- Change default Password Hash KDF Storage from 100_000 to 600_000 iterations
- Update Password Hash when the default iteration value is different
- Validate password_iterations
- Validate client-side KDF to prevent it from being set lower than 100_000
As mentioned in #3111, using a very very large vault causes some issues.
Mainly because of a SQLite limit, but, it could also cause issue on
MariaDB/MySQL or PostgreSQL. It also uses a lot of memory, and memory
allocations.
This PR solves this by removing the need of all the cipher_uuid's just
to gather the correct attachments.
It will use the user_uuid and org_uuid's to get all attachments linked
to both, weither the user has access to them or not. This isn't an
issue, since the matching is done per cipher and the attachment data is
only returned if there is a matching cipher to where the user has access to.
I also modified some code to be able to use `::with_capacity(n)` where
possible. This prevents re-allocations if the `Vec` increases size,
which will happen a lot if there are a lot of ciphers.
According to my tests measuring the time it takes to sync, it seems to
have lowered the duration a bit more.
Fixes#3111
Recent versions of the Bitwarden clients (see bitwarden/clients#3574)
won't parse non-JSON responses. The most noticeable consequence is that
`/api/accounts/revision-date` responses won't be parsed, leading to
`/api/sync` always being called, even when it's not necessary.
When importing to Vaultwarden (or Bitwarden) notes larger then 10_000
encrypted characters are invalid. This because it for one isn't
compatible with Bitwarden. And some clients tend to break on very large
notes.
We already added a check for this limit when adding a single cipher, but
this caused issues during import, and could cause a partial imported
vault. Bitwarden does some validations before actually running it
through the import process and generates a special error message which
helps the user indicate which items are invalid during the import.
This PR adds that validation check and returns the same kind of error.
Fixes#3048
Previously the websocket notifications were using `app_id` as the
`ContextId`. This was incorrect and should have been the device_uuid
from the client device executing the request. The clients will ignore
the websocket request if the uuid matches. This also fixes some issues
with the Desktop client which is able to modify attachments within the
same screen and causes an issue when saving the attachment afterwards.
Also changed the way to handle removed attachments, since that causes an
error saving the vault cipher afterwards, complaining about a missing
attachment. Bitwarden ignores this, and continues with the remaining
attachments (if any). This also fixes#2591 .
Further some more websocket notifications have been added to some other
functions which enhance the user experience.
- Logout users when deauthed, changed password, rotated keys
- Trigger OrgSyncKeys on user confirm and removal
- Added some extra to the send feature
Also renamed UpdateTypes to match Bitwarden naming.
- Put groups support behind a feature flag, and disabled by default.
The reason is that it has some known issues, but we want to keep
optimizing this feature. Putting it behind a feature flag could help
some users, and the developers into optimizing this feature without to
much trouble.
Further:
- Updates Rust to v1.66.0
- Updated GHA workflows
- Updated Alpine to 3.17
- Updated jquery to v3.6.2
- Moved jdenticon.js to load at the bottom, fixes an issue on chromium
- Added autocomplete attribute to admin login password field
- Added some extra CSP options (Tested this on Safari, Firefox, Chrome, Bitwarden Desktop)
- Moved uppercase convertion from runtime to compile-time using `paste`
for building the environment variables, lowers heap allocations.
When audit logging was introduced there entered a small bug preventing
the recover-2fa from working.
This PR fixes that by add a new headers check to extract the device-type
when possible and use that for the logging.
Fixes#2985
The yubico crate uses blocking reqwest, and we called the `verify` from
a async thread. To prevent issues we need to wrap it within a
`spawn_blocking`.
It looks like Bitwarden, in-the-end, didn't changed the export feature
on v2022.11.0, and now have put in on v2023.1.0.
This patch now changes that to the same version.
Before those new clients are being released, we should see if they
changed that again, and adjust where needed.
- Several cleanups and code optimizations for Emergency Access
- Fixed a race-condition regarding jobs for Emergency Access
- Some other small changes like `allow(clippy::)` removals
Fixes#2925
As discussed in #2937, this will limit the amount of encrypted
characters to 10.000 characters, same as Bitwarden.
This will not break current ciphers which exceed this limit, but it will prevent those
ciphers from being updated.
Fixes#2937
This PR adds event/audit logging support for organizations.
By default this feature is disabled, since it does log a lot and adds
extra database transactions.
All events are touched except a few, since we do not support those
features (yet), like SSO for example.
This feature is tested with multiple clients and all database types.
Fixes#229
In the upcomming web-vault and other clients they changed the register
endpoint from `/api/accounts/register` to `/identity/register`.
This PR adds the new endpoint to already be compatible with the new
clients.
Fixes#2889
All uses of `get_random()` were in the form of:
`&get_random(vec![0u8; SIZE])`
with `SIZE` being a constant.
Building a `Vec` is unnecessary for two reasons. First, it uses a
very short-lived dynamic memory allocation. Second, a `Vec` is a
resizable object, which is useless in those context when random
data have a fixed size and will only be read.
`get_random_bytes()` takes a constant as a generic parameter and
returns an array with the requested number of random bytes.
Stack safety analysis: the random bytes will be allocated on the
caller stack for a very short time (until the encoding function has
been called on the data). In some cases, the random bytes take
less room than the `Vec` did (a `Vec` is 24 bytes on a 64 bit
computer). The maximum used size is 180 bytes, which makes it
for 0.008% of the default stack size for a Rust thread (2MiB),
so this is a non-issue.
Also, most of the uses of those random bytes are to encode them
using an `Encoding`. The function `crypto::encode_random_bytes()`
generates random bytes and encode them with the provided
`Encoding`, leading to code deduplication.
`generate_id()` has also been converted to use a constant generic
parameter as well since the length of the requested String is always
a constant.
Added a new endpoint which the currently beta client for at least
Android v2022.10.1 seems to be calling, and crashes with the response we
currently provide
Fixes#2890Fixes#2891Fixes#2892
Since v2022.9.x the org export uses a different endpoint.
But, since v2022.11.x this endpoint will return a different format.
See: https://github.com/bitwarden/clients/pull/3641 and https://github.com/bitwarden/server/pull/2316
To support both version in the case of users having an older client
either web-vault or cli this PR checks the version and responds using
the correct format. If no version can be determined it will use the new
format as a default.
if `SIGNUPS_VERIFY` is enabled new users that have been invited have
their onboarding flow interrupted because they have to first verify
their mail address before they can join an organization.
we can skip the extra verication of the email address when signing up
because a valid invitation token already means that the email address is
working and we don't allow invited users to signup with a different
address.
unfortunately, this is not possible with emergency access invitations
at the moment as they are handled differently.
If you add a new user that has already been Invited to another
organization they will be Accepted automatically. This should not be
possible because they cannot be Confirmed until they have completed
their registration. It is also not necessary because their invitation
will be accepted automatically once they register.
- The Master Password Hint input has changed it's location to the
password update form. This PR updates the the code to process this.
- Also changed the `ProfileData` struct to exclude `Culture` and
`MasterPasswordHint`, since both are not used at all, and when not
defined they will also not be allocated.
Fixes#2833
Since v2022.9.x it seems they changed the export endpoint and way of working.
This PR fixes this by adding the export endpoint.
Also, it looks like the clients can't handle uppercase first JSON key's.
Because of this there now is a function which converts all the key's to lowercase first.
I have an issue reported at Bitwarden if this is expected behavior: https://github.com/bitwarden/clients/issues/3606Fixes#2760Fixes#2764
This PR adds support for the Send v2 API.
It should prevent 404 errors which could cause some issues with some
configurations on some reverse proxies.
In the long run, we can probably remove the old file upload API, but for
now lets leave it there, since Bitwarden also still has this endpoint in
the code.
Might fixes#2753
In web-vault v2022.9.x it seems the endpoints changed.
- activate > restore
- deactivate > revoke
This PR adds those endpoints and renames the functions.
It also keeps the previous endpoints for now to be compatible with
previous vault verions for now, just in case.
There was a small oversight on upgrading to v2022.9.0 web-vault version.
It seems the call to the /plans/ endpoint doesn't provide authentication anymore.
Removed this check and it seems to work again.
Fixes#2737
- The new web-vault version supports fastmail.com anon email, add the
correct api host to support it.
- Removed Firefox Relay, this seems only to be supported on SaaS.
- Added a function to the two-factor api to prevent 404 errors.
This PR adds a the new v2022.8.x revoke feature which allows an
organization owner or admin to revoke access for one or more users.
This PR also fixes several permissions and policy checks which were faulty.
- Modified some functions to use DB Count features instead of iter/count aftwards.
- Rearanged some if statements (faster matching or just one if instead of nested if's)
- Added and fixed several policy checks where needed
- Some small updates on some response models
- Made some functions require an enum instead of an i32
This PR attends to mitigate (not fix) #2644.
There seems to be an issue when uploading files either as attachment or
via send via the mobile (Android) client.
The binary data gets transfered correctly to Vaultwarden (Checked via
Wireshark), but the data is not parsed correctly for some reason.
Since the parsing is not done by Vaultwarden it self, i think we should
at least try to prevent saving the data and letting users think all
fine.
Further investigation is needed to actually fix this issue.
This is just a quick patch.
A bit inspired by @paolobarbolini from this commit at lettre https://github.com/lettre/lettre/pull/784 .
I added a few more clippy lints here, and fixed the resulted issues.
Overall i think this could help in preventing future issues, and maybe
even peformance problems. It also makes some code a bit more clear.
We could always add more if we want to, i left a few out which i think
arn't that huge of an issue. Some like the `unused_async` are nice,
which resulted in a few `async` removals.
Some others are maybe a bit more estatic, like `string_to_string`, but i
think it looks better to use `clone` in those cases instead of `to_string` while they already are a string.