# frozen_string_literal: true # Use this hook to configure devise mailer, warden hooks and so forth. # Many of these configuration options can be set straight in your model. # Devise failure app to randomly stall failed login attempts, to prevent timing attacks. class RandomStalling < Devise::FailureApp def respond sleep rand * 5 super end protected def i18n_options(options) options[:locale] = session[:user_locale] super end end Devise.setup do |config| # The secret key used by Devise. Devise uses this key to generate # random tokens. Changing this key will render invalid all existing # confirmation, reset password and unlock tokens in the database. # Devise will use the `secret_key_base` as its `secret_key` # by default. You can change it below and use your own secret key. # config.secret_key = 'e1f4e9899fb5e8b3123950b19cd0f6d22ecaa8c7fb792b6db5a939edc2b3bab722d06a6a46345ee9bf12caa0178408d6134ea92ed778977b8a7ed1007a0c6dbe' # Configure the class responsible to send e-mails. config.mailer = "Decidim::DecidimDeviseMailer" # Configure the parent class responsible to send e-mails. config.parent_mailer = "Decidim::ApplicationMailer" config.parent_controller = "ActionController::Base" # ==> ORM configuration # Load and configure the ORM. Supports :active_record (default) and # :mongoid (bson_ext recommended) by default. Other ORMs may be # available as additional gems. require "devise/orm/active_record" # ==> Configuration for any authentication mechanism # Configure which keys are used when authenticating a user. The default is # just :email. You can configure it to use [:username, :subdomain], so for # authenticating a user, both parameters are required. Remember that those # parameters are used only when authenticating and not when retrieving from # session. If you need permissions, you should implement that in a before filter. # You can also supply a hash where the value is a boolean determining whether # or not authentication should be aborted when the value is not present. # config.authentication_keys = [:email] # Configure parameters from the request object used for authentication. Each entry # given should be a request method and it will automatically be passed to the # find_for_authentication method and considered in your model lookup. For instance, # if you set :request_keys to [:subdomain], :subdomain will be used on authentication. # The same considerations mentioned for authentication_keys also apply to request_keys. # config.request_keys = [] # Configure which authentication keys should be case-insensitive. # These keys will be downcased upon creating or modifying a user and when used # to authenticate or find a user. Default is :email. config.case_insensitive_keys = [:email] # Configure which authentication keys should have whitespace stripped. # These keys will have whitespace before and after removed upon creating or # modifying a user and when used to authenticate or find a user. Default is :email. config.strip_whitespace_keys = [:email] # Tell if authentication through request.params is enabled. True by default. # It can be set to an array that will enable params authentication only for the # given strategies, for example, `config.params_authenticatable = [:database]` will # enable it only for database (email + password) authentication. # config.params_authenticatable = true # Tell if authentication through HTTP Auth is enabled. False by default. # It can be set to an array that will enable http authentication only for the # given strategies, for example, `config.http_authenticatable = [:database]` will # enable it only for database authentication. The supported strategies are: # :database = Support basic authentication with authentication key + password # config.http_authenticatable = false # If 401 status code should be returned for AJAX requests. True by default. # config.http_authenticatable_on_xhr = true # The realm used in Http Basic Authentication. 'Application' by default. # config.http_authentication_realm = 'Application' # It will change confirmation, password recovery and other workflows # to behave the same regardless if the e-mail provided was right or wrong. # Does not affect registerable. config.paranoid = true # By default Devise will store the user in session. You can skip storage for # particular strategies by setting this option. # Notice that if you are skipping storage for all authentication paths, you # may want to disable generating routes to Devise's sessions controller by # passing skip: :sessions to `devise_for` in your config/routes.rb config.skip_session_storage = [:http_auth] # By default, Devise cleans up the CSRF token on authentication to # avoid CSRF token fixation attacks. This means that, when using AJAX # requests for sign in and sign up, you need to get a new CSRF token # from the server. You can disable this option at your own risk. # config.clean_up_csrf_token_on_authentication = true # When false, Devise will not attempt to reload routes on eager load. # This can reduce the time taken to boot the app but if your application # requires the Devise mappings to be loaded during boot time the application # will not boot properly. # config.reload_routes = true # ==> Configuration for :database_authenticatable # For bcrypt, this is the cost for hashing the password and defaults to 11. If # using other algorithms, it sets how many times you want the password to be hashed. # # Limiting the stretches to just one in testing will increase the performance of # your test suite dramatically. However, it is STRONGLY RECOMMENDED to not use # a value less than 10 in other environments. Note that, for bcrypt (the default # algorithm), the cost increases exponentially with the number of stretches (e.g. # a value of 20 is already extremely slow: approx. 60 seconds for 1 calculation). config.stretches = Rails.env.test? ? 1 : 11 # Set up a pepper to generate the hashed password. # config.pepper = 'da466a45a1744ca79cc920a565749cf42b1cbcda0478b299a0db973e1a157fc43d1f578ec8dd393b4ef104274272a3621d203f49f473432a46b8a28ecc9bb4ae' # Send a notification email when the user's password is changed # config.send_password_change_notification = false # ==> Configuration for :invitable # The period the generated invitation token is valid, after # this period, the invited resource will not be able to accept the invitation. # When invite_for is 0 (the default), the invitation will not expire. config.invite_for = 2.weeks # Number of invitations users can send. # - If invitation_limit is nil, there is no limit for invitations, users can # send unlimited invitations, invitation_limit column is not used. # - If invitation_limit is 0, users cannot send invitations by default. # - If invitation_limit n > 0, users can send n invitations. # You can change invitation_limit column for some users so they can send more # or less invitations, even with global invitation_limit = 0 # Default: nil # config.invitation_limit = 5 # The key to be used to check existing users when sending an invitation # and the regexp used to test it when validate_on_invite is not set. # config.invite_key = {:email => /\A[^@]+@[^@]+\z/} # config.invite_key = {:email => /\A[^@]+@[^@]+\z/, :username => nil} # Flag that force a record to be valid before being actually invited # Default: false # config.validate_on_invite = true # Resend invitation if user with invited status is invited again # Default: true # config.resend_invitation = false # The class name of the inviting model. If this is nil, # the #invited_by association is declared to be polymorphic. # Default: nil # config.invited_by_class_name = 'User' # The foreign key to the inviting model (if invited_by_class_name is set) # Default: :invited_by_id # config.invited_by_foreign_key = :invited_by_id # The column name used for counter_cache column. If this is nil, # the #invited_by association is declared without counter_cache. # Default: nil # config.invited_by_counter_cache = :invitations_count # Auto-login after the user accepts the invite. If this is false, # the user will need to manually log in after accepting the invite. # Default: true config.allow_insecure_sign_in_after_accept = true # A period that the user is allowed to confirm their account before their # token becomes invalid. For example, if set to 3.days, the user can confirm # their account within 3 days after the mail was sent, but on the fourth day # their account cannot be confirmed with the token any more. # Default is nil, meaning there is no restriction on how long a user can take # before confirming their account. # config.confirm_within = 3.days # If true, requires any email changes to be confirmed (exactly the same way as # initial account confirmation) to be applied. Requires additional unconfirmed_email # db field (see migrations). Until confirmed, new email is stored in # unconfirmed_email column, and copied to email column on successful confirmation. config.reconfirmable = true # Defines which key will be used when confirming an account # config.confirmation_keys = [:email] # ==> Configuration for :rememberable # The time the user will be remembered without asking for credentials again. # config.remember_for = 2.weeks # Invalidates all the remember me tokens when the user signs out. config.expire_all_remember_me_on_sign_out = true # If true, extends the user's remember period when remembered via cookie. # config.extend_remember_period = false # Options to be passed to the created cookie. For instance, you can set # secure: true in order to force SSL only cookies. # config.rememberable_options = {} # ==> Configuration for :validatable # Range for password length. # NOTE: this will not be used as we are using our own PasswordValidator # config.password_length = 6..128 # Email regex used to validate email formats. It simply asserts that # one (and only one) @ exists in the given string. This is mainly # to give user feedback and not to assert the e-mail validity. config.email_regexp = /\A[^@\s]+@[^@\s]+\z/ # ==> Configuration for :lockable # Defines which strategy will be used to lock an account. # :failed_attempts = Locks an account after a number of failed attempts to sign in. # :none = No lock strategy. You should handle locking by yourself. config.lock_strategy = :failed_attempts # Defines which key will be used when locking and unlocking an account config.unlock_keys = [:email] # Defines which strategy will be used to unlock an account. # :email = Sends an unlock link to the user email # :time = Re-enables login after a certain amount of time (see :unlock_in below) # :both = Enables both strategies # :none = No unlock strategy. You should handle unlocking by yourself. config.unlock_strategy = :both # Number of authentication tries before locking an account if lock_strategy # is failed attempts. config.maximum_attempts = 20 # Time interval to unlock the account if :time is enabled as unlock_strategy. config.unlock_in = 1.hour # Warn on the last attempt before the account is locked. config.last_attempt_warning = true # ==> Configuration for :recoverable # # Defines which key will be used when recovering the password for an account # config.reset_password_keys = [:email] # Time interval you can reset your password with a reset password key. # Do not put a too small interval or your users will not have the time to # change their passwords. config.reset_password_within = 6.hours # When set to false, does not sign a user in automatically after their password is # reset. Defaults to true, so a user is signed in automatically after a reset. # config.sign_in_after_reset_password = true # ==> Configuration for :encryptable # Allow you to use another hashing or encryption algorithm besides bcrypt (default). # You can use :sha1, :sha512 or algorithms from others authentication tools as # :clearance_sha1, :authlogic_sha512 (then you should set stretches above to 20 # for default behavior) and :restful_authentication_sha1 (then you should set # stretches to 10, and copy REST_AUTH_SITE_KEY to pepper). # # Require the `devise-encryptable` gem when using anything other than bcrypt # config.encryptor = :sha512 # ==> Scopes configuration # Turn scoped views on. Before rendering "sessions/new", it will first check for # "users/sessions/new". It is turned off by default because it is slower if you # are using only default views. config.scoped_views = true # Configure the default scope given to Warden. By default it is the first # devise role declared in your routes (usually :user). # config.default_scope = :user # Set this configuration to false if you want /users/sign_out to sign out # only the current scope. By default, Devise signs out all scopes. # config.sign_out_all_scopes = true # ==> Navigation configuration # Lists the formats that should be treated as navigational. Formats like # :html, should redirect to the sign in page when the user does not have # access, but formats like :xml or :json, should return 401. # # If you have any extra navigational formats, like :iphone or :mobile, you # should add them to the navigational formats lists. # # The "*/*" below is required to match Internet Explorer requests. # config.navigational_formats = ['*/*', :html] # The default HTTP method used to sign out a resource. Default is :delete. config.sign_out_via = :delete # ==> Warden configuration # If you want to use other strategies, that are not supported by Devise, or # change the failure app, you can configure them inside the config.warden block. # config.warden do |manager| manager.failure_app = RandomStalling end # ==> Mountable engine configurations # When using Devise inside an engine, we can call it `MyEngine`, and this engine # is mountable, there are some extra configurations to be taken into account. # The following options are available, assuming the engine is mounted as: # # mount MyEngine, at: '/my_engine' # # The router that invoked `devise_for`, in the example above, would be: # config.router_name = :decidim # # When using OmniAuth, Devise cannot automatically set OmniAuth path, # so you need to do it manually. For the users scope, it would be: # config.omniauth_path_prefix = '/my_engine/users/auth' end