For around 2 weeks, I've been getting an increasing quantity of nonspecific reports from users of login problems on ikiwiki sites, mostly joeyh.name and git-annex.branchable.com. A few users are still logging in successfully, but it seems to be hitting many users; post volume has gone down more than holidays would explain. It doesn't seem limited to any login method; email and password have both been said not to work. (Openid too, but could be openid provider problem there.) I have not managed to reproduce the problem myself, using firefox, firefox-esr, or chromium. --[[Joey]] > Otto Kekäläinen described to me a problem where email login to post a > comment seemed to work; it displayed the comment edit form; but posting > the form went back to the login page. Cookie problem? > > Ok, to reproduce the problem: Log into joeyh.name using https. The email > login link is a http link. The session cookie was set https-only. > --[[Joey]] > > The reason the edit form is able to be displayed is that emailauth > sets up a session, in getsession(), and that $session is used for the > remainder of that cgi call. But, a cookie for that session is not stored > in the browser in this case. Ikiwiki *does* send a session cookie, but > the browser seems to not let an existing https-only session cookie be > replaced by a new session cookie that can be used with http. (If the > emailed link, generated on https is opened in a different browser, this > problem doesn't happen.) There may have been a browser behavior change > here? > > So what to do about this? Sites with the problem have `redirect_to_https: 0` > and the cgiurl is http not https. So when emailauth generates the url > with `cgiurl_abs`, it's a http url, even if the user got to that point > using https. > > I suppose that emailauth could look at `$ENV{HTTPS}` same as > printheader() does, to detect this case, and rewrite the cgiurl as a > https url. Or, printheader() could just not set "-secure" on the cookie, > but that does degrade security as MITM can then steal the cookie you're > using on a https site. > > Of course, the easy workaround, increasingly a good idea anyway, is to > enable `redirect_to_https`.. --[[Joey]] > One of the users also reported a problem with password reset, and > indeed, passwordauth is another caller of `cgiurl_abs`. (The only other > caller, notifyemail, is probably fine.) The emailed password reset link > also should be https if the user was using https. So, let's add a > `cgiurl_abs_samescheme` that both can use. --[[Joey]] [[fixed|done]].. At least I hope that was the thing actually preventing most of the people from logging in. --[[Joey]]