16

As far as I can think, there are two reasonable ways to reset a user's forgotten password.

  1. Have the user enter their email address and a new plaintext password is sent to their email address.

  2. A link is sent to their email address which has a UID number in the URL. Clicking on this takes the user to a form on the website where they can choose there own new password.

Which method is preferable and why?

If method 1 is used, perhaps a third party could read the email and obtain the new password. If method 2 is used, what is to stop someone methodically going through UID codes to try and access the form to change a user's password?

2

3 Answers 3

54

The best pattern would be :

  1. User requests password reset. Best is to do it through username, and don't indicate if the username exists or not (to avoid possible users listing through a script)

  2. You generate a record in a new database table with userid, datetime of request (= current datetime), and a GUID you just generated

  3. You send a mail to the user, pointing to password reset page with the GUID (not the userid) as parameter

  4. On this page, you should check that the GUID is existing, and eventually you could put some expiration date (=the user has 1 day to reset, for example)

  5. Don't forget to mark the record as "used" (with an extra field in the table) when the user reset his password, so that you can stop an eventual second try...

It could possibly even more secure, but that is already quite good I think....

8
  • And how we handle that link if we are going with 2nd way. I am calling forgot password from iOS application and using FRAPI API(www.getfrapi.com).When user clicked on that link of mail then how we handle that mail's url ? through API or do we need external server ? I need help.
    – Ponting
    Jul 26, 2013 at 10:29
  • But you have to realize that email should always be the second way of communication in these situations, since user might not be able to access anymore the email or the email would not be valid at all. I'd recommend you to read this and get a good combination of ways to secure the procedure of reseting the password. Nov 18, 2013 at 6:51
  • 3
    Hi arash. Thanks for this link, it is indeed very interesting. The weakness in relying on email to reset password is not, as I see it, the password reset procedure, but the security on the email account. If this one is well secured the whole password reset procedure using it is also quite secure. That's one more occasion to insist on the need of a good security on email accounts, as they're for most people the "master key" to many other internet accounts and/or personal info.
    – Laurent S.
    Dec 3, 2013 at 9:02
  • I just read yet another very interresting article on the same subject. A quite old article, but everything looks still valid. Here it is
    – Laurent S.
    Jan 14, 2015 at 12:38
  • 1
    The GUID should be hashed else it's no different to a plaintext password.
    – Michael
    Oct 1, 2015 at 12:36
15

OWASP has a good checklist of https://www.owasp.org/index.php/Forgot_Password_Cheat_Sheet

Here is a quick summary of steps:

  1. Gather Identity Data or Security Questions
  2. Verify Security Questions
  3. Send a Token Over a Side-Channel
  4. Allow user to change password
-4

Verify if the sender is the real user by asking verification questions.

Do not send password on the personal email that is not on the planate employees list.

Do not add the word "password" to the title or body of the email.

Make sure to send separately the username and password.

For Office 365 user, direct them to the forgot my password area or send this link https://passwordreset.microsoftonline.com

Don't get intimidated by the user, escalate to IT manager if the need arises.

2
  • 7
    You should never ever send a password by email.
    – Laurent S.
    Mar 13, 2019 at 16:34
  • More generally, if you are even storing the passwords, there is an unnecessary security risk to your reviewers. Store only a one-way hash and make sure it's a strong hash.
    – cazort
    Nov 18, 2021 at 18:16

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