The user has 10 tries at the password, after which the account is locked.
The same is true for the verify code, the user will have 10 tries before the user account is locked.
specifically, the 2FA page when you first create an account is different to the login 2FA page
and also the 2FA page when you change your phone number is different as well
when a user enters their 2FA code, the API will store a random UUID
against them in the database - this code is then stored on the cookie
on the front end.
At the beginning of each authenticated request, we do the following
steps:
* Retrieve the user's cookie, and get the user_id from it
* Request that user's details from the database
* populate current_user with the DB model
* run the login_required decorator, which calls
current_user.is_authenticated
is_authenticated now also checks that the database model matches the
cookie for session_id. The potential states and meanings are as follows:
database | cookie | meaning
----------+--------+---------
None | None | New user, or system just been deployed.
| | Redirect to start page.
----------+--------+---------
'abc' | None | New browser (or cleared cookies). Redirect to
| | start page.
----------+--------+---------
None | 'abc' | Invalid state (cookie is set from user obj, so
| | would only happen if DB is cleared)
----------+--------+---------
'abc' | 'abc' | Same browser. Business as usual
----------+--------+---------
'abc' | 'def' | Different browser in cookie - db has been changed
| | since then. Redirect to start
The previous, weekly activity breakdown was what we reckoned might be
useful. But now that we have people using the platform it feels like
aggregating a service’s usage by month is:
- matches the timeframe users report on within their organisation
- is consistent with the usage page
And like the usage page this commit also limits the page to only show
one financial year’s worth of data at once (rather than data for all
time).
This commit also makes some changes to the jobs view code so that our
aggregation of failure states is consistent between the dashboard pages
and the jobs pages.
Right now we tell people that the usage page is for the current
financial year. This is a lie – it’s for all time.
So this commit calls through to the API to get the stats for (by
default) the current financial year.
We already do this for the monthly breakdown, this just does the same
thing for the yearly totals.
It also adds navigation to show the data for other financial years:
- previous so you can go back and see your usage and verify that the
bill you’re about to pay is correct
- next so that you can check what your SMS allowance is going to be
before you actually get into it
There is a check that the template can not be created as priority if the user is not a platform admin.
There is a check that the template can not change the `priority` unless they are a platform admin.
in the NotifyAdminAPIClient, which all api traffic goes through, return
403 for any stateful requests (post, put and delete), if the following
criteria have been met:
* a current_service is set
(this prevents checks being carried out on non-service related
updates, eg editing user details)
* the service is not active
* the current user is not a platform admin
so platform admins can still update anything.
Note: Without any specific error handling, the user will see a generic
403 page. This is fine, probably - it's a relatively niche case that
you'll be editing a service you can't get to anyway
in the NotifyAdminAPIClient, which all api traffic goes through, return
403 for any stateful requests (post, put and delete), if the following
criteria have been met:
* a current_service is set
(this prevents checks being carried out on non-service related
updates, eg editing user details)
* the service is not active
* the current user is not a platform admin
so platform admins can still update anything.
Note: Without any specific error handling, the user will see a generic
403 page. This is fine, probably - it's a relatively niche case that
you'll be editing a service you can't get to anyway
- This allows us to set a custom header for admin calls only (not needed in client calls)
- Adds request-id from Middleware to the API call to ensure the API logs against the same request ID.
* all current invocations of get_services now call get_active_services
EXCEPT for platform admin page (where we want to see inactive services
* cleaned up parameter names and unpacking (since *params is unhelpful)
* fixed incorrect kwarg name in conftest
This PR changes the flow to change an email address.
Once the user enter their password, they are told "Check your email".
An email has been sent to them containing a link to notify which contains an encrypted token.
The encrypted token contains the user id and new email address. Once the link is clicked the user's email address is updated to the new email address.
They are redirected to the /user-profile page.
Also in this commit is an update from flask.ext.login to flask_login.
Basically:
- shows all the months from start of given financial year to now or end
of given financial year (whichever is earliest)
- shows a breakdown of free and paid text messages for each of these
months
Depends on:
- [x] https://github.com/alphagov/notifications-api/pull/699
We want to show a log of notifications that have been sent from the API.
The admin app uses its own private `/service/…/notifications` endpoint
for listing activity. This commit allows us to pass through two
optional, additional parameters to tell the API to:
- include or not include notifications created from a job
- include or not include notifications created with a test API key
Starting arguments on their own line and putting the closing parenthesis
on it’s own line because any subsequent changes to the arguments diff
cleanly (ie without touching any other lines).
Services who are in alpha or building prototypes need a way of sending
to any email address or phone number without having to sign the MOU.
This commit adds a page where they can whitelist up to 5 email addresses
and 5 phone numbers.
It uses the ‘list entry’ UI pattern from the Digital Marketplace
frontend toolkit [1] [2] [3].
I had to do some modification:
- of the Javascript, to make it work with the GOV.UK Module pattern
- of the template to make it work with WTForms
- of the content security policy, because the list entry pattern uses
Hogan[1], which needs to use `eval()` (this should be fine if we’re
only allowing it for scripts that we serve)
- of our SASS lint config, to allow browser-targeting mixins to come
after normal rules (so that they can override them)
This commit also adds a new form class to validate and populate the two
whitelists. The validation is fairly rudimentary at the moment, and
doesn’t highlight which item in the list has the error, but it’s
probably good enough.
The list can only be updated all-at-once, this is how it’s possible to
remove items from the list without having to make multiple `POST`
requests.
1. 434ad30791/toolkit/templates/forms/list-entry.html
2. 434ad30791/toolkit/scss/forms/_list-entry.scss
3. 434ad30791/toolkit/javascripts/list-entry.js
4. http://twitter.github.io/hogan.js/
The clients never get passed useful values to their `__init__` methods.
Rather the real values are passed through later using the `init_app`
method.
So it should be an error if the client is relying on the values that
get passed to it’s init method. Easiest way to ensure this is by making
the `__init__` method not expect any arguments and passing fake values
to the `Super` call.
If you schedule a job you might change your mind or circumstances might
change. So you need to be able to cancel it. This commit adds a button
on the job page which hits the `…/cancel` API endpoint for a job.
The create job endpoint returns the data about the job with a `data:`
wrapper. This commit makes sure that, when the client is trying to
process a job which has just been created, it looks inside the `data`
wrapper.
Users need to pick a time in the next 24hrs, or send a file immediately.
Rationale for this is a bit lost in time-before-holiday, but generally:
‘Now’ and ‘later’ as the inital choices makes it really clear what
this feature is about conceptually.
The choice of times is absolute, eg ‘1pm’ not ‘in 3 hours’