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 Python 2.7Python 3.2Python 3.3
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Windows (64-bit)
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1.3 Available View build log
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1.3 Available View build log
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1.3 Available View build log
 
License
GPL
Lastest release
version 1.3 on Feb 20th, 2013

Introduction

Since Plone 4.0 you can configure Plone to allow users to login with their email address, using a setting in the Security control panel. This works fine out of the box. Some improvements would be useful though that need some more careful consideration before being added to core Plone. That is where this package comes in.

This is a temporary package with some fixes for when you want to use the email address of a user as login name in Plone 4. It also introduces a few hooks for determining the user id and login name of a new user.

Plone version

This package is tested with Plone 4.1, 4.2 and 4.3. It will not work in 4.0.

For Plone 3, you must use the collective.emaillogin package.

Dependencies

We need a newer version of Products.PluggableAuthService than is available currently in the latest Plone versions. Assuming you are using buildout for your Plone site, you need to add a line to a versions section:

Products.PluggableAuthService = 1.10.0

Any version newer than this is fine as well. If your Plone version already has this version or a newer one pinned, then you do not need to add this line.

What does this package do?
Clearer separation between user id and login name

The validation of the register browser view uses two methods to get a user id and login name:

# Generate a nice user id and store that in the data.
user_id = self.generate_user_id(data)
# Generate a nice login name and store that in the data.
login_name = self.generate_login_name(data)

After this, the data dictionary will have keys user_id and login_name set accordingly.

We avoid as much as possible the use of username as a variable, because no one ever knows if that is meant as a user id or as a login name. In standard Plone this is always the same, but this need not be true, especially when using the email address as login name.

These changes are intended to be merged to plone.app.users.

Control over user ids

An IUserIdGenerator interface is defined. This is used in the new generate_user_id method of the register browser view (also used when adding a new user as admin). Two sample implementations:

def uuid_userid_generator(data=None):
    # Return a uuid, independent of the data.
    # This is available in utils.py in the plone.app.users patches.
    from zope.component import getUtility
    from plone.uuid.interfaces import IUUIDGenerator
    generator = getUtility(IUUIDGenerator)
    return generator()

def login_name_as_userid_generator(data):
    # We like to keep it simple.
    return data.get('username')

In generate_user_id we try a few options for coming up with a good user id:

  1. We query a utility, so integrators can register a hook to generate a user id using their own logic:

    generator = queryUtility(IUserIdGenerator)
    if generator:
        userid = generator(data)
        if userid:
            data['user_id'] = userid
            return userid
    
  2. If use_uuid_as_userid is set in the site_properties, we generate a uuid. This is a new property introduced by this package and can be set in the Security control panel.

  3. If a username is given and we do not use email as login, then we simply return that username as the user id.

  4. We create a user id based on the full name, if that is passed. This may result in an id like bob-jones-2.

When the email address is used as login name, we originally used the email address as user id as well. This has a few possible downsides, which are the main reasons for the new, pluggable approach:

  • It does not work for some valid email addresses.
  • Exposing the email address in this way may not be wanted.
  • When the user later changes his email address, the user id will still be his old address. It works, but may be confusing.

Another possibility would be to simply generate a uuid, but that is ugly. We could certainly try that though: the big plus here would be that you then cannot create a new user with the same user id as a previously existing user if this ever gets removed. If you would get the same id, this new user would get the same global and local roles, if those have not been cleaned up.

When a user id is chosen, the user_id key of the data gets set and the user id is returned.

These changes are intended to be merged to plone.app.users.

Control over login names

Similarly, an ILoginNameGenerator interface is defined.

Usually the login name and user id are the same, but this is not necessarily true. When using the email address as login name, we may have a different user id, generated by calling the generate_user_id method.

We try a few options for coming up with a good login name:

  1. We query a utility, so integrators can register a hook to generate a login name using their own logic:

    pas = getToolByName(self.context, 'acl_users')
    generator = queryUtility(ILoginNameGenerator)
    if generator:
        login_name = generator(data)
        if login_name:
            login_name = pas.applyTransform(login_name)
            data['login_name'] = login_name
          return login_name
    
  2. If a username is given and we do not use email as login, then we simply return that username as the login name.

  3. When using email as login, we use the email address.

In all cases, we call PAS.applyTransform on the login name, if that is defined. This is a recent addition to PAS, currently under development.

When a login name is chosen, the login_name key of the data gets set and the login name is returned.

These changes are intended to be merged to plone.app.users.

Lowercase login names

We store login names as lowercase. The email addresses themselves can actually be mixed case, though that is not really by design, more a (happy) circumstance.

This needs branch maurits-login-transform of Products.PluggableAuthService. That branch introduces a property login_transform. Setting this to lower the lower method of PAS is called whenever a login name is given.

All relevant places in plone.app.users have been changed to take this new property into account, using code like this:

login_name = pas.loginTransform(login_name)

In the security panel of plone.app.controlpanel we change the set_use_email_as_login method to set login_transform to lower case when switching on email as login name. For safety, we never change this back to the default empty string. This is fine for normal non-email login names as well.

Note that when login_transform is lower, the end user can login with upper case JOE and he will then be logged in with login name joe, as long as the password is correct of course. If you somehow still have an upper or mixed case login name, you cannot login.

Setting the login_transform to a non empty string will automatically apply this transform to all existing logins in your database.

Note: when this is merged to core Plone, login names will not be transformed to lowercase by default. The option will simply be available if the site admin wants it. Switching on email as login will also switch on lowercase login names.

Updating login names

We have a patch for the ZODBMutablePropertyProvider of Products.PlonePAS that adds two new but empty methods required by the changed IUserEnumerationPlugin interface of PAS:

def updateUser(self, user_id, login_name):
   pass


def updateEveryLoginName(self, quit_on_first_error=True):
   pass

This has been merged to Products.PlonePAS.

Control panels

Switching email as login name on or off in the security panel now automatically updates existing login names. It may fail when there are duplicates.

The updating of existing users used to be done in the @@migrate-to-emaillogin view (class EmailView) from plone.app.controlpanel. We have simplified this page to only search for duplicate login names. You can search for duplicate email addresses or duplicate user ids, always lower case.

The security panel now has an option Use UUID user ids, by default switched off.

Set own login name

The Products.CMFPlone.utils.set_own_login_name method is simplified, with much of the former code being moved to PAS itself:

def set_own_login_name(member, loginname):
    """Allow the user to set his/her own login name.

    If you have the Manage Users permission, you can update the login
    name of another member too, though the name of this function is a
    bit weird then.  Historical accident.
    """
    pas = getToolByName(member, 'acl_users')
    mt = getToolByName(member, 'portal_membership')
    if member.getId() == mt.getAuthenticatedMember().getId():
        pas.updateOwnLoginName(loginname)
        return
    secman = getSecurityManager()
    if not secman.checkPermission(ManageUsers, member):
        raise Unauthorized('You can only change your OWN login name.')
    pas.updateLoginName(member.getId(), loginname)
Installation

When installing this add-on in the Add-ons control panel, the following is done.

  • It adds the use_uuid_as_userid site property, by default False.
  • If email as login is already used in the site, we set login_transform to lower. This could give an error and quit the installation. Maybe we want to catch this and just log a warning.
  • It explicitly enables email as login name. This would not be done when merging this package back to core Plone.

Changelog

1.3 (2013-02-19)
  • Depend on Products.PluggableAuthService >= 1.10.0 which has been released recently. [maurits]
1.2 (2013-01-23)
  • Make sure user ids are strings, not unicode. [maurits]
1.1 (2013-01-23)
  • Make sure the Manage Users permission is checked in set_own_login_name. [maurits]
1.0 (2013-01-22)
  • Initial release

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Last updated Feb 20th, 2013

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