For some reason I encountered a strange bug which resulted in sending
out multiple websocket notifications for the exact same user.
Added a `distinct()` for the query to filter out multiple uuid's.
the client will ignore the value of theses fields in case of `PBKDF2`
(whether they are unset or left from trying out `Argon2id` as KDF).
with `Argon2id` those fields should never be `null` but always in a
valid state. if they are `null` (how would that even happen?) the
client still assumes default values for `Argon2id` (i.e. m=64 and p=4)
and if they are set to something else login will fail anyway.
There was used a wrong macro to produce an error message when mailing
the user his password was reset failed. It was using `error!()` which
does not return an `Err` and aborts the rest of the code.
This resulted in the users password still being resetted, but not being
notified. This PR fixes this by using `err!()`. Also, do not set the
user object as mutable until it really is needed.
Second, when a user was using the new Argon2id KDF with custom values
like memory and parallelism, that would have rendered the password
incorrect. The endpoint which should return all the data did not
returned all the new Argon2id values.
Fixes#3388
Co-authored-by: Stefan Melmuk <509385+stefan0xC@users.noreply.github.com>
- Updated workflows to use new checkout version
This probably fixes the curl download for hadolint also.
- Updated crates including Rocket to the latest rc3 :party:
- Applied 2 nightly clippy lints to prevent future clippy issues.
- Added support for Quay.io
- Added support for GHCR.io
To enable support for these container image registries the following needs to be added.
As `Actions secrets and variables` - `Secrets`
- `DOCKERHUB_TOKEN` and `DOCKERHUB_USERNAME`
- `QUAY_TOKEN` and `QUAY_USERNAME`
As `Actions secrets and variables` - `Variables` - `Repository Variables`
- `DOCKERHUB_REPO`
- `GHCR_REPO`
- `QUAY_REPO`
The `DOCKERHUB_REPO` currently configured in `Secrets` can be removed if wanted, probably best after this PR has been merged.
If one of the vars/secrets are not configured it will skip that specific registry!
Since we now use the `ClientIp` Guard on a lot more places, it also
increases the size of binary, and the macro generated code because of
this extra Guard. By merging the `ClientIp` Guard with the several
`Header` guards we have it reduces the amount of code generated
(including LLVM IR), but also a small speedup in build time.
I also spotted some small `json!()` optimizations which also reduced the
amount of code generated.
- Changed MSRV to v1.65.
Discussed this with @dani-garcia, and we will support **N-2**.
This is/will be the same as for the `time` crate we use.
Also updated the wiki regarding this https://github.com/dani-garcia/vaultwarden/wiki/Building-binary
- Removed backtrace crate in favor of `std::backtrace` stable since v1.65
- Updated Rust to v1.67.1
- Updated all the crates
- Updated the GHA action versions
- Adjusted the GHA MSRV build to extract the MSRV from `Cargo.toml`
There was a small bug left in regards to the web-vault v2023.2.0 fixes.
This PR fixes the left items. I think all should be addressed now.
When editing a User, you were not able to see or edit groups, or see
wich collections a user bellonged to.
Fixes#3311
Rocket automatically implements a HEAD route when there's a matching GET
route, but relying on this behavior also means a spurious error gets
logged due to <https://github.com/SergioBenitez/Rocket/issues/1098>.
Add explicit HEAD routes for `/` and `/alive` to prevent uptime monitoring
services from generating error messages like `No matching routes for HEAD /`.
With these new routes, `HEAD /` only checks that the server can respond over
the network, while `HEAD /alive` also checks that the database connection is
alive, similar to `GET /alive`.
Added support for Argon2 hashing support for the `ADMIN_TOKEN` instead
of only supporting a plain text string.
The hash must be a PHC string which can be generated via the `argon2`
CLI **or** via the also built-in hash command in Vaultwarden.
You can simply run `vaultwarden hash` to generate a hash based upon a
password the user provides them self.
Added a warning during startup and within the admin settings panel is
the `ADMIN_TOKEN` is not an Argon2 hash.
Within the admin environment a user can ignore that warning and it will
not be shown for at least 30 days. After that the warning will appear
again unless the `ADMIN_TOKEN` has be converted to an Argon2 hash.
I have also tested this on my RaspberryPi 2b and there the `Bitwarden`
preset takes almost 4.5 seconds to generate/verify the Argon2 hash.
Using the `OWASP` preset it is below 1 second, which I think should be
fine for low-graded hardware. If it is needed people could use lower
memory settings, but in those cases I even doubt Vaultwarden it self
would run. They can always use the `argon2` CLI and generate a faster hash.
- Updated datatables
- Added NTP Time check
- Added Collections, Groups and Events count for orgs
- Renamed `Items` to `Ciphers`
- Some small style updates
- Supports the new Collection/Group/User editing UI's
- Support `/partial` endpoint for cipher updating to allow folder and favorite update for read-only ciphers.
- Prevent `Favorite`, `Folder`, `read-only` and `hide-passwords` from being added to the organizational sync.
- Added and corrected some `Object` key's to the output json.
Fixes#3279
In the org vault view, the Bitwarden web vault currently tries to fetch the
groups for an org regardless of whether it claims to have group support.
If this errors out, no vault items are displayed.