# Use this hook to configure devise mailer, warden hooks and so forth. The first # four configuration values can also be set straight in your models. Devise.setup do |config| config.warden do |manager| manager.default_strategies(scope: :user).unshift :two_factor_authenticatable manager.default_strategies(scope: :user).unshift :two_factor_backupable end # ==> Mailer Configuration # Configure the class responsible to send e-mails. config.mailer = "DeviseMailer" # ==> 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 = [:login] # 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, :email_confirmation] # 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. # config.params_authenticatable = true # Tell if authentication through HTTP Basic Auth is enabled. False by default. # config.http_authenticatable = false # If http headers 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" config.reconfirmable = true # 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 # ==> Configuration for :database_authenticatable # For bcrypt, this is the cost for hashing the password and defaults to 10. If # using other encryptors, it sets how many times you want the password re-encrypted. # # 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. config.stretches = Rails.env.test? ? 1 : 10 # Setup a pepper to generate the encrypted password. # config.pepper = "2ef62d549c4ff98a5d3e0ba211e72cff592060247e3bbbb9f499af1222f876f53d39b39b823132affb32858168c79c1d7741d26499901b63c6030a42129924ef" # ==> Configuration for :confirmable # The time you want to give a user to confirm their account. During this time # they will be able to access your application without confirming. Default is 0.days # When allow_unconfirmed_access_for is zero, the user won't be able to sign in without confirming. # You can use this to let your user access some features of your application # without confirming the account, but blocking it after a certain period # (ie 2 days). # config.allow_unconfirmed_access_for = 2.days # 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 # If true, a valid remember token can be re-used between multiple browsers. # config.remember_across_browsers = 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.cookie_options = {} # Send a notification email when the user's password is changed config.send_password_change_notification = true # ==> Configuration for :validatable # Range for password length. Default is 6..128. config.password_length = 8..128 # Email regex used to validate email formats. It simply asserts that # an 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[^@]+@[^@]+\z/ # ==> Configuration for :timeoutable # The time you want to timeout the user session without activity. After this # time the user will be asked for credentials again. Default is 30 minutes. # config.timeout_in = 30.minutes # ==> 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 = 10 # Time interval to unlock the account if :time is enabled as unlock_strategy. config.unlock_in = 10.minutes # ==> 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. # Don't put a too small interval or your users won't have the time to # change their passwords. # When someone else invites you to GitLab this time is also used so it should be pretty long. config.reset_password_within = 2.days # 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 = false # ==> Configuration for :encryptable # Allow you to use another encryption algorithm besides bcrypt (default). You can use # :sha1, :sha512 or encryptors 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) # config.encryptor = :sha512 # Authentication through token does not store user in session and needs # to be supplied on each request. Useful if you are using the token as API token. config.skip_session_storage << :token_auth # ==> Scopes configuration # Turn scoped views on. Before rendering "sessions/new", it will first check for # "users/sessions/new". It's turned off by default because it's slower if you # are using only default views. # config.scoped_views = false # Configure the default scope given to Warden. By default it's the first # devise role declared in your routes (usually :user). config.default_scope = :user # now have an :email scope as well, so set the default # Configure sign_out behavior. # Sign_out action can be scoped (i.e. /users/sign_out affects only :user scope). # The default is true, which means any logout action will sign out all active 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 :"*/*" and "*/*" formats below is required to match Internet # Explorer requests. config.navigational_formats = [:"*/*", "*/*", :html, :zip] # The default HTTP method used to sign out a resource. Default is :delete. config.sign_out_via = :get # ==> OmniAuth # To configure a new OmniAuth provider copy and edit omniauth.rb.sample # selecting the provider you require. # Check the wiki for more information on setting up on your models # ==> 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 = Gitlab::DeviseFailure # manager.intercept_401 = false # manager.default_strategies(scope: :user).unshift :some_external_strategy # end if Gitlab::Auth::LDAP::Config.enabled? Gitlab::Auth::LDAP::Config.providers.each do |provider| ldap_config = Gitlab::Auth::LDAP::Config.new(provider) config.omniauth(provider, ldap_config.omniauth_options) end end if Gitlab.config.omniauth.enabled Gitlab::OmniauthInitializer.new(config).execute(Gitlab.config.omniauth.providers) end end