_I hate [WikiSpam|http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wikispam]!_ Being technically minded and based in the Asia time zone while my co-authors are mainly in Europe and some in the US, it became my unofficial role to clean up the WikiSpam each day in a 1.2 based PhpWiki. The WikiSpam that I see is mostly created during the evening in the US time zone - which is the morning for me. I started working on PhpWiki 1.3/1.4 with a view to upgrade our wiki, implementing security to: * let anyone view our work, * let anyone register themselves as users, * but require new users to be authorised before editing or creating pages. While testing and fixing bugs, I discovered some interesting and useful things about security in PhpWiki. I hope my knowledge will help others. This is the recipe that I used. There are many variations that will work just as well or even better for you. Note that for most of the actions, you need to be logged into the wiki as an administrator. !!!1 - Generic security setup. For the configuration that I describe above, the following parameters should be set in config/config.ini (and are further documented there). This requires that you have read and write access to the filestore on the webserver. ----
; require the new login code - the default
;ENABLE_USER_NEW = true

; allow ACL based permissions on pages - the default
;ENABLE_PAGEPERM = true

; allow unknown/anonymous users to by default read the content
ALLOW_ANON_USER = true

; prevent unknown/anonymous users from editing/creating pages
ALLOW_ANON_EDIT = false

; prevent users just creating a temporary user
; (I am skating over the complexities of this setting)
ALLOW_BOGO_LOGIN = false

; to require users to have passwords
; (this is not independent of the other settings above)
ALLOW_USER_PASSWORDS = true

; require passwords to have a minimum length
; I am not trying to protect national security,
; just encourage the vandals to go elsewhere
PASSWORD_LENGTH_MINIMUM = 6

; use a database to check user-ids and passwords.
; Note that there many other settings database settings that
; need careful attention but that is out of scope for this HOW-TO
USER_AUTH_ORDER = "Db"
USER_AUTH_POLICY = first-only

; Store group information in wiki pages
; there's no need to develop a complex front end for a database.
; Note that in performance terms this is the most expensive option.
GROUP_METHOD = WIKIPAGE

; the master page listing the groups - I just used the default
; CATEGORY_GROUP_PAGE = ~CategoryGroup

; The following SQL queries/statements are stored in
; config/config.ini so that they can easily be changed
; if there an existing user database. Several of these have
; alternatives documented in config/config.ini
DBAUTH_AUTH_USER_EXISTS = "SELECT userid FROM user WHERE userid="$userid""
DBAUTH_AUTH_CHECK = "SELECT IF(passwd=PASSWORD("$password"),1,0) AS ok
FROM user WHERE userid="$userid""
DBAUTH_AUTH_CRYPT_METHOD = plain
DBAUTH_AUTH_UPDATE = "UPDATE user SET passwd=PASSWORD("$password") WHERE
userid="$userid""
DBAUTH_AUTH_CREATE = "INSERT INTO user SET
passwd=PASSWORD("$password"),userid="$userid""
DBAUTH_PREF_SELECT = "SELECT prefs FROM pref WHERE userid="$userid""
DBAUTH_PREF_UPDATE = "REPLACE INTO pref SET
prefs="$pref_blob",userid="$userid""

; I am paranoid about undiscovered cross-site scripting
; vulnerabilities so I prevent users injecting HTML directly into
; pages. It may be safe to allow the latter 2 options
ENABLE_RAW_HTML = false
ENABLE_RAW_HTML_LOCKEDONLY = false
ENABLE_RAW_HTML_SAFE = false
---- !!!2 - User Group management Create group pages in the wiki. *First, in page CategoryGroup, add the name of the group in the bulleted list. This may either be a WikiWord or enclosed in "~[" and "~]" and there must be nothing else on the line. For example, while editing CategoryGroup, add
* ~[Writers]
* ~UserManagement
and save. I will use these two groups as examples. * Create the two group pages by clicking on the links in the CategoryGroup page and add the list of users as a bulleted list (as above). - In the Writers group, list the users that are allowed to edit and create pages. - In the UserManagement group, list the users that may authorise new users (or remove existing users). - A user may be a member of both groups and new users may be added at any time. * Lock all three pages CategoryGroup, Writers and UserManagement. * Unlock all three pages. _I am not certain that these last two steps are necessary but various comments around the documentation indicate that it is and, anyway, it did no harm._ !!!3 - change the default page permissions. Create a page named . to hold these default permissions. _Yes, named "."._ The recommended way to do this is to * go your HomePage * remove "HomePage" from the url and replace with the parameters "?pagename=.&action=create" * enter some text like "This page holds the default ACLs for all pages" and save * go your HomePage * remove "HomePage" from the url and replace with the parameters "?pagename=.&action=setacl" * change the ACLs for EDIT and for CREATE to - +Administrators - +Owner - +Writers - -Authenticated Users - -Signed Users - -Bogo Users * _Where + means the ACL allows that kind of access and x means the ACL does not allow that kind of access._ * change the ACLs for CHANGE and REMOVE to - +Administrators - +Owner - -Authenticated Users - -Signed Users - -Bogo Users !3a Alternative method to create page "." and set the ACLs correctly. I found some problems in the SetACL user interface (that I have not yet looked into / fixed), so I used an alternative mechanism to set the ACLs. * export a Zip Dump (via the PhpWikiAdministration page) * extract one of the files from this zip - initially, it might look like ----
Subject: ~AppendText
From: foo@bar (~PhpWiki)
To: foo@bar (~PhpWiki)
Date: Wed, 5 Jan 2005 17:09:46 +0800
Mime-Version: 1.0 (Produced by ~PhpWiki 1.3.11pre-20050108)
Content-Type: application/x-phpwiki;
  pagename=~AppendText;
  flags="";
  author=The%20PhpWiki%20programming%20team;
  version=1;
  lastmodified=1104916186;
  created=1104916186;
  author_id=The%20PhpWiki%20programming%20team;
  markup=2;
  charset=UTF-8
Content-Transfer-Encoding: quoted-printable

~
---- * rename and edit this file (I called it "dot" but this does not matter). The contents should look something like ----
Subject: .
From: foo@bar (~PhpWiki)
To: foo@bar (~PhpWiki)
Date: Mon, 17 Jan 2005 15:54:59 +0800
Mime-Version: 1.0 (Produced by ~PhpWiki 1.3.11pre-20050108)
Content-Type: application/x-phpwiki;
  pagename=.;
  flags="";
  author=Admin;
  version=1;
  lastmodified=1105949000;
  created=1105949000;
  author_id=Admin;
  markup=2;
  acl="view:_EVERY;
edit:_ADMIN,_OWNER,Writers,-_SIGNED-_BOGOUSER,-_AUTHENTICATED;
create:_ADMIN,_OWNER,Writers,-_SIGNED,-_BOGOUSER,-_AUTHENTICATED;
list:_EVERY; remove:_ADMIN,_OWNER,-_SIGNED,-_BOGOUSER,-_AUTHENTICATED;
change:_ADMIN,_OWNER,-_SIGNED,-_BOGOUSER,-_AUTHENTICATED; dump:_EVERY";
  charset=UTF-8
Content-Transfer-Encoding: quoted-printable

This page holds the default permissions for all pages
---- * The author and author_id should be the name of the administrator account. * The important line is the one starting " acl=". This lists the groups/login types allowed to perform various actions on a page. - Names starting with an _ and all in capitals ("_ADMIN","_OWNER" etc.) are built-in PhpWiki groups. - A - in front of the name means that that group is not allowed perform an action, so "edit:-_AUTHENTICATED" means that a user that has logged in is not allowed edit a page (unless they are also a member of another group that is allowed). * The example acl= line above implements the policy that I described near the start of this page. * Load the file back into the database through the PhpWikiAdministration page. * Check the permissions are what you need in PhpWikiAdministration/SetAcl - this can be done on any page, not just on the "." page. _Use the setacl button to see the permissions on a page._ * If you have to alter the ACL, I suggest that you bump the values for version, lastmodified and created before reloading (I found problems removing groups in the UI, so use the dump page, manual edit and reload page mechanism documented above). * Set any additional/specific restrictions on an individual page by page basis. * In particular, to have a limited list of users that can manage adding and removing users from the Writers group, you should - on pages Writers, UserManagement, CategoryGroup and CategoryCategory - add UserManagement to edit and create permissions - remove Writers from edit and create permissions * Test the permissions work as expected. --PhpWiki:CharlesCorrigan