A Devise extension to add additional security features required by modern web applications. Forked from Devise Security Extension
It is composed of 7 additional Devise modules:
:password_expirable
- passwords will expire after a configured time (and will need to be changed by the user). You will most likely want to use:password_expirable
together with the:password_archivable
module to prevent the current expired password from being reused immediately as the new password.:secure_validatable
- better way to validate a model (email, stronger password validation). Don't use with Devise:validatable
module!:password_archivable
- save used passwords in anold_passwords
table for history checks (prevent reusing passwords):session_limitable
- ensures, that there is only one session usable per account at once:expirable
- expires a user account after x days of inactivity (default 90 days):security_questionable
- as accessible substitution for captchas (security question with captcha fallback):paranoid_verification
- admin can generate verification code that user needs to fill in otherwise he won't be able to use the application.
Configuration and database schema for each module below.
captcha support for sign_up
, sign_in
, recover
and unlock
(to make
automated mass creation and brute forcing of accounts harder)
Devise Security works with Devise on Rails >= 5.2. You can add it to your Gemfile after you successfully set up Devise (see Devise documentation) with:
gem 'devise-security'
Run the bundle command to install it.
After you installed Devise Security you need to run the generator:
rails generate devise_security:install
The generator adds optional configurations to
config/initializers/devise_security.rb
. Enable the modules you wish to use in
the initializer you are ready to add Devise Security modules on top of Devise
modules to any of your Devise models:
devise :password_expirable, :secure_validatable, :password_archivable, :session_limitable, :expirable
For :secure_validatable
you need to have a way to validate an e-mail. There
are multiple libraries that support this, and even a way built into Ruby!
- (Recommended) Ruby built-in
URI::MailTo::EMAIL_REGEXP
constantNote: This method would require a
email_validation
method to be defined in order to hook into thevalidates
method defined here. - email_address gem
- valid_email2 gem
- rails_email_validator gem (deprecated)
Devise.setup do |config|
# ==> Security Extension
# Configure security extension for devise
# Password expires after a configurable time (in seconds).
# Or expire passwords on demand by setting this configuration to `true`
# Use `user.need_change_password!` to expire a password.
# Setting the configuration to `false` will completely disable expiration checks.
# config.expire_password_after = 3.months | true | false
# Need 1 char each of: A-Z, a-z, 0-9, and a punctuation mark or symbol
# You may use "digits" in place of "digit" and "symbols" in place of
# "symbol" based on your preference
# config.password_complexity = { digit: 1, lower: 1, symbol: 1, upper: 1 }
# Number of old passwords in archive
# config.password_archiving_count = 5
# Deny old password (true, false, count)
# config.deny_old_passwords = true
# captcha integration for recover form
# config.captcha_for_recover = true
# captcha integration for sign up form
# config.captcha_for_sign_up = true
# captcha integration for sign in form
# config.captcha_for_sign_in = true
# captcha integration for unlock form
# config.captcha_for_unlock = true
# security_question integration for recover form
# this automatically enables captchas (captcha_for_recover, as fallback)
# config.security_question_for_recover = false
# security_question integration for unlock form
# this automatically enables captchas (captcha_for_unlock, as fallback)
# config.security_question_for_unlock = false
# security_question integration for confirmation form
# this automatically enables captchas (captcha_for_confirmation, as fallback)
# config.security_question_for_confirmation = false
# ==> Configuration for :expirable
# Time period for account expiry from last_activity_at
# config.expire_after = 90.days
# Allow passwords to be equal to email (false, true)
# config.allow_passwords_equal_to_email = false
# paranoid_verification will regenerate verification code after failed attempt
# config.paranoid_code_regenerate_after_attempt = 10
end
Devise-security supports Mongoid as an
alternative ORM to active_record. To use this ORM, add this to your Gemfile
.
gem 'mongoid'
And then ensure that the environment variable DEVISE_ORM=mongoid
is set.
For local development you will need to have MongoDB installed locally.
brew install mongodb
# inside config/application.rb
require File.expand_path('../boot', __FILE__)
#...
DEVISE_ORM=:mongoid
# Require the gems listed in Gemfile, including any gems
# you've limited to :test, :development, or :production.
Bundler.require(*Rails.groups)
module MyApp
class Application < Rails::Application
#...
end
end
The captcha support depends on EasyCaptcha. See further documentation there.
-
Add EasyCaptcha to your
Gemfile
withgem 'easy_captcha'
-
Run the initializer
rails generate easy_captcha:install
-
Enable captcha - see "Configuration" of Devise Security above.
-
Add the captcha in the generated devise views for each controller you have activated.
<p><%= captcha_tag %></p> <p><%= text_field_tag :captcha %></p>
create_table :the_resources do |t|
# other devise fields
t.datetime :password_changed_at
end
add_index :the_resources, :password_changed_at
Note: setting password_changed_at
to nil
will require the user to change
their password.
create_table :old_passwords do |t|
t.string :encrypted_password, null: false
t.string :password_archivable_type, null: false
t.integer :password_archivable_id, null: false
t.string :password_salt # Optional. bcrypt stores the salt in the encrypted password field so this column may not be necessary.
t.datetime :created_at
end
add_index :old_passwords, [:password_archivable_type, :password_archivable_id], name: 'index_password_archivable'
create_table :the_resources do |t|
# other devise fields
t.string :unique_session_id
end
Sometimes it's useful to impersonate a user without authentication (e.g.
administrator impersonating a user),
in this case the session_limitable
strategy will log out the user, and if the
user logs in while the administrator is still logged in, the administrator will
be logged out.
For such cases the following can be used:
sign_in(User.find(params[:id]), scope: :user, skip_session_limitable: true)
create_table :the_resources do |t|
# other devise fields
t.datetime :last_activity_at
t.datetime :expired_at
end
add_index :the_resources, :last_activity_at
add_index :the_resources, :expired_at
create_table :the_resources do |t|
# other devise fields
t.string :paranoid_verification_code
t.integer :paranoid_verification_attempt, default: 0
t.datetime :paranoid_verified_at
end
add_index :the_resources, :paranoid_verification_code
add_index :the_resources, :paranoid_verified_at
Documentation for Paranoid Verifiable module
# app/models/security_question.rb
class SecurityQuestion < ActiveRecord::Base
validates :locale, presence: true
validates :name, presence: true, uniqueness: true
end
create_table :security_questions do |t|
t.string :locale, null: false
t.string :name, null: false
end
SecurityQuestion.create! locale: :de, name: 'Wie lautet der Geburstname Ihrer Mutter?'
SecurityQuestion.create! locale: :de, name: 'Wo sind sie geboren?'
SecurityQuestion.create! locale: :de, name: 'Wie lautet der Name Ihres ersten Haustieres?'
SecurityQuestion.create! locale: :de, name: 'Was ist Ihr Lieblingsfilm?'
SecurityQuestion.create! locale: :de, name: 'Was ist Ihr Lieblingsbuch?'
SecurityQuestion.create! locale: :de, name: 'Was ist Ihr Lieblingstier?'
SecurityQuestion.create! locale: :de, name: 'Was ist Ihr Lieblings-Reiseland?'
add_column :the_resources, :security_question_id, :integer
add_column :the_resources, :security_question_answer, :string
or
create_table :the_resources do |t|
# other devise fields
t.integer :security_question_id
t.string :security_question_answer
end
- Devise (https://github.com/heartcombo/devise)
- Rails 5.2 onwards (http://github.com/rails/rails)
- recommendations:
autocomplete-off
(http://github.com/phatworx/autocomplete-off)easy_captcha
(http://github.com/phatworx/easy_captcha)mongodb
(https://www.mongodb.com/)rvm
(https://rvm.io/)
- see the github issues (feature requests)
- 0.1 expire passwords
- 0.2 strong password validation
- 0.3 password archivable with validation
- 0.4 captcha support for sign_up, sign_in, recover and unlock
- 0.5 session_limitable module
- 0.6 expirable module
- 0.7 security questionable module for recover and unlock
- 0.8 Support for Rails 4 (+ variety of patches)
- 0.11 Support for Rails 5. Forked to allow project maintenance and features
See also Github Releases
- Nate Bird (https://github.com/natebird)
- Kevin Olbrich (http://github.com/olbrich)
- Dillon Welch (http://github.com/oniofchaos)
- Check out the latest master to make sure the feature hasn't been implemented or the bug hasn't been fixed yet
- Check out the issue tracker to make sure someone already hasn't requested it and/or contributed it
- Fork the project
- Start a feature/bugfix branch
- Commit and push until you are happy with your contribution
- Make sure to add tests for it. This is important so I don't break it in a future version unintentionally.
- Please try not to mess with the Rakefile, version, or history. If you want to have your own version, or is otherwise necessary, that is fine, but please isolate to its own commit so I can cherry-pick around it.
Standard tests can be invoked using rake
. To run the tests against the
mongoid
ORM, use DEVISE_ORM=mongoid rake
while mongodb
is running.
We are committed to maintain support for devise-security
for all normal or
security maintenance versions of the Ruby language
as listed here, and for the
Ruby on Rails framework
as per their maintenance policy.
In order to avoid introducing bugs caused by backwardly incompatible Ruby
language features, it is highly recommended that all development work be done
using the oldest supported ruby version. The contents of the .ruby-version
file should reflect this.
Copyright (c) 2017-2022 Dillon Welch & Kevin Olbrich.
Copyright (c) 2011-2017 Marco Scholl as the project devise_security_extension
.
This repo was created as a fork from b2ee978a.
See LICENSE.txt for further details.