How Authentication works with MoinMoin
MoinMoin historically has used some cookie-based authentication: you log in via the form on page UserPreferences, moin sets a cookie and from then on this cookie is used for authenticating you - until you log off and the cookie gets deleted (or until the cookie expires).
For running moin in corporate environments this is often no option as access restrictions have to be enforced reliably. Starting with 1.3 moin could also use HTTP basic auth based authentication, when being run with some web servers (like Apache) supporting it.
Starting with 1.5 moin now has freely configurable and kind of modular authentication. You use the auth configuration value to set up a list of authentication methods that is processed in exactly that order.
When an external user database is used you do not want to recreate all users in moin. For this case the configuration option user_autocreate was added to moin 1.5. If you set it to True a new user profile will be created automatically when a new user has passed authentication (and the auth method supports auto creation).
Presently the following authentication methods are supported:
Server setup
Authentication
Auth method in moin
All
by moin via own cookie
MoinMoin.auth.moin_cookie
by moin via external cookie
see contrib/auth_externalcookie/
Apache with CGI, modpy or FastCgi
by Apache modules: HTTP Basic, HTTP Digest, SSPI (aka NTLM) or LDAP
MoinMoin.auth.http
by moin via LDAP
ldap (contributed module)?
Apache+SSL with CGI, modpy or FastCgi
by Apache via SSL client certificate
MoinMoin.auth.sslclientcert
Twisted
HTTP Basic (but does not request authentication by header, so this is currently only useful for automated stuff, not for browser use)
MoinMoin.auth.http
IIS
(?)
(?)
1. Shipped plugins
1.1. moin_cookie auth (default)
1 from MoinMoin.auth import moin_cookie
2 auth = [moin_cookie]
This is the default auth list moin uses (so if you just want that, you don't need to configure it). It means that moin just tries to use the MOIN_ID cookie as it ever did.
For doing that, moin will just call the MoinMoin.auth.moin_cookie function. This function will look if there is a valid cookie:
if yes, it will use it to make and return a valid user object. It will also return a flag that tells "we don't need to continue trying other auth methods" (continue_flag=False). So we are done for that case and we have a valid user.
if no, the function does not return a user object, but returns continue_flag=True to tell "we need to continue trying other auth methods to authenticate the user". But as moin_cookie is the only auth method in the list, there is no other auth method to try and the user will stay unknown for that case.
1.2. http auth
To activate http authentication you have to add following lines to wikiconfig.py:
1 from MoinMoin.auth import http
2 auth = [http]
For HTTP basic auth used with a web server like Apache, the web server handles authentication before moin gets called. You either enter a valid username and password or your access will be denied by the web server.
So moin's http auth method will just check if user authentication happened:
if yes, it will return a user object based on the authenticated user name and continue_flag=False.
if no, it will not return a user object, but continue_flag=True to try other auth methods. In this example, there are no other auth methods, so the user will stay unknown.
Well, in reality, it is a bit more complicated indeed:
- For Twisted we use the username and password stored in the moin user profile. Except wiki xmlrpc usage this is currently not used.
- For NTLM and Negotiate, we split off everything befor the last "\" (usually it is "Domain\username") and we also use title() to normalize "username" to "Username".
You usually do want to set user_autocreate = True for this auth method. moin will then auto create a user profile if the authenticated user does not already have one. So the user does not need to create the moin profile himself.
1.3. sslclientcert auth
To activate authentication via SSL client certificates you have to add following lines to wikiconfig.py:
1 from MoinMoin.auth import sslclientcert
2 auth = [sslclientcert]
For SSL client certificate auth used with a web server like Apache, the web server handles authentication before moin gets called. You either have a valid SSL client certificate or your access will be denied by the web server.
So moin's sslclientcert auth method will just check if user authentication happened:
if yes, it will return a user object based on the email address or user name in the certificate and continue_flag=False.
if no, it will not return a user object, but continue_flag=True to try other auth methods. In this example, there are no other auth methods, so the user will stay unknown.
You usually do want to set user_autocreate = True for this auth method. moin will then auto create a user profile if the authenticated user does not already have one. So the user does not need to create the moin profile himself.
1.4. php_auth
To activate Single-Sign-On integration with PHP applications, use this module. It reads PHP session files and therefore directly integrates with existing PHP authentication systems.
To use this module, use the following lines of code in your configuration:
1 from MoinMoin.auth import php_auth
2 auth = [php_auth()]
php_auth has the following parameters:
1 php_auth(apps=['egw'], s_path="/tmp", s_prefix="sess_")
apps is a list of enabled applications
s_path is the path of the PHP session files
s_prefix is the prefix of the PHP session files
The only supported PHP application is eGroupware 1.2 currently. But it should be fairly easy to add a few lines of code that extract the necessary information from the PHP session.
2. Combining multiple auth methods
For combining e.g. http and cookie authentication, your wikiconfig.py might contain:
1 from MoinMoin.auth import http, moin_cookie
2 auth = [http, moin_cookie]
In this example, moin will first check if the http auth method gives a valid user. If yes, it will use just that. If not and continue_flag returned by http auth method is True, it will continue checking other auth list method - moin_cookie in this case...
Not all combinations make sense, of course.
3. Making your own auth method
See the commented config file fragment contrib/auth_externalcookie/ and MoinMoin/auth.py in your moin distribution archive for examples of how to do authentication.
Here is just a short summary of what's currently possible:
use UserPreferences login form as userinterface for your own auth method for entering name and password
- search existing user profiles for a "matching" user (the match needs not be the name, it can also be the email address or something you put into aliasname)
create a user object and let it remember what attributes were determined by auth method (and thus should not be offered on UserPreferences)
- update values in user's profile from externally provided data
- autocreate user profiles