An incomplete 2FA login is one where the correct master password was provided,
but the 2FA token or action required to complete the login was not provided
within the configured time limit. This potentially indicates that the user's
master password has been compromised, but the login was blocked by 2FA.
Be aware that the 2FA step can usually still be completed after the email
notification has already been sent out, which could be confusing. Therefore,
the incomplete 2FA time limit should be long enough that this situation would
be unlikely. This feature can also be disabled entirely if desired.
- Changed the date of the migration folders to be from this date.
- Removed a lot is_email_domain_allowed checks.
This check only needs to be done during the invite it self, else
everything else will fail even if a user has an account created via the
/admin interface which bypasses that specific check! Also, the check was
at the wrong place anyway's, since it would only not send out an e-mail,
but would still have allowed an not allowed domain to be used when
e-mail would have been disabled. While that check always works, even if
sending e-mails is disasbled.
- Added an extra allowed route during password/key-rotation change which
updates/checks the public-key afterwards.
- A small change with some `Some` and `None` orders.
- Change the new invite object to only generate the UTC time once, since
it could be possible that there will be a second difference, and we only
need to call it just once.
by black.dex@gmail.com
Signed-off-by: thelittlefireman <thelittlefireman@users.noreply.github.com>
- The new web-vault v2.21.0+ has support for Master Password Reset. For
this to work it generates a public/private key-pair which needs to be
stored in the database. Currently the Master Password Reset is not
fixed, but there are endpoints which are needed even if we do not
support this feature (yet). This PR fixes those endpoints, and stores
the keys already in the database.
- There was an issue when you want to do a key-rotate when you change
your password, it also called an Emergency Access endpoint, which we do
not yet support. Because this endpoint failed to reply correctly
produced some errors, and also prevent the user from being forced to
logout. This resolves#1826 by adding at least that endpoint.
Because of that extra endpoint check to Emergency Access is done using
an old user stamp, i also modified the stamp exception to allow multiple
rocket routes to be called, and added an expiration timestamp to it.
During these tests i stumbled upon an issue that after my key-change was
done, it triggered the websockets to try and reload my ciphers, because
they were updated. This shouldn't happen when rotating they keys, since
all access should be invalided. Now there will be no websocket
notification for this, which also prevents error toasts.
- Increased Send Size limit to 500MB (with a litle overhead)
As a side note, i tested these changes on both v2.20.4 and v2.21.1 web-vault versions, all keeps working.
Note: The original Vaultwarden implementation of Bitwarden Send would always
hide the email address, while the upstream implementation would always show it.
Upstream PR: https://github.com/bitwarden/server/pull/1234
When ticking the 'Also rotate my account's encryption key' box, the key
rotated ciphers are posted after the change of password.
During the password change the security stamp was reseted which made
the posted key's return an invalid auth. This reset is needed to prevent other clients from still being able to read/write.
This fixes this by adding a new database column which stores a stamp exception which includes the allowed route and the current security stamp before it gets reseted.
When the security stamp check fails it will check if there is a stamp exception and tries to match the route and security stamp.
Currently it only allows for one exception. But if needed we could expand it by using a Vec<UserStampException> and change the functions accordingly.
fixes#1240
Currently, favorites are tracked at the cipher level. For org-owned ciphers,
this means that if one user sets it as a favorite, it automatically becomes a
favorite for all other users that the cipher has been shared with.
- Added security check for previouse used codes
- Allow TOTP codes with 1 step back and forward when there is a time
drift. This means in total 3 codes could be valid. But only newer codes
then the previouse used codes are excepted after that.
This includes migrations as well as Dockerfile's for amd64.
The biggest change is that replace_into isn't supported by Diesel for the
PostgreSQL backend, instead requiring the use of on_conflict. This
unfortunately requires a branch for save() on all of the models currently
using replace_into.