在私人伺服器上驗證 Google Play 回應資料的內容之前,請先向私人伺服器發出初始驗證請求。在第一個請求中,將使用者憑證傳送至您的伺服器,然後讓伺服器以「Nonce」或僅使用一次的數字做出回應。接著您可以在下一個要對私人伺服器傳送的請求中加入這個 Nonce,請求取得授權驗證資料。如要進一步瞭解如何為 Nonce 選擇最佳值,請參閱「產生合適的 Nonce 值」一節。
產生合適的 Nonce 值
請使用下列其中一種技巧,建立難以猜到的 Nonce 值:
根據使用者 ID 產生雜湊值。
為每位使用者產生隨機值。將這個隨機值儲存在應用程式伺服器上,做為特定使用者屬性的一部分。
驗證來自伺服器的回應資料
查看應用程式伺服器傳送給應用程式的回應資料時,請確認授權驗證庫的回應並非偽造。請將應用程式伺服器回應資料中包含的簽名與應用程式在上個步驟中從 Google Play 收到的金鑰進行比較,以驗證簽名。
[null,null,["上次更新時間:2025-07-27 (世界標準時間)。"],[],[],null,["# Adding Server-Side License Verification to Your App\n\nWhen verifying that the user has purchased or downloaded a legitimate copy of\nyour app from the Google Play Store, it's best to perform the license\nverification check on a server that you control.\n\nThis guide presents a step-by-step process for completing server-side license\nverification and presents some best practices related to performing this check.\n\nProcess overview\n----------------\n\nFigure 1 shows how information is transferred between your app, Google Play, and\nyour private server: \n**Figure 1.** Flow of data between your app and Google Play, then between your app and your private server\n\n1. Your app makes a request to Google Play, inquiring about whether a particular user has purchased or downloaded a legitimate copy of your app.\n2. Google Play responds by sending a *response data object* , an object of type [`ResponseData`](/google/play/licensing/licensing-reference#lvl-summary), to your app. This object is a signed piece of information that states whether the user has purchased or downloaded a legitimate copy of your app.\n3. Your app makes a request to a private server that you control, verifying the contents of the response data.\n4. The server responds by sending a status to your app, indicating whether the user has indeed purchased or downloaded a legitimate copy of your app. If the server provides a \"success\" message, [verify the\n response](#verify-app-server-response) and then grant the user access to the resources that require a license.\n\nBecause the response data is signed by Google Play, then checked on your\nserver, there's no way to modify the object on the device running your app. If\nyour app relies on the server and makes resources available only to legitimate\nusers, your app is substantially more protected against unauthorized users.\n\nThe following sections provide additional considerations to keep in mind when\nperforming server-side license verification.\n\nSafeguard against replay attacks\n--------------------------------\n\nAfter receiving a response from Google Play regarding the user's license status,\nit's possible for the user to copy the response data and use it multiple times,\nor give it to other users who could then forge their own requests to your app's\nprivate server. This sort of action is known as a *replay attack*.\n\nTo reduce the likelihood of users performing replay attacks successfully, take\nthe following measures before sending a request to your app's server:\n\n- Check the timestamp that's included in the response data, making sure that\n Google Play generated the response recently.\n\n | **Note:** You can increase the allowed difference between the response data's timestamp and the current time based on how long users should be able to interact with license-bound resources after they deactivate their license.\n- Perform rate-limiting on your server request, such as exponential backoff, to\n reduce the number of times that your app attempts to send the same response data\n to your app's server.\n\n | **Caution:** To preserve a good user experience in cases where a user interacts with your app on a variety of devices, be careful if you add rate-limiting based on number of devices.\n- Before verifying the contents of Google Play's response data on your private\n server, make an initial, authentication-based request to your private server. In\n this first request, send user credentials to your server, and have your server\n then respond with a *nonce* , or a number that is used only once. You can then\n include this nonce in your next request to your private server, asking for\n license verification data. For details on how to choose a good value for the\n nonce, see the [generate a suitable nonce value](#generate-nonce) section.\n\n | **Note:** Include a user ID field in both the nonce request and the license verification request. Your app's server can then compare the fields' values from the two requests and make sure they match.\n\n### Generate a suitable nonce value\n\nUse one of the following techniques to create a nonce value that's difficult to\nguess:\n\n- Generate a hash value based on the user's ID.\n- Generate a random value on a per-user basis. Store this random value on your app's server as part of a given user's attributes.\n\nVerify response data from your server\n-------------------------------------\n\nWhen reviewing response data that your app's server sends to your app, make sure\nthat the License Verification Library response isn't forged. Verify the\nsignature that's included in the app server's response data by comparing it\nwith the key that your app received from Google Play in a previous step.\n\nIt's also worth remembering that the block specific to the License Verification\nLibrary (LVL) is the only part that's signed. Therefore, it's the only part of\nyour app server's response data that your app should trust."]]