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I keep receiving "invalid-site-private-key" on my reCAPTCHA validation request

maybe you guys can help me with this. I am trying to implement reCAPTCHA in my node.js application and no matter what I do, I keep getting "invalid-site-private-key" as a response.

Here are the things I double and double checked and tried:

  1. Correct Keys
  2. Keys are not swapped
  3. Keys are "global keys" as I am testing on localhost and thought it might be an issue with that
  4. Tested in production environment on the server - same problem

The last thing I can think of is that my POST request to the reCAPTCHA API itself is incorrect as the concrete format of the body is not explicitly documented (the parameters are documented, I know). So this is the request body I am currently sending (the key and IP is changed but I checked them on my side):

privatekey=6LcHN8gSAABAAEt_gKsSwfuSfsam9ebhPJa8w_EV&remoteip=10.92.165.132& challenge=03AHJ_Vuu85MroKzagMlXq_trMemw4hKSP648MOf1JCua9W-5R968i2pPjE0jjDGX TYmWNjaqUXTGJOyMO3IKKOGtkeg_Xnn2UVAfoXHVQ-0VCHYPNwrj3PQgGj22EFv7RGSsuNfJCyn mwTO8TnwZZMRjHFrsglar2zQ&response=Coleshill areacce

Is there something wrong with this format? Do I have to send special headers? Am I completely wrong? (I am working for 16 hours straight now开发者_开发技巧 so this might be ..)

Thank you for your help!


As stated in the comments above, I was able to solve the problem myself with the help of broofa and the node-recaptcha module available at https://github.com/mirhampt/node-recaptcha.

But first, to complete the missing details from above:

  • I didn't use any module, my solution is completely self-written based on the documentation available at the reCAPTCHA website.
  • I didn't send any request headers as there was nothing stated in the documentation. Everything that is said concerning the request before they explain the necessary parameters is the following:

    "After your page is successfully displaying reCAPTCHA, you need to configure your form to check whether the answers entered by the users are correct. This is achieved by doing a POST request to http://www.google.com/recaptcha/api/verify. Below are the relevant parameters."

    -- "How to Check the User's Answer" at http://code.google.com/apis/recaptcha/docs/verify.html

So I built a querystring myself (which is a one-liner but there is a module for that as well as I learned now) containing all parameters and sent it to the reCAPTCHA API endpoint. All I received was the error code invalid-site-private-key, which actually (as we know by now) is a wrong way of really sending a 400 Bad Request. Maybe they should think about implementing this then people would not wonder what's wrong with their keys.

These are the header parameters which are obviously necessary (they imply you're sending a form):

  • Content-Length which has to be the length of the query string
  • Content-Type which has to be application/x-www-form-urlencoded

Another thing I learned from the node-recaptcha module is, that one should send the querystring utf8 encoded.

My solution now looks like this, you may use it or built up on it but error handling is not implemented yet. And it's written in CoffeeScript.

http = require 'http'

module.exports.check = (remoteip, challenge, response, callback) ->

  privatekey = 'placeyourprivatekeyhere'

  request_body = "privatekey=#{privatekey}&remoteip=#{remoteip}&challenge=#{challenge}&response=#{response}"
  response_body = ''

  options = 

    host: 'www.google.com'
    port: 80
    method: 'POST'
    path: '/recaptcha/api/verify'

  req = http.request options, (res) ->

    res.setEncoding 'utf8'

    res.on 'data', (chunk) ->
      response_body += chunk

    res.on 'end', () ->
      callback response_body.substring(0,4) == 'true'

  req.setHeader 'Content-Length', request_body.length
  req.setHeader 'Content-Type', 'application/x-www-form-urlencoded'

  req.write request_body, 'utf8'
  req.end()

Thank you :)


+1 to @florian for the very helpful answer. For posterity, I thought I'd provide some information about how to verify what your captcha request looks like to help you make sure that the appropriate headers and parameters are being specified.

If you are on a Mac or a Linux machine or have access to one of these locally, you can use the netcat command to setup a quick server. I guess there are netcat windows ports but I have no experience with them.

nc -l 8100

This command creates a TCP socket listening on pot 8100 and will wait for a connection. You then can change the captcha verify URL from http://www.google.com/recaptcha/... in your server code to be http://localhost:8100/. When your code makes the POST to the verify URL you should see your request outputted to the scree by netcat:

POST / HTTP/1.1
Content-Type: application/x-www-form-urlencoded
Content-Length: 277
Host: localhost:8100
Connection: Keep-Alive
User-Agent: Apache-HttpClient/4.1 (java 1.5)

privatekey=XXX&remoteip=127.0.0.1&challenge=03AHJYYY...&response=some+words

Using this, I was able to see that my private-key was corrupted.

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