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Author SHA1 Message Date
epriestley
8e5d9c6f0e Allow MFA providers to be deprecated or disabled
Summary: Ref T13222. Providers can now be deprecated (existing factors still work, but users can't add new factors for the provider) or disabled (factors stop working, also can't add new ones).

Test Plan:
  - Enabled, deprecated, and disabled some providers.
  - Viewed provider detail, provider list.
  - Viewed MFA settings list.
  - Verified that I'm prompted for enabled + deprecated only at gates.
  - Tried to disable final provider, got an error.
  - Hit the MFA setup gate by enabling "Require MFA" with no providers, got a more useful message.
  - Immediately forced a user to the "MFA Setup Gate" by disabling their only active provider with another provider enabled ("We no longer support TOTP, you HAVE to finish Duo enrollment to continue starting Monday.").

Reviewers: amckinley

Reviewed By: amckinley

Maniphest Tasks: T13222

Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D20031
2019-01-28 09:29:27 -08:00
epriestley
7797443428 Support invites in the registration and login flow
Summary:
Ref T7152. This substantially completes the upstream login flow. Basically, we just cookie you and push you through normal registration, with slight changes:

  - All providers allow registration if you have an invite.
  - Most providers get minor text changes to say "Register" instead of "Login" or "Login or Register".
  - The Username/Password provider changes to just a "choose a username" form.
  - We show the user that they're accepting an invite, and who invited them.

Then on actual registration:

  - Accepting an invite auto-verifies the address.
  - Accepting an invite auto-approves the account.
  - Your email is set to the invite email and locked.
  - Invites get to reassign nonprimary, unverified addresses from other accounts.

But 98% of the code is the same.

Test Plan:
  - Accepted an invite.
  - Verified a new address on an existing account via invite.
  - Followed a bad invite link.
  - Tried to accept a verified invite.
  - Reassigned an email by accepting an unverified, nonprimary invite on a new account.
  - Verified that reassigns appear in the activity log.

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Reviewers: btrahan

Reviewed By: btrahan

Subscribers: epriestley

Maniphest Tasks: T7152

Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D11737
2015-02-11 06:06:28 -08:00
epriestley
f1534e6feb Make password reset emails use one-time tokens
Summary:
Ref T4398. This code hadn't been touched in a while and had a few crufty bits.

**One Time Resets**: Currently, password reset (and similar links) are valid for about 48 hours, but we always use one token to generate them (it's bound to the account). This isn't horrible, but it could be better, and it produces a lot of false positives on HackerOne.

Instead, use TemporaryTokens to make each link one-time only and good for no more than 24 hours.

**Coupling of Email Verification and One-Time Login**: Currently, one-time login links ("password reset links") are tightly bound to an email address, and using a link verifies that email address.

This is convenient for "Welcome" emails, so the user doesn't need to go through two rounds of checking email in order to login, then very their email, then actually get access to Phabricator.

However, for other types of these links (like those generated by `bin/auth recover`) there's no need to do any email verification.

Instead, make the email verification part optional, and use it on welcome links but not other types of links.

**Message Customization**: These links can come out of several workflows: welcome, password reset, username change, or `bin/auth recover`. Add a hint to the URI so the text on the page can be customized a bit to help users through the workflow.

**Reset Emails Going to Main Account Email**: Previously, we would send password reset email to the user's primary account email. However, since we verify email coming from reset links this isn't correct and could allow a user to verify an email without actually controlling it.

Since the user needs a real account in the first place this does not seem useful on its own, but might be a component in some other attack. The user might also no longer have access to their primary account, in which case this wouldn't be wrong, but would not be very useful.

Mitigate this in two ways:

  - First, send to the actual email address the user entered, not the primary account email address.
  - Second, don't let these links verify emails: they're just login links. This primarily makes it more difficult for an attacker to add someone else's email to their account, send them a reset link, get them to login and implicitly verify the email by not reading very carefully, and then figure out something interesting to do (there's currently no followup attack here, but allowing this does seem undesirable).

**Password Reset Without Old Password**: After a user logs in via email, we send them to the password settings panel (if passwords are enabled) with a code that lets them set a new password without knowing the old one.

Previously, this code was static and based on the email address. Instead, issue a one-time code.

**Jump Into Hisec**: Normally, when a user who has multi-factor auth on their account logs in, we prompt them for factors but don't put them in high security. You usually don't want to go do high-security stuff immediately after login, and it would be confusing and annoying if normal logins gave you a "YOU ARE IN HIGH SECURITY" alert bubble.

However, if we're taking you to the password reset screen, we //do// want to put the user in high security, since that screen requires high security. If we don't do this, the user gets two factor prompts in a row.

To accomplish this, we set a cookie when we know we're sending the user into a high security workflow. This cookie makes login finalization upgrade all the way from "partial" to "high security", instead of stopping halfway at "normal". This is safe because the user has just passed a factor check; the only reason we don't normally do this is to reduce annoyance.

**Some UI Cleanup**: Some of this was using really old UI. Modernize it a bit.

Test Plan:
  - **One Time Resets**
    - Used a reset link.
    - Tried to reuse a reset link, got denied.
    - Verified each link is different.
  - **Coupling of Email Verification and One-Time Login**
    - Verified that `bin/auth`, password reset, and username change links do not have an email verifying URI component.
    - Tried to tack one on, got denied.
    - Used the welcome email link to login + verify.
    - Tried to mutate the URI to not verify, or verify something else: got denied.
  - **Message Customization**
    - Viewed messages on the different workflows. They seemed OK.
  - **Reset Emails Going to Main Account Email**
    - Sent password reset email to non-primary email.
    - Received email at specified address.
    - Verified it does not verify the address.
  - **Password Reset Without Old Password**
    - Reset password without knowledge of old one after email reset.
    - Tried to do that without a key, got denied.
    - Tried to reuse a key, got denied.
  - **Jump Into Hisec**
    - Logged in with MFA user, got factor'd, jumped directly into hisec.
    - Logged in with non-MFA user, no factors, normal password reset.
  - **Some UI Cleanup**
    - Viewed new UI.
  - **Misc**
    - Created accounts, logged in with welcome link, got verified.
    - Changed a username, used link to log back in.

Reviewers: btrahan

Reviewed By: btrahan

Subscribers: epriestley

Maniphest Tasks: T4398

Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D9252
2014-05-22 10:41:00 -07:00
epriestley
559c0fe886 Tune cookie behaviors for 'phcid', 'phreg', etc
Summary:
Fixes T3471. Specific issues:

  - Add the ability to set a temporary cookie (expires when the browser closes).
  - We overwrote 'phcid' on every page load. This creates some issues with browser extensions. Instead, only write it if isn't set. To counterbalance this, make it temporary.
  - Make the 'next_uri' cookie temporary.
  - Make the 'phreg' cookie temporary.
  - Fix an issue where deleted cookies would persist after 302 (?) in some cases (this is/was 100% for me locally).

Test Plan:
  - Closed my browser, reopned it, verified temporary cookies were gone.
  - Logged in, authed, linked, logged out.

Reviewers: btrahan

Reviewed By: btrahan

Subscribers: epriestley

Maniphest Tasks: T3471

Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D8537
2014-03-14 14:33:31 -07:00
epriestley
5b1d9c935a After writing "next_uri", don't write it again for a while
Summary:
Fixes T3793. There's a lot of history here, see D4012, T2102. Basically, the problem is that things used to work like this:

  - User is logged out and accesses `/xyz/`. After they login, we'd like to send them back to `/xyz/`, so we set a `next_uri` cookie.
  - User's browser has a bunch of extensions and now makes a ton of requests for stuff that doesn't exist, like `humans.txt` and `apple-touch-icon.png`. We can't distinguish between these requests and normal requests in a general way, so we write `next_uri` cookies, overwriting the user's intent (`/xyz/`).

To fix this, we made the 404 page not set `next_uri`, in D4012. So if the browser requests `humans.txt`, we 404 with no cookie, and the `/xyz/` cookie is preserved. However, this is bad because an attacker can determine if objects exist and applications are installed, by visiting, e.g., `/T123` and seeing if they get a 404 page (resource really does not exist) or a login page (resource exists). We'd rather not leak this information.

The comment in the body text describes this in more detail.

This diff sort of tries to do the right thing most of the time: we write the cookie only if we haven't written it in the last 2 minutes. Generally, this should mean that the original request to `/xyz/` writes it, all the `humans.txt` requests don't write it, and things work like users expect. This may occasionally do the wrong thing, but it should be very rare, and we stop leaking information about applications and objects.

Test Plan: Logged out, clicked around / logged in, used Charles to verify that cookies were set in the expected way.

Reviewers: btrahan

Reviewed By: btrahan

CC: aran

Maniphest Tasks: T3793

Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D8047
2014-01-23 14:16:08 -08:00
epriestley
0727418023 Consolidate use of magical cookie name strings
Summary: Ref T4339. We have more magical cookie names than we should, move them all to a central location.

Test Plan: Registered, logged in, linked account, logged out. See inlines.

Reviewers: btrahan

Reviewed By: btrahan

CC: aran

Maniphest Tasks: T4339

Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D8041
2014-01-23 14:01:35 -08:00
epriestley
02aa193cb0 Add a common password blacklist
Summary:
Fixes T4143. This mitigates the "use a botnet to slowly try to login to every user account using the passwords '1234', 'password', 'asdfasdf', ..." attack, like the one that hit GitHub.

(I also donated some money to Openwall as a thanks for compiling this wordlist.)

Test Plan:
  - Tried to register with a weak password; registered with a strong password.
  - Tried to set VCS password to a weak password; set VCS password to a strong password.
  - Tried to change password to a weak password; changed password to a strong password.

Reviewers: btrahan

Reviewed By: btrahan

CC: aran, chad

Maniphest Tasks: T4143

Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D8048
2014-01-23 14:01:18 -08:00