I see there are a few. Which ones are best maintained and easy to use? Or should I just write my own?
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Maybe you'd find Redux suiting your needs. It's no overkill and comes packed solely with bare features most of us would require. The dev and contributors were very strict on what code was contributed. This is the official page |
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Hello, I'm not sure if 'Authentication for CodeIgniter done right' is anywhere available?:) or is it a dream...?:) Thanks fot nice post !:) |
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actually sha1 is more secure than md5....and newest recomendation is to use SHA2(SHA-224, SHA-256, SHA-384, and SHA-512) hashing.... |
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But I want a full feature, same as freakauth light |
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Hi Jens Roland is these use for kohana framework? Or else? |
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I like your 20-step program. I've been frustrated with Redux, but it seems like the best-featured, best-documented solution out there. Don't understand why the skeleton of some standard auth wasn't build into CI. Their explanation that it "would look different for every app" seems like a copout. |
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Hi Jens Roland. I'm the developer of Redux Auth and some of the issues you mentioned have been fixed in the version 2 beta. You can download this off the offcial website with a sample application too.
Security questions are now not used and a simpler forgotten password system has been put in place.
This was fixed in version 2 and returns boolean values. I hated the hodgepodge as much as you.
The sample application uses the CI's validation system.
Work in progress I also implemented some other features such as email views, this gives you the choice of being able to use the CodeIgniter helpers in your emails. It's still a work in progress so if have any more suggestions please keep them coming. -Popcorn Ps : Thanks for recommending Redux. |
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I've implemented my own as well (currently about 80% done after a few weeks of work). I tried all of the others first; FreakAuth Light, DX Auth, Redux, SimpleLogin, SimpleLoginSecure, pc_user, Fresh Powered, and a few more. None of them were up to par, IMO, either they were lacking basic features, inherently INsecure, or too bloated for my taste. Actually, I did a detailed roundup of all the authentication libraries for CodeIgniter when I was testing them out (just after New Year's). FWIW, I'll share it with you: DX Auth
FreakAuth Light
pc_user
Fresh Powered
Redux
EDIT: Mathew Davies, who develops Redux Auth, says a bunch of the cons in my list (including the security questions dealbreaker) have been fixed in the latest beta, so that should definitely be worth checking out SimpleLoginSecure
Don't get me wrong: I don't mean to disrespect any of the above libraries; I am very impressed with what their developers have accomplished and how far each of them have come, and I'm not above reusing some of their code to build my own. What I'm saying is, sometimes in these projects, the focus shifts from the essential 'need-to-haves' (such as hard security practices) over to softer 'nice-to-haves', and that's what I hope to remedy. Therefore: back to basics. Authentication for CodeIgniter done rightHere's my MINIMAL required list of features from an authentication library. It also happens to be a subset of my own library's feature list ;)
Note: those last few points are not super-high-security overkill that you don't need for your web application. If an authentication library doesn't meet these security standards 100%, DO NOT USE IT! Recent high-profile examples of irresponsible coders who left them out of their software: #17 is how Sarah Palin's AOL email was hacked during the Presidential campaign; a nasty combination of #18 and #19 were the culprit recently when the Twitter accounts of Britney Spears, Barack Obama, Fox News and others were hacked; and #20 alone is how Chinese hackers managed to steal 9 million items of personal information from more than 70.000 Korean web sites in one automated hack in 2008. These attacks are not brain surgery. If you leave your back doors wide open, you shouldn't delude yourself into a false sense of security by bolting the front. Moreover, if you're serious enough about coding to choose a best-practices framework like CodeIgniter, you owe it to yourself to at least get the most basic security measures done right. <rant> Basically, here's how it is: I don't care if an auth library offers a bunch of features, advanced role management, PHP4 compatibility, pretty CAPTCHA fonts, country tables, complete admin panels, bells and whistles -- if the library actually makes my site less secure by not following best practices. It's an authentication package; it needs to do ONE thing right: Authentication. If it fails to do that, it's actually doing more harm than good. </rant> /Jens Roland |
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I tried Redux. Wasn't a fan. In the end, I ended up making a CI wrapper for Zend_Auth, which works like a charm. |
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Also take a look at BackendPro Ultimately you will probably end up writing something custom, but there's nothing wrong with borrowing concepts from DX Auth, Freak Auth, BackendPro, etc. My experiences with the packaged apps is they are specific to certain structures and I have had problems integrating them into my own applications without requiring hacks, then if the pre-package has an update, I have to migrate them in. I also use Smarty and ADOdb in my CI code, so no matter what I would always end up making major code changes. |
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I use a customized version of DX Auth. I found it simple to use, extremely easy to modify and it has a user guide (with great examples) that is very similar to Code Igniter's. |
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I've tried both FreakAuth and Erkana. I found FreakAuth was overkill for my needs (a simple login form + user add/edit/delete). I evaluated Erkana, but decided not to use, although I no longer remember exactly why. I may also have tried Sentry. In the end I wrote my own, based on the CodeIgniter Filters System. Jim. |
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