It was always intended to allow custom keys on the join event, but this has
at some point been lost. Restore it.
If the user specifies keys like "avatar_url" then they will be clobbered.
This is for two reasons:
1. Suppresses duplicates correctly, as the notifier doesn't do any
duplicate suppression.
2. Makes it easier to connect the AppserviceHandler to the replication
stream.
The name 'result' is of bool type and has no len property,
resulting in a TypeError. Futhermore in the flow control
conn.response is observed and hence should be reported.
Signed-off-by: Daniel Ehlers <sargon@toppoint.de>
In case one does not define bind_dn in ldap configuration, filter
attribute is not declared. Since auth code only uses ldap_filter attribute
when according LDAP mode is selected, it is safe to only declare the
attribute in that case.
Signed-off-by: Daniel Ehlers <sargon@toppoint.de>
In the situation where all of a user's devices get deleted, we want to
indicate this to a client, so we want to return an empty dictionary, rather
than nothing at all.
It turns out that it's more useful to return a null device display name (and
let clients decide how to handle it: eg, falling back to device_id) than using
a constant string like "unknown device".
implement a GET /devices endpoint which lists all of the user's devices.
It also returns the last IP where we saw that device, so there is some dancing
to fish that out of the user_ips table.
* `RegistrationHandler.appservice_register` no longer issues an access token:
instead it is left for the caller to do it. (There are two of these, one in
`synapse/rest/client/v1/register.py`, which now simply calls
`AuthHandler.issue_access_token`, and the other in
`synapse/rest/client/v2_alpha/register.py`, which is covered below).
* In `synapse/rest/client/v2_alpha/register.py`, move the generation of
access_tokens into `_create_registration_details`. This means that the normal
flow no longer needs to call `AuthHandler.issue_access_token`; the
shared-secret flow can tell `RegistrationHandler.register` not to generate a
token; and the appservice flow continues to work despite the above change.
Add a 'devices' table to the storage, as well as a 'device_id' column to
refresh_tokens.
Allow the client to pass a device_id, and initial_device_display_name, to
/login. If login is successful, then register the device in the devices table
if it wasn't known already. If no device_id was supplied, make one up.
Associate the device_id with the access token and refresh token, so that we can
get at it again later. Ensure that the device_id is copied from the refresh
token to the access_token when the token is refreshed.
Make sure that we have the canonical user_id *before* calling
get_login_tuple_for_user_id.
Replace login_with_password with a method which just validates the password,
and have the caller call get_login_tuple_for_user_id. This brings the password
flow into line with the other flows, and will give us a place to register the
device_id if necessary.
Don't send requestToken request to untrusted ID servers
Also correct the THREEPID_IN_USE error to add the M_ prefix. This is a backwards incomaptible change, but the only thing using this is the angular client which is now unmaintained, so it's probably better to just do this now.
Use the pure-python ldap3 library, which eliminates the need for a
system dependency.
Offer both a `search` and `simple_bind` mode, for more sophisticated
ldap scenarios.
- `search` tries to find a matching DN within the `user_base` while
employing the `user_filter`, then tries the bind when a single
matching DN was found.
- `simple_bind` tries the bind against a specific DN by combining the
localpart and `user_base`
Offer support for STARTTLS on a plain connection.
The configuration was changed to reflect these new possibilities.
Signed-off-by: Martin Weinelt <hexa@darmstadt.ccc.de>
The only place that was observed was to set the profile. I've made it
so that the profile is set within store.register in the same transaction
that creates the user.
This required some slight changes to the registration code for upgrading
guest users, since it previously relied on the distributor swallowing errors
if the profile already existed.