authors
PmWiki has built-in support for password-protecting various areas of the wiki site. Authors generally want to be able to apply passwords to individual pages or to wiki groups. Wiki Administrators can apply passwords to individual pages, to wiki groups, or to the entire site. Setting an edit password on a page or group (or the entire site) is one of the most common ways to stop spam. As with any access control system, the password protection mechanisms described here are only a small part of overall system and wiki security.
As an author editing pages...
An author will generally set 3 types of passwords:
- to control who can see a page or group, use
read
passwords
- to control who can edit a page or group, use
edit
passwords
- to control who can alter the passwords used to protect a page or group, use
attr
passwords
If required most page actions can be password protected.
Protect an individual page
To set a password on an individual wiki page, add the page action
?action=attr
to the page's URL (address) to access its attributes. Using the form on the attributes page, you can set or clear the read
, edit
, or attr
passwords on the page. In the form you enter the passwords as cleartext; PmWiki encrypts them for you automatically when it stores them.
Additional options:
Protect a wiki group of pages
To set a password on a wiki group is slightly more difficult -- you just set the passwords on a special page? in each group called
First, you can get to the attributes page for GroupAttributes by entering a URL (address) like
http://example.com/pmwiki/pmwiki.php?n=GroupName.GroupAttributes?action=attr
Replace example.com with your domain name, and GroupName with the name of the group
Then, using the form on the attributes page, you can set or clear the read
, edit
, or attr
passwords for the entire group. In the form you enter the passwords as cleartext; PmWiki encrypts them for you automatically.
Additional options:
Passwords
Passwords may consist of any combination of characters, except double "quotes" or 'apostrophes'.
Passwords with spaces or colons must be entered using quotes, eg "foo bar" or "foo:bar".
Obviously longer is better, and on some systems passwords need to have 4 or more characters.
Multiple passwords
Multiple passwords for a page, group or site are allowed.
Simply enter multiple passwords separated by a space. This allows you to have a read password, a write password, and have the write password allow read/write access. In other words, if the read password is
alpha
and the edit password is
beta
then enter
Set new read password: alpha beta
Set new edit password: beta
This says that either
alpha
or
beta
can be used to read pages, but only
beta
may edit. Since PmWiki checks the passwords you've entered since the browser has been opened, entering a read password that is also a write password allows both reading and writing.
Protect the site
Passwords can be applied to the entire wiki website in config.php.
See passwords administration for details.
administrator
As an administrator ...
You can set passwords on pages and groups exactly as described above for authors. You can also:
- set site-wide passwords for pages and groups that do not have passwords
- use
attr
passwords to control who is able to set passwords on pages
- use
upload
passwords to control access to the file upload capabilities (if uploads are enabled)
- use an
admin
password to override the passwords set for any individual page or group
- use SiteAdmin.AuthList to view the permissions settings for pages that have permissions set.
For more information on password options available to administrators, see PasswordsAdmin.
Which password wins?
In PmWiki, page passwords override group passwords, group passwords override the default passwords, and the admin
password overrides all passwords. This gives a great deal of flexibility in controlling access to wiki pages in PmWiki.
The special page? SiteAdmin.AuthList is a page list of all pages with access permissions set.
Opening access to pages in protected groups/sites
Sometimes we want to "unprotect" pages in a group or site that is otherwise protected. In these cases, the special password
@nopass
is used to indicate that access should be allowed to a page without requiring a password.
For example, suppose Main.GroupAttributes has an edit password set, thus restricting the editing of all pages in Main. Now we want Main.WikiSandbox to be editable without a password. Using
clear
for the edit password for Main.WikiSandbox doesn't unprotect the page, because the password is being set by the group. Instead, we set the edit password for Main.WikiSandbox to the special value
@nopass
which tells PmWiki to ignore any site-wide or group-level passwords for that page.
FAQ
How can I password protect all the pages and groups on my site? Do I really have to set passwords page by page, or group by group?
Administrators can set passwords for the entire site by editing the config.php file; they don't have to set passwords for each page or group. For example, to set the entire site to be editable only by those who know an "edit" password, an administrator can add a line like the following to local/config.php:
For more information about the password options that are available only to administrators, see PasswordsAdmin.
I get http error 500 "Internal Server Error" when I try to log in. What's wrong?
This can happen if the encrypted passwords are not created on the web server that hosts the PmWiki.
The PHP crypt() function changed during the PHP development, e.g. a password encrypted with PHP 5.2 can not be decrypted in PHP 5.1, but PHP 5.2 can decrypt passwords created by PHP 5.1.
This situation normally happens if you prepare everything on your local machine with the latest PHP version and you upload the passwords to a webserver which is running an older version.
The same error occurs when you add encrypted passwords to local/config.php.
Solution: Create the passwords on the system with the oldest PHP version and use them on all other systems.
How can I create private groups for users, so that each user can edit pages in their group, but no one else (other than the admin) can?
Modify the edit attribute for each group to id:username, e.g. set the edit attribute in JaneDoe.GroupAttributes to id:JaneDoe.
There is a more automatic solution, but it's probably not a good idea for most wikis. Administrators can use the AuthUser recipe and add the following few lines to their local/config.php file to set this up:
$group = FmtPageName('$Group', $pagename);
$DefaultPasswords['edit'] = 'id:'.$group;
include_once("$FarmD/scripts/authuser.php");
This automatically gives edit rights to a group to every user who has the same user name as the group name. Unfortunately it also gives edit rights to such a user who is visiting a same-named group not just for pages in that group, but for any page on the wiki that relies on the site's default edit password. This can create security holes.
How come when I switch to another wiki within a farm, I keep my same authorization?
PmWiki uses PHP sessions to keep track of authentication/authorization information, and by default PHP sets things up such that all interactions with the same server are considered part of the same session.
For security considerations about shared session pools, see the "Session injection" chapter in Cookbook:SessionSecurityAdvice.
To fix the browser-side convenience issue, one easy way is to make sure each wiki uses a different cookie name for its session identifier. Near the top of one of the wiki's local/config.php
files, before calling authuser or any other recipes, add a line like:
session_name('XYZSESSID');
You can pick any alphanumeric name for XYZSESSID; for example, for the cs559-1 wiki you might choose
session_name('CS559SESSID');
This will keep the two wikis' session cookies independent of each other.
Is it possible to test the password level for display and/or if condition? Example: * (:if WriterPassword:) (display Edit link) (:ifend:)
You can use (:if auth edit:)
. See ConditionalMarkup.
Can I use (:if …:)
to hide secrets in a wiki page?
You can, but usually that's not secure.
The recommended strategy is to put secrets in a separate page and restrict all read-related¹ access permissions to those users who are allowed to read the secrets.
To display the secrets in another page, you can include (parts of) the secrets page:
Users with read access to the secrets will readily see them, whereas other users see nothing or (at your choosing) some other text, e.g. a login link.
¹ Currently (version 2.2.99), these are: read
(would allow include), edit
(would show the source), attr
(would allow to obtain read/edit), diff
(would allow viewing any change), source
(allows raw source display)
The reason why Conditional Markup isn't suitable for access control is that it only applies for rendering wikitext as a web page, and that's just one of many ways to access a page's text.
In order to rely on Conditional Markup for protection of secrets, you'd have to restrict all access methods that can circumvent it.
To do so, you'd need to keep track of all methods available.
In a default installation of PmWiki, some of the easy methods include: Editing a page, viewing its edit history, its source, or including fragments of it into the edit preview of another page. (Preview: To avoid traces in RecentChanges.)
However, this list is far from exhaustive, and could easily grow with Recipes? or future versions of PmWiki.