+1We are discussing this over and over again. I wonder what's so difficult to stick to some basic rules of collaboration.
Am 19.02.18 um 20:48 schrieb Taher Alkhateeb:
Thank you for the work Jacques. I was hoping as stated earlier that you share the work before committing it since it is an architectural decision that requires community consensus. On Feb 19, 2018 10:29 PM, "Jacques Le Roux" <[email protected]> wrote: Done Jacques Le 18/02/2018 à 20:33, Jacques Le Roux a écrit :Taher, I agree using a property is hackish. I'll try to implement what you suggest using a keep-autologin-cookie webapp attribute which will be false by default and true for the applications mentioned below. I'll check it make sense for webpos before using true there. Thanks Jacques Le 18/02/2018 à 11:43, Taher Alkhateeb a écrit :Hi Jacques, I don't think your proposed solution works either. It seems you might be missing the underlying problem. There are patterns that I see over and over and I wish we can eliminate them, I will explain the general patterns and then a suggestion for reasonable solution: 1- Wrong dependency direction: Framework should never know about core apps. Core apps should never know about plugins. The arrow is always from the outside to the inside. So when you create a solution, it should always be generic and allow "plugging in" values from the outside to the inside, not pulling or coding by hand 2- Global Shared Mutable State: The two keywords here are "shared" and "mutable". The less we have of both, the better. So no, I don't have a problem with having properties, I have a problem with global mutable variables. They make the system much harder to reason about and debug. So it is always better for a global variable to be immutable, and even better, to not exist. However all systems require some level of global variables but we should use them carefully and try to isolate their impact. Essential things like database connections, tomcat sessions, etc ... are reasonable, but going too far might be a problematic architectural design, not a necessity. So in the example we are discussing here, one idea for a solution would be some kind of configuration (perhaps in ofbiz-component.xml) where you declare whatever settings you want, and then the login worker would simply loop over all components to decide. This is a clean (outside-to-inside) solution instead of this hack job. My recommendation is to revert all of this work, discuss a proper solution in the ML, open a JIRA and provide a patch. I also recommend _not_ committing any architectural changes without discussing them in the community first. On Sun, Feb 18, 2018 at 11:36 AM, Jacques Le Roux <[email protected]> wrote:Thanks for the review Taher, Sorry I completely forgot this thread. When I wrote the autoLogoutFromAllBackendSessions() method I let a TODO there // remove all the autoLoginCookies but if in ecommerce/ecomseo and webpos (it's done manually there, not sure for webpos TODO: check) and I remember I thought about harcoding some applications was not good. And especially, how to let know users, who need this feature, to keep the autologin cookie in their custom plugins applications. I know you don't like having too much properties. But to avoid hard wiring these applications in the framework, Isuggest to have a new keep-autologin-cookie security properties, with default OOTB plugins applications # -- Names of the component where the autologin cookie should be kept one year keep-autologin-cookie=ecommerce,ecomseo,webpos This way, users who need to keep the autologin cookie just have to add the concerned application/s to this list. And autoLogoutFromAllBackendSessions() can then use this list to avoid removing autologin cookies from these applications. Would this work for you? As I wrote in the TODO, I'm not sure why webpos have a the autoLogout request-map in its controller. I'm not even sure the webpos really implements it, like ecommerce does. So we could remove webpos from the keep-autologin-cookie list. I'll check that. If it's really needed, as the autologin-cookie feature just remembers you but does not sign you automatically (you need to know the password) I don't think it's a security flaw. Anyway, if it was the only problem with the webpos :/ Jacques Le 12/02/2018 à 19:48, Taher Alkhateeb a écrit :I just checked this code and it looks really worrying to me. You have hard wired the ecommerce component with logic into the heart of the framework, I think we need to review the entire body of work and maybe revert it. On Sat, Feb 10, 2018 at 2:38 PM, Jacques Le Roux <[email protected]> wrote:Le 10/02/2018 à 12:33, Jacques Le Roux a écrit :Hi, Almost 6 years ago OFBIZ-4959 "Logout do not remove autoLogin" was created and I closed as incomplete. Recently while working on OFBIZ-10206 "Security issue in Token Based Authentication" which followed my work in OFBIZ-9833 "Token Based Authentication" I needed a way to get the userLoginId (or userLogin) from the session. But, as explained in OFBIZ-10206, at this stage it was unavailable. So I decided to go with autoLoginCookies. I then " remembered" OFBIZ-4959. So I'd like to commit the patch I provided at OFBIZ-4959. But before that I want to discuss about autoLoginCookies and the feature to be sure we are all on the same field. The auto login feature is used in ecommerce applications (ie OOTB ecommerce and ecomseo) to welcome an user when s/he gets back. It does not really log the user in but eases the login process. From the code, the same feature exists in the webpos, I did not check. AutoLoginCookies are also generated for all applications, but are not used for the auto login feature like in ecommerce applications. It can be nevertheless useful as proves OFBIZ-10206 "Security issue in Token Based Authentication". But for OFBIZ-10206 and security in general it's better to remove the autoLoginCookies of the other applications (ie no ecommerce and webpos) when the user logout. Of course if the user quits the session w/o login out the autoLoginCookies remains so it's best to start with a clean state and remove the autoLoginCookies at start. Without negative opinions I'll commit the OFBIZ-4959.patch in 1 week. Jacques Forgot to say that the autoLoginCookies have a time to live of 1 year.Jacques
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