answer to my needs. Let me succinctly break down my process so far:
I am creating a site that, server-side, needs to pull the posts/statuses from a single Facebook Page
I am an admin of that Facebook Page
I have created a Facebook App
Using the Facebook Graph API Explorer, I've generated a short-lived key, connected to my app and my account, that grants permission to my account to view the access-tokens for my pages
I've converted my short-lived key to a long-lived key (60 days) ala scenario 4 from this
And here's where I am stuck. My 60 day key works fine for my server to pull the info needed from the page, but as far I can tell, there's no way to programmatically extend that 60 day key. I also do not know of a way to generate a new short-lived key without manually going to the Facebook Graph API Explorer and creating one.
Since it is my server making the requests to the Facebook API and not a user-based system (where I could easily request that a user authorize the Facebook app again), this creates a very clunky system. Since Facebook deprecated offline_access, is there really no permanent way to have my server pull info from my own page? Will I really have to create a new key by hand and manually update my server with it every 60 days?
Or is there something I'm missing?
Update:
The step-by-step guide that was previously found here has been migrated down into its own answer.
These are the steps that were previously in the question - they have been migrated to this answer.
Having found that it is possible to generate a Facebook Page Access Token that does not expire (with help from #Igy), here is a clear, step-by-step quide for all those looking to the same:
Make sure you are the admin of the FB page you wish to pull info from
Create a FB App (should be with the same user account that is the page admin)
Head over to the Facebook Graph API Explorer
On the top right, select the FB App you created from the "Application" drop down list
Click "Get Access Token"
Make sure you add the manage_pages permission
Convert this short-lived access token into a long-lived one by making this Graph API call:
https://graph.facebook.com/oauth/access_token?client_id=<your FB App ID >&client_secret=<your FB App secret>&grant_type=fb_exchange_token&fb_exchange_token=<your short-lived access token>
Grab the new long-lived access token returned back
Make a Graph API call to see your accounts using the new long-lived access token: https://graph.facebook.com/me/accounts?access_token=<your long-lived access token>
Grab the access_token for the page you'll be pulling info from
Lint the token to see that it is set to Expires: Never!
That should do it. You should now have a Facebook Page Access Token that doesn't expire, unless:
You change your Facebook account password
You lose admin access for the target page
You delete or de-authorize your Facebook App
Any of these will cause the access token to become invalid.
If you are getting (#100) Tried accessing nonexisting field (accounts) on node type (Page), go to the Access Token Debugger, copy the value of User ID, and use it to replace the "me" part of the URL in step 9.
This is covered in the Offline Access deprecation document
Use the 60-day token for the page admin to retrieve a Page Access Token (via /PAGE_ID?fields=access_token or /me/accounts) - the Page access token will not have an expiry time
An approach that works in 2019
I was recently trying to achieve something similar (to the use case described in this thread), but I wanted to make sure to respect Facebook's current policies, so I did a little research and here I'm sharing what I found.
My use case
So, as I said already, my use case is very similar to the one described here; that is:
I'm doing some work for a school district.
They are using a software tool to manage pretty much everything that relates to school transportation.
That tool allows them to send email notifications (to subscribers) when they publish bus delay alerts and school closure alerts.
A lot of people in the community follow the organization on their Facebook page, and that's the only place they look for those alerts.
So an employee of the organization has to manually publish each notification on the Facebook page (in addition to creating it in the transportation software). Moreover, those notifications eventually expire (or are simply deleted before they expire), so the employee has to go back later on to delete them manually as well.
It's a waist of time, so what we are trying to do here is to develop as simple system that periodically polls the software tool's database for new (and expired) notifications and update them (i.e. add and remove) on the Facebook page.
This is, in my view, a legitimate use case, but I wasn't sure how to implement it in a way that's in line with Facebook's policies.
The accepted answer
I followed the steps of the accepted answer and it worked, except that things appear to have changed: now, even though the generated page token does not expire, access to data does expire after around 60 days. You will see that as well if you follow the procedure and inspect the page token in the FB Token Debugger Tool.
Besides, the fact that the generated page tokens are tied to the user account is also unfortunate, because if the user updates his/her password, then the page token also gets invalidated.
How to do it in 2019
After several hours of research, I stumbled upon the following Facebook documentation article: Business Login for Direct Businesses.
It turns out that it is now possible, following the steps described in the above article, to generate a page token that is not associated to any particular Facebook user account and which will not expire (unless the FB App gets deleted or the underlying application token gets deleted, you know...)
So here are the steps and the most important parts:
You need a Business Manager account.
Verification will be required and a digital contract will have to be signed.
You need to add the target Facebook page to that account.
You need to create a Facebook App, and transfer that app to the same Business Manager account as well.
The app will have to go through Facebook's review process, because the following permissions will be needed: manage_pages and publish_pages.
Important note For the posts made using the generate page token to be visible to users other than the application administrators, that app will need to have been published and approved.
You may still experiment with the concept without submitting for review, but the posts won't be publicly visible.
In the Business Manager account (only after your app and page have been added to the account), you need to create what's called a System User, and give that user admin role (or permissions) to the target Facebook page.
A system user is owned by the Business Manager account, and isn't tied to a specific user. My current understanding is that one major use case for a system user is programmatic access to Facebook's Graph API (just what we need).
Then, for that system user, you need to generate a access token (which will be never-expiring). You will be prompted to select for which app. You will then select your target app.
You will then need to use the generated app token to generate a page token, which will also be never-expiring. The procedure is described in this article as:
GET /<PAGE_ID>?fields=access_token&access_token=<SYSTEM_USER_ACCESS_TOKEN>
That's it.
That token will never expire, and it won't be tied to a particular Facebook user, so it's exactly what we need!
The last part is to make sure that your Facebook app gets approved by Facebook. It's in fact the most important part, because the whole procedure is worthless if people don't see our posts.
I wanted to know for sure that I could rely on the above procedure to build something for my client without Facebook rejecting it in the end, so, beforehand (i.e. before starting to work on my client's project), I went through the whole process of creating a page, an app, a Business Manager account, etc. I verified my business. I submitted my app for review. In my request, I was very specific about my use case and emphasized that the app was for "self-use" (i.e. that the organization is developing an app for itself, not for other Facebook users). I got approved without less than 24 hours.
A few other notes about the app review process:
I had to select a platform for the app, so I selected website.
I had to indicate why the app needed the two permissions and how it was going to use them.
I had to indicate why the reviewer would not be able to sign into my app and try it (i.e. because the app will be used by a worker process).
For the mandatory screencasts, I simply presented manual operations in the terminal using the curl utility (to generate the page token and make posts to the Facebook page). I also showed how I was using Business Manager to link the system user to the page and generate a token, and so on.
Again, I was very specific about my use case, and I think that that helped.
I hope this information will be useful to people with similar use cases.
Many thanks to #redhotvengeance for step-by-step guide.
After some time, now there is clearly described in Facebook documentation:
https://developers.facebook.com/docs/facebook-login/access-tokens/expiration-and-extension
Extending Page Access Tokens
Apps can retrieve a page access token from Page admin users when they
authenticate with the manage_pages permission. If the user access
token used to retrieve this page access token is short-lived, the page
access token will also be short-lived.
To get a longer-lived page access token, exchange the User access
token for a long-lived one, as above, and then request the Page access
token. The resulting page access token will not have any expiry time.
You can also copy and past from the app dashboard on facebook.
The steps:
Go to https://developers.facebook.com
Select your app in the top right corner of the page
(pic of what it looks like)
Click on Messenger from the options on the left (it will go to setting automatically) (pic of what it looks like)
Go to the "Token Generation" section in the page. Select what page you want to generate the token for. (pic of what that section looks like)
The copy and past your page token where ever you need it.
Keep in mind that while in theory your token won't expire, that it is directly tied to what ever facebook account your logged into. So say you change your password or you remove the permissions from between your account and your app then your token won't be valid any more.

Infinite access token *without* requiring user to "allow access" - in response to Facebook deprecating offline_access

This is a common scenario, but one that I don't see a lot of people posting about. Let's say I have a website, example.com, that loads a list of events from a Facebook Page. It would be a bad user experience to ask the user to "allow access" to the website just so they can see a list of events.
So, what I do is generate an access token with offline access permissions via the Graph API Explorer (https://developers.facebook.com/tools/explorer). This gives me an infinite (as long as the user doesn't change their password, etc.) access token. Perfect.
Soon, though, Facebook is deprecating offline_access. Is there going to be any way to continue to show this events feed on my website without requiring a user to allow access (which would refresh the access token)?
No, there will be no more infinite access tokens. You should store the list of events in your database so you don't have to query facebook so often. This way the user doesn't have to allow access to see a list of events that you get from your data store.