12 KiB
Password auth provider callbacks
Password auth providers offer a way for server administrators to integrate
their Synapse installation with an external authentication system. The callbacks can be
registered by using the Module API's register_password_auth_provider_callbacks
method.
Callbacks
auth_checkers
First introduced in Synapse v1.46.0
auth_checkers: Dict[Tuple[str, Tuple[str, ...]], Callable]
A dict mapping from tuples of a login type identifier (such as m.login.password
) and a
tuple of field names (such as ("password", "secret_thing")
) to authentication checking
callbacks, which should be of the following form:
async def check_auth(
user: str,
login_type: str,
login_dict: "synapse.module_api.JsonDict",
) -> Optional[
Tuple[
str,
Optional[Callable[["synapse.module_api.LoginResponse"], Awaitable[None]]]
]
]
The login type and field names should be provided by the user in the
request to the /login
API. The Matrix specification
defines some types, however user defined ones are also allowed.
The callback is passed the user
field provided by the client (which might not be in
@username:server
form), the login type, and a dictionary of login secrets passed by
the client.
If the authentication is successful, the module must return the user's Matrix ID (e.g.
@alice:example.com
) and optionally a callback to be called with the response to the
/login
request. If the module doesn't wish to return a callback, it must return None
instead.
If the authentication is unsuccessful, the module must return None
.
Note that the user is not automatically registered, the register_user(..)
method of
the module API can be used to lazily create users.
If multiple modules register an auth checker for the same login type but with different fields, Synapse will refuse to start.
If multiple modules register an auth checker for the same login type with the same fields,
then the callbacks will be executed in order, until one returns a Matrix User ID (and
optionally a callback). In that case, the return value of that callback will be accepted
and subsequent callbacks will not be fired. If every callback returns None
, then the
authentication fails.
check_3pid_auth
First introduced in Synapse v1.46.0
async def check_3pid_auth(
medium: str,
address: str,
password: str,
) -> Optional[
Tuple[
str,
Optional[Callable[["synapse.module_api.LoginResponse"], Awaitable[None]]]
]
]
Called when a user attempts to register or log in with a third party identifier,
such as email. It is passed the medium (eg. email
), an address (eg. jdoe@example.com
)
and the user's password.
If the authentication is successful, the module must return the user's Matrix ID (e.g.
@alice:example.com
) and optionally a callback to be called with the response to the /login
request.
If the module doesn't wish to return a callback, it must return None instead.
If the authentication is unsuccessful, the module must return None
.
If multiple modules implement this callback, they will be considered in order. If a
callback returns None
, Synapse falls through to the next one. The value of the first
callback that does not return None
will be used. If this happens, Synapse will not call
any of the subsequent implementations of this callback. If every callback returns None
,
the authentication is denied.
on_logged_out
First introduced in Synapse v1.46.0
async def on_logged_out(
user_id: str,
device_id: Optional[str],
access_token: str
) -> None
Called during a logout request for a user. It is passed the qualified user ID, the ID of the deactivated device (if any: access tokens are occasionally created without an associated device ID), and the (now deactivated) access token.
Deleting the related pushers is done after calling on_logged_out
, so you can rely on them
to still be present.
If multiple modules implement this callback, Synapse runs them all in order.
get_username_for_registration
First introduced in Synapse v1.52.0
async def get_username_for_registration(
uia_results: Dict[str, Any],
params: Dict[str, Any],
) -> Optional[str]
Called when registering a new user. The module can return a username to set for the user
being registered by returning it as a string, or None
if it doesn't wish to force a
username for this user. If a username is returned, it will be used as the local part of a
user's full Matrix ID (e.g. it's alice
in @alice:example.com
).
This callback is called once User-Interactive Authentication has been completed by the user. It is not called when registering a user via SSO. It is passed two dictionaries, which include the information that the user has provided during the registration process.
The first dictionary contains the results of the User-Interactive Authentication flow followed by the user. Its keys are the identifiers of every step involved in the flow, associated with either a boolean value indicating whether the step was correctly completed, or additional information (e.g. email address, phone number...). A list of most existing identifiers can be found in the Matrix specification. Here's an example featuring all currently supported keys:
{
"m.login.dummy": True, # Dummy authentication
"m.login.terms": True, # User has accepted the terms of service for the homeserver
"m.login.recaptcha": True, # User has completed the recaptcha challenge
"m.login.email.identity": { # User has provided and verified an email address
"medium": "email",
"address": "alice@example.com",
"validated_at": 1642701357084,
},
"m.login.msisdn": { # User has provided and verified a phone number
"medium": "msisdn",
"address": "33123456789",
"validated_at": 1642701357084,
},
"m.login.registration_token": "sometoken", # User has registered through a registration token
}
The second dictionary contains the parameters provided by the user's client in the request
to /_matrix/client/v3/register
. See the Matrix specification
for a complete list of these parameters.
If the module cannot, or does not wish to, generate a username for this user, it must
return None
.
If multiple modules implement this callback, they will be considered in order. If a
callback returns None
, Synapse falls through to the next one. The value of the first
callback that does not return None
will be used. If this happens, Synapse will not call
any of the subsequent implementations of this callback. If every callback returns None
,
the username provided by the user is used, if any (otherwise one is automatically
generated).
get_displayname_for_registration
First introduced in Synapse v1.54.0
async def get_displayname_for_registration(
uia_results: Dict[str, Any],
params: Dict[str, Any],
) -> Optional[str]
Called when registering a new user. The module can return a display name to set for the
user being registered by returning it as a string, or None
if it doesn't wish to force a
display name for this user.
This callback is called once User-Interactive Authentication
has been completed by the user. It is not called when registering a user via SSO. It is
passed two dictionaries, which include the information that the user has provided during
the registration process. These dictionaries are identical to the ones passed to
get_username_for_registration
, so refer to the
documentation of this callback for more information about them.
If multiple modules implement this callback, they will be considered in order. If a
callback returns None
, Synapse falls through to the next one. The value of the first
callback that does not return None
will be used. If this happens, Synapse will not call
any of the subsequent implementations of this callback. If every callback returns None
,
the username will be used (e.g. alice
if the user being registered is @alice:example.com
).
is_3pid_allowed
First introduced in Synapse v1.53.0
async def is_3pid_allowed(self, medium: str, address: str, registration: bool) -> bool
Called when attempting to bind a third-party identifier (i.e. an email address or a phone
number). The module is given the medium of the third-party identifier (which is email
if
the identifier is an email address, or msisdn
if the identifier is a phone number) and
its address, as well as a boolean indicating whether the attempt to bind is happening as
part of registering a new user. The module must return a boolean indicating whether the
identifier can be allowed to be bound to an account on the local homeserver.
If multiple modules implement this callback, they will be considered in order. If a
callback returns True
, Synapse falls through to the next one. The value of the first
callback that does not return True
will be used. If this happens, Synapse will not call
any of the subsequent implementations of this callback.
Example
The example module below implements authentication checkers for two different login types:
my.login.type
- Expects a
my_field
field to be sent to/login
- Is checked by the method:
self.check_my_login
- Expects a
m.login.password
(defined in the spec)- Expects a
password
field to be sent to/login
- Is checked by the method:
self.check_pass
- Expects a
from typing import Awaitable, Callable, Optional, Tuple
import synapse
from synapse import module_api
class MyAuthProvider:
def __init__(self, config: dict, api: module_api):
self.api = api
self.credentials = {
"bob": "building",
"@scoop:matrix.org": "digging",
}
api.register_password_auth_provider_callbacks(
auth_checkers={
("my.login_type", ("my_field",)): self.check_my_login,
("m.login.password", ("password",)): self.check_pass,
},
)
async def check_my_login(
self,
username: str,
login_type: str,
login_dict: "synapse.module_api.JsonDict",
) -> Optional[
Tuple[
str,
Optional[Callable[["synapse.module_api.LoginResponse"], Awaitable[None]]],
]
]:
if login_type != "my.login_type":
return None
if self.credentials.get(username) == login_dict.get("my_field"):
return (self.api.get_qualified_user_id(username), None)
async def check_pass(
self,
username: str,
login_type: str,
login_dict: "synapse.module_api.JsonDict",
) -> Optional[
Tuple[
str,
Optional[Callable[["synapse.module_api.LoginResponse"], Awaitable[None]]],
]
]:
if login_type != "m.login.password":
return None
if self.credentials.get(username) == login_dict.get("password"):
return (self.api.get_qualified_user_id(username), None)