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administrators (basic)
PmWiki has built-in support for password-protecting various areas of the wiki site. Passwords can be applied to individual pages, to Wiki Groups, or to the entire wiki site. Note that the password protection mechanisms described here are only a small part of overall system (and wiki) security, see PmWiki.Security for more discussion of this.
Authors can use PmWiki to add passwords to individual pages and WikiGroups as described in Passwords. However, WikiAdministrators can also set passwords in local/config.php as described below.
Password basics
PmWiki supports several levels of access to wiki pages:
read
passwords allow viewing the contents of wiki pages
edit
passwords control editing and modification of wiki pages
attr
passwords control who is able to set passwords on pages (and potentially other future attributes)
if uploads are enabled, upload
passwords control uploading of files and attachments
Finally, there is an admin
password that allows an administrator to override the passwords set for any individual page or group.
By default, PmWiki has the following password settings:
- The
admin
and upload
passwords are locked by default.
- The Main and PmWiki groups have a locked
attr
password (in their respective GroupAttributes pages).
- The pages in the Site group except Site.SideBar are locked against editing; by default the Site.SideBar page requires the admin or the site-wide edit password.
An admin
password can be used to overcome “locked” passwords, other than that, no password will allow access.
See Passwords for information about setting per-page and per-group passwords. The remainder of this page describes setting site-wide passwords from the local/config.php file.
Setting site-wide passwords
One of the first things an admin should do is set an admin
password for the site. This is done via a line like the following in the local/config.php file:
$DefaultPasswords
[‘admin’] = crypt(‘secret_password’);
Note that the crypt() call is required for this — PmWiki stores and processes all passwords internally as encrypted strings. See the crypt section below for details about eliminating the cleartext password from the configuration file.
To set the entire site to be editable only by those who know an “edit” password, add a line like the following to local/config.php:
$DefaultPasswords
[‘edit’] = crypt(‘edit_password’);
Similarly, you can set $DefaultPasswords['read']
, $DefaultPasswords['edit']
, and $DefaultPasswords['upload']
to control default read
, edit
, and upload
passwords for the entire site. The default passwords are used only for pages and groups which do not have passwords set. Also, each of the $DefaultPasswords
values may be arrays of encrypted passwords:
$DefaultPasswords
[‘read’] = array(crypt(‘alpha’), crypt(‘beta’));
$DefaultPasswords
[‘edit’] = crypt(‘beta’);
This says that either “alpha” or “beta” can be used to read pages, but only the “beta” password will allow someone to edit a page. Since PmWiki remembers any passwords entered during the current session, the “beta” password will allow both reading and writing of pages, while the “alpha” password allows reading only. A person without either password would be unable to view pages at all.
Identity-based authorization (username/password logins, AuthUser)
Unlike many systems which have identity-based systems for controlling access to pages (e.g., using a separate username and password for each person), PmWiki defaults to a password-based system as described above. In general password-based systems are often easier to maintain because they avoid the administrative overheads of creating user accounts, recovering lost passwords, and mapping usernames to permitted actions.
However, PmWiki’s authuser.php script augments the password-based system to allow access to pages based on a username and password combination. See AuthUser for more details on controlling access to pages based on user identity.
Security holes …
Administrators need to carefully plan where passwords are applied to avoid opening inadvertent security holes. If your wiki is open (anyone can read and edit), this would not seem to be a concern, except, a malicious or confused user could apply a read password to a group and make the group completely unavailable to all other users. At the very least, even an open wiki should have a site-wide “admin” password and a site-wide “attr” password set in config.php. The sample-config.php file distributed with PmWiki indicates that the PmWiki and Main groups have “attr” locked by default, but if anyone creates a new group, “attr” is unlocked. Administrators must remember to set “attr” passwords for each new group (if desired) in this case. An easier solution is to include these lines in config.php :
$DefaultPasswords['admin'] = crypt('youradminpassword');
$DefaultPasswords['attr'] = crypt('yourattrpassword');
Encrypting passwords in config.php
One drawback to using the crypt() function directly to set passwords in config.php is that anyone able to view the file will see the unencrypted password. For example, if config.php contains
$DefaultPasswords
[‘admin’] = crypt(‘mysecret’);
then the “mysecret” password is in plain text for others to see. However, a wiki administrator can obtain and use an encrypted form of the password directly by using ?action=crypt
on any PmWiki url (or just jump to PasswordsAdmin?action=crypt). This action presents a form that generates encrypted versions of passwords for use in the config.php file. For example, when ?action=crypt
is given the password “mysecret
”, PmWiki will return a string like
$1$hMMhCdfT$mZSCh.BJOidMRn4SOUUSi1
The string returned from ?action=crypt
can then be placed directly into config.php, as in:
$DefaultPasswords
[‘admin’] = '$1$hMMhCdfT$mZSCh.BJOidMRn4SOUUSi1';
Note that in the encrypted form the crypt keyword and parentheses are removed, since the password is already encrypted. Also, the encrypted password must be in single quotes. In this example the password is still “mysecret
”, but somebody looking at config.php won’t be able to see that just from looking at the encrypted form. Crypt may give you different encryptions for the same password—this is normal (and makes it harder for someone else to determine the original password).
Removing passwords
To remove a site password entirely, such as the default locked password for uploads, just set it to empty:
$DefaultPasswords
[‘upload’] = ‘’;
You can also use the special password “@nopass” via ?action=attr
to have a non-password protected page within a password-protected group, or a non-password protected group with a site-wide default password set.
Revoking or invalidating passwords
If a password is compromised and the wiki administrator wants to quickly invalidate all uses of that password on a site, a quick solution is the following in local/config.php:
$ForbiddenPasswords = array(‘secret’, ‘tanstaafl’);
if (in_array(@$_POST[‘authpw’], $ForbiddenPasswords))
unset($_POST[‘authpw’]);
This prevents “secret” and “tanstaafl” from ever being accepted as a
valid authorization password, regardless of what pages may be
using it.
See Also
- The
$HandleAuth
array, which sets the required authentication level that is necessary to perform an action.
Protecting actions (example)
Each action can be password protected. Cookbook authors providing scripts with own actions can use this also, but I’ll limit the example to a (by default) not protected ?action=source
. This action shows the wikisource of the actual page. Sometimes you don’t want that especially when using some conditional markup which should not be discovered easily or only by persons that are allowed to edit the page.
There are several solutions for that:
- Limit “source” only to editors add the following to your local/config.php:
$HandleAuth['source'] ='edit';
- For using “source” with an own password, then add:
$HandleAuth['source'] ='source';
$DefaultPasswords['source'] = crypt(secret);
# see above
If you additionally want to set the password in the attributes page add:
$PageAttributes['passwdsource'] = "$['Set new source password']";
In general, adding the prefix ‘passwd’ to an action name in the $PageAttributes
array indicates that you wish for the given field to be encrypted when saved to disk.
The full set of steps to add new password handling for an action such as “diff” would be:
# add a new (encrypted) field to the attr page
$PageAttributes['passwddiff'] = '$[Set new history password]';
# clear the default password for 'diff'
$DefaultPasswords['diff'] = '';
# Tell PmWiki that the 'diff' password allows action 'diff'.
$HandleAuth['diff'] = 'diff';
# Tell PmWiki that a 'read' password
# (or optionally the 'edit') password
# is also sufficient to enable 'diff'.
# Of course, the 'admin' password will work too.
$AuthCascade['diff'] = 'read'; ## or 'edit'
« Per-group customizations | DocumentationIndex | AuthUser »
Q There seems to be a default password. What is it?
There isn’t any valid password until you set one. PasswordsAdmin describes how to set one.
PmWiki comes “out of the box” with $DefaultPasswords
[‘admin’] set to ‘*’. This doesn’t mean the password is an asterisk, it means that default admin password has to be something that encrypts to an asterisk. Since it’s impossible for the crypt() function to ever return a 1-character encrypted value, the admin password is effectively locked until the admin sets one in config.php.
Q How do I use passwd-formatted files (like .htpasswd) for authentication?
See AuthUser or Cookbook:UserAuth
Q Is there anything I can enter in a GroupAttributes field to say ‘same as the admin password’? If not, is there anything I can put into the config.php file to have the same effect?
For the sitewide edit password (in config.php), use ‘@_site_edit’. I haven’t tested this, but I think one can also use ‘@_site_admin’, ‘@_site_read’, ‘@_site_attr’, etc. for the other site-wide passwords set in config.php. ‘@admin’ is used to specify the site admin password.
Q How do I edit protect, say, all RecentChanges pages?
(needs answer)