Summary:
Provide a catchall mechanism to find unprotected writes.
- Depends on D758.
- Similar to WriteOnHTTPGet stuff from Facebook's stack.
- Since we have a small number of storage mechanisms and highly structured
read/write pathways, we can explicitly answer the question "is this page
performing a write?".
- Never allow writes without CSRF checks.
- This will probably break some things. That's fine: they're CSRF
vulnerabilities or weird edge cases that we can fix. But don't push to Facebook
for a few days unless you're prepared to deal with this.
- **>>> MEGADERP: All Conduit write APIs are currently vulnerable to CSRF!
<<<**
Test Plan:
- Ran some scripts that perform writes (scripts/search indexers), no issues.
- Performed normal CSRF submits.
- Added writes to an un-CSRF'd page, got an exception.
- Executed conduit methods.
- Did login/logout (this works because the logged-out user validates the
logged-out csrf "token").
- Did OAuth login.
- Did OAuth registration.
Reviewers: pedram, andrewjcg, erling, jungejason, tuomaspelkonen, aran,
codeblock
Commenters: pedram
CC: aran, epriestley, pedram
Differential Revision: 777
Summary:
With the sshd-vcs thing I hacked together, this will enable Phabricator to host
repositories without requiring users to have SSH accounts.
I also fixed "subporjects" and added an explicit ENGINE to it.
Test Plan: Created, edited and deleted public keys. Attempted to add the same
public key twice. Attempted to add invalid and unnamed public keys.
Reviewed By: aran
Reviewers: jungejason, tuomaspelkonen, aran, cadamo, codeblock
CC: aran, epriestley
Differential Revision: 711
Summary:
We currently cycle CSRF tokens every hour and check for the last two valid ones.
This means that a form could go stale in as little as an hour, and is certainly
stale after two.
When a stale form is submitted, you basically get a terrible heisen-state where
some of your data might persist if you're lucky but more likely it all just
vanishes. The .js file below outlines some more details.
This is a pretty terrible UX and we don't need to be as conservative about CSRF
validation as we're being. Remedy this problem by:
- Accepting the last 6 CSRF tokens instead of the last 1 (i.e., pages are
valid for at least 6 hours, and for as long as 7).
- Using JS to refresh the CSRF token every 55 minutes (i.e., pages connected
to the internet are valid indefinitely).
- Showing the user an explicit message about what went wrong when CSRF
validation fails so the experience is less bewildering.
They should now only be able to submit with a bad CSRF token if:
- They load a page, disconnect from the internet for 7 hours, reconnect, and
submit the form within 55 minutes; or
- They are actually the victim of a CSRF attack.
We could eventually fix the first one by tracking reconnects, which might be
"free" once the notification server gets built. It will probably never be an
issue in practice.
Test Plan:
- Reduced CSRF cycle frequency to 2 seconds, submitted a form after 15
seconds, got the CSRF exception.
- Reduced csrf-refresh cycle frequency to 3 seconds, submitted a form after 15
seconds, got a clean form post.
- Added debugging code the the csrf refresh to make sure it was doing sensible
things (pulling different tokens, finding all the inputs).
Reviewed By: aran
Reviewers: tuomaspelkonen, jungejason, aran
CC: aran, epriestley
Differential Revision: 660
Summary:
Add users to the search results. I need to follow this up with a patch to make
the search results stop being terrible. I'll do that.
Test Plan:
Searched for users, ran "reindex_all_users.php"
Reviewed By: jungejason
Reviewers: tomo, jungejason, aran
CC: aran, jungejason
Differential Revision: 508
Summary:
Without this, user creation throws an exception when trying to insert NULL into
a non-NULL field.
Test Plan:
Created a new user.
Reviewed By: fratrik
Reviewers: fratrik, toulouse, aran, jungejason, tuomaspelkonen
CC: aran, fratrik
Differential Revision: 480
Summary:
Provides a new workflow for making it non-horrible to install certificates.
Basically you run "arc install-certificate" and then copy/paste a short token
off a webpage and it does the ~/.arcrc edits for you.
Test Plan:
Installed certificates, used bad tokens, hit rate limiting.
Reviewed By: aran
Reviewers: aran, jungejason, tuomaspelkonen
CC: aran
Differential Revision: 460
Summary:
Allows user-configurable timezones. Adds a preference panel, and migrates to the
new date rendering in easily-modified areas of the code. ***In progress***.
Test Plan:
Check database to make sure the field is being changed when the settings are
changed; check affected views to see how they render times.
Reviewed By: epriestley
Reviewers: epriestley
CC: aran, epriestley, toulouse
Differential Revision: 475
Summary:
- When an administrator creates a user, provide an option to send a welcome
email. Right now this workflow kind of dead-ends.
- Prevent administrators from changing the "System Agent" flag. If they can
change it, they can grab another user's certificate and then act as them. This
is a vaguely weaker security policy than is exhibited elsewhere in the
application. Instead, make user accounts immutably normal users or system agents
at creation time.
- Prevent administrators from changing email addresses after account creation.
Same deal as conduit certs. The 'bin/accountadmin' script can still do this if a
user has a real problem.
- Prevent administrators from resetting passwords. There's no need for this
anymore with welcome emails plus email login and it raises the same issues.
Test Plan:
- Created a new account, selected "send welcome email", got a welcome email,
logged in with the link inside it.
- Created a new system agent.
- Reset an account's password.
Reviewed By: aran
Reviewers: tuomaspelkonen, jungejason, aran
CC: anjali, aran, epriestley
Differential Revision: 379
Summary:
Currently, we echo the password as the user types it. This turns out to be a bit
of an issue in over-the-shoulder installs. Instead, disable tty echo while the
user is typing their password so nothing is shown (like how 'sudo' works).
Also show a better error message if the user chooses a duplicate email; without
testing for this we just throw a duplicate key exception when saving, which
isn't easy to understand. The other duplicate key exception is duplicate
username, which is impossible (the script updates rather than creating in this
case).
There's currently a bug where creating a user and setting their password at the
same time doesn't work. This is because we hash the PHID into the password hash,
but it's empty if the user hasn't been persisted yet. Make sure the user is
persisted before setting their password.
Finally, fix an issue where $original would have the new username set, creating
a somewhat confusing summary at the end.
I'm also going to improve the password behavior/explanation here once I add
welcome emails ("Hi Joe, epriestley created an account for you on Phabricator,
click here to login...").
Test Plan:
- Typed a password and didn't have it echoed. I also tested this on Ubuntu
without encountering problems.
- Chose a duplicate email, got a useful error message instead of the exception
I'd encountered earlier.
- Created a new user with a password in one pass and logged in as that user,
this worked properly.
- Verified summary table does not contain username for new users.
Reviewed By: jungejason
Reviewers: jungejason, tuomaspelkonen, aran
CC: moskov, jr, aran, jungejason
Differential Revision: 358
Summary: This isn't complete, but I figured I'd ship it for review while it's still smallish.
Provide an activity log for high-level system actions (logins, admin actions). This basically allows two things to happen:
- The log itself is useful if there are shenanigans.
- Password login can check it and start CAPTCHA'ing users after a few failed attempts.
I'm going to change how the admin stuff works a little bit too, since right now you can make someone an agent, grab their certificate, revert them back to a normal user, and then act on their behalf over Conduit. This is a little silly, I'm going to move "agent" to the create workflow instead. I'll also add a confirm/email step to the administrative password reset flow.
Test Plan: Took various administrative and non-administrative actions, they appeared in the logs. Filtered the logs in a bunch of different ways.
Reviewers: jungejason, tuomaspelkonen, aran
CC:
Differential Revision: 302
Summary:
Conduit already has multiple-session code, just move it to the main
establishSession() method and set a web session limit larger than 1.
NOTE: This will log everyone out since we no longer look for the "web" session,
only for "web-1", "web-2", ..., etc. Presumably this doesn't matter.
Test Plan:
Applied patch, was logged out. Logged in in Safari. Verified I was issued
"web-1". Logged in in Firefox. Verified I was issued "web-2".
Kept logging in and out until I got issued "web-5", then did it again and was
issued "web-1" with a new key.
Ran conduit methods and verified they work and correctly cycled session keys.
Reviewed By: tuomaspelkonen
Reviewers: tuomaspelkonen, jungejason, aran
Commenters: jungejason
CC: rm, fzamore, ola, aran, epriestley, jungejason, tuomaspelkonen
Differential Revision: 264
Summary:
Provide an "isAdmin" flag for users, to designate administrative users.
Restore the account editing interface and allow it to set role flags and reset
passwords.
Provide an "isDisabled" flag for users and shut down all system access for them.
Test Plan:
Created "admin" and "disabled" users. Did administrative things with the admin
user. Tried to do stuff with the disabled user and was rebuffed. Tried to access
administrative interfaces with a normal non-admin user and was denied.
Reviewed By: aran
Reviewers: tuomaspelkonen, jungejason, aran
CC: ccheever, aran
Differential Revision: 278
Summary:
Get rid of HPHP-only syntax, add a header and width restriction.
Test Plan:
Looked at /preferences/, saved preferences.
Reviewed By: tuomaspelkonen
Reviewers: tuomaspelkonen
CC: tuomaspelkonen
Differential Revision: 92
Summary:
Internal tools, e.g., differential and diffusion have user defined
preferences for monospaced font and the option for showing either the
name of the tool or the glyph of the tool in the title.
These preferences were ported to phabricator. These preferences can be
modified in /preferences/ and they both affect diffusion and differential
at the moment.
Test Plan:
* Created an empty database
* Loaded /preferences/ and modified the monospaced font and clicked save
* Confirmed that the same page was loaded with the message that preferences
have been saved and that the example text used the user defined font
* in /preferences/ changed the option to show tool names as plain text and
clicked save
* Confirmed that the same page was loaded with '[Preferences]' in the title
instead of a glyph
* These same tests were also executed for differential and diffusion
Reviewers: epriestley
CC: jungejason
Differential Revision: 91
Summary:
add a constants module
src/applications/phid/constants/PhabricatorPHIDConstants.
Test Plan:
Execute applications which were using the hard-coded string.
Differential Revision: 44
Reviewed By: epriestley
Reviewers: epriestley
CC: epriestley