Flask-Security Changelog
************************

Here you can see the full list of changes between each Flask-Security
release.


Version 4.1.3
=============

Released March 2, 2022


Fixes
-----

* (#581) Fix bug when attempting to disable register_blueprint.
  (halali)

* (#539) Fix example documentation re: generating localized messages.
  (kazuhei2)

* (#546) Make roles joinedload compatible with SQLAlchemy 2.0. (keats)

* (#586) Ship py.typed as part of package.

* (#580) Improve documentation around use of bleach and include in
  common install extra.


Version 4.1.2
=============

Released September 22, 2021


Fixes
-----

* (#526) default_reauthn_handler doesn't honor SECURITY_URL_PREFIX

* (#528) Improve German translations (sr-verde)

* (#527) Fix two-factor sample code (djpnewton)


Version 4.1.1
=============

Released September 10, 2021


Fixes
-----

* (#518) Fix corner case where Security object was being reused in
  tests.

* (#512) If USERNAME_ENABLE is set, change LoginForm field from
  EmailField to StringField. Also - dynamically add fields to Login
  and Registration forms rather than always having them - this made
  the RegistrationForm much simpler.

* (#516) Improved username feature handling solved issue of always
  requiring bleach.

* (#513) Improve documentation of default username validation.


Version 4.1.0
=============

Released July 23, 2021


Features
--------

* (#474) Add public API and CLI command to change a user's password.

* (#140) Add type hints. Please note that many of the packages that
  flask-security depends on aren't typed yet - so there are likely
  errors in some of the types.

* (#466) Add first-class support for using username for signing in.


Fixes
-----

* (#483) 4.0 doesn't accept 3.4 authentication tokens. (kuba-lilz)

* (#490) Flask-Mail sender name can be a tuple. (hrishikeshrt)

* (#486) Possible open redirect vulnerability.

* (#478) Improve/update German translation. (sr-verde)

* (#488) Improve handling of Babel packages.

* (#496) Documentation improvements, distribution extras, fix single
  message override.

* (#497) Improve cookie handling and default "samesite" to "Strict".


Backwards Compatibility Concerns
--------------------------------

* (#488) In 4.0.0, with the addition of Flask-Babel support, Flask-
  Security enforced that if it could import either Flask-Babel or
  Flask-BabelEx, that those modules had been initialized as proper
  Flask extensions. Prior to 4.0.0, just Flask-BabelEx was supported -
  and that didn't require any explicit initialization. Flask-Babel
  DOES require explicit initialization. However for some applications
  that don't completely control their environment (such as system pre-
  installed versions of python) this caused applications that didn't
  even want translation services to fail on startup. With this
  release, Flask-Security still attempts to import one or the other
  package - however if those modules are NOT initialized, Flask-
  Security will simply ignore them and no translations will occur.

* (#497) The CSRF_COOKIE and TWO_FACTOR_VALIDITY cookie had their
  defaults changed to set "samesite=Strict". This follows the Flask-
  Security goal of making things more secure out-of-the-box.

* (#140) Type hinting. For the most part this of course has no runtime
  effects. However, this required a fairly major overhaul of how
  Flask-Security is initialized in order to provide valid types for
  the many constructor attributes. There are no known compatability
  concerns - however initialization used to convert all arguments into
  kwargs then add those as attributes and merge with application
  constants. That no longer happens and it is possible that some
  corner cases don't behave precisely as they did before.


Version 4.0.1
=============

Released April 2, 2021


Features
--------


Fixes
-----

* (#461) 4.0 doesn't accept 3.4 authentication tokens. (kuba-lilz)

* (#460) 2-fa error: Failed to send code - improved documentation and
  debuggability.

* (#454) 2-fa error: TypeError - fixed documentation.

* (#443) Calling create user without any arguments - fixed underlying
  cause of translating form errors in the CLI.

* (#442) Email validation confusion - added documentation.

* (#450) Add documentation on how to override specific error messages.

* (#439) Don't install global-scope tests. (mgorny)

* (#470) Add note about updating DB using MySQL. (jugmac00)

* (#468) Fix documentation - uia_phone_number should be
  uia_phone_mapper. (dvrg)

* (#457) Improve chinese translations. (zxjlm)

* (#453) Improve basque and spanish translations. (mmozos)

* (#448) Add Afrikaans translations. (lonelyvikingmichael)

* (#467) Add Blinker as explicit dependency, improve/fix celery usage
  docs, dont require pyqrcode unless authenticator configured, improve
  SMS configuration variables documentation.


Version 4.0.0
=============

Released January 26, 2021

**PLEASE READ CHANGE NOTES CAREFULLY - THERE ARE LIKELY REQUIRED
CHANGES YOU WILL HAVE TO MAKE TO EVEN START YOUR APPLICATION WITH
4.0**


Start Here
----------

* Your UserModel must contain "fs_uniquifier"

* Either uninstall Flask-BabelEx (if you don't need translations) or
  add either Flask-Babel (>=2.0) or Flask-BabelEx to your dependencies
  AND be sure to initialize it in your app.

* Add Flask-Mail to your dependencies.

* If you have unicode emails or passwords read change notes below.


Version 4.0.0rc2
================

Released January 18, 2021


Features & Cleanup
------------------

* Removal of python 2.7 and <3.6 support

* Removal of token caching feature (a relatively new feature that had
  some systemic issues)

* (#328) Remove dependence on Flask-Mail and refactor.

* (#335) Remove two-factor */tf-confirm* endpoint and use generic
  *freshness* mechanism.

* (#336) Remove "SECURITY_BACKWARDS_COMPAT_AUTH_TOKEN_INVALID(ATE)".
  In addition to not making sense - the documentation has never been
  correct.

* (#339) Require "fs_uniquifier" in the UserModel and stop
  using/referencing the UserModel primary key.

* (#349) Change "SECURITY_USER_IDENTITY_ATTRIBUTES" configuration
  variable semantics.

* Remove (all?) requirements around having an 'email' column in the
  UserModel. API change - JSON SPA redirects used to always include a
  query param 'email=xx'. While that is still sent (if and only if)
  the UserModel contains an 'email' columns, a new query param
  'identity' is returned which returns the value of
  "UserMixin.calc_username()".

* (#382) Improvements and documentation for two-factor authentication.

* (#394) Add support for email validation and normalization (see
  "MailUtil").

* (#231) Normalize unicode passwords (see "PasswordUtil").

* (#391) Option to redirect to */confirm* if user hits an endpoint
  that requires confirmation. New option
  "SECURITY_REQUIRES_CONFIRMATION_ERROR_VIEW" which if set and the
  user hits the */login*, */reset*, or */us-signin* endpoint, and they
  require confirmation the response will be a redirect. (SnaKyEyeS)

* (#366) Allow redirects on sub-domains. Please see
  "SECURITY_REDIRECT_ALLOW_SUBDOMAINS". (willcroft)

* (#376) Have POST redirects default to Flask's "APPLICATION_ROOT".
  Previously the default configuration was "/". Now it first looks at
  Flask's *APPLICATION_ROOT* configuration and uses that (which also
  by default is "/". (tysonholub)

* (#401) Add 2FA Validity Window so an application can configure how
  often the second factor has to be entered. (baurt)

* (#403) Add HTML5 Email input types to email fields. This has some
  backwards compatibility concerns outlined below. (drola)

* (#413) Add hy_AM translations. (rudolfamirjanyan)

* (#410) Add Basque and fix Spanish translations. (mmozos)

* (#408) Polish translations. (kamil559)

* (#390) Update ru_RU translations. (TitaniumHocker)


Fixed
-----

* (#389) Fixes for translations. First - email subjects were never
  being translated. Second, converted all templates to use
  _fsdomain(xx) rather than _(xx) so that they get translated
  regardless of the app's domain.

* (#381) Support Flask-Babel 2.0 which has backported Domain support.
  Flask-Security now supports Flask-Babel (>=2.00), Flask-BabelEx, as
  well as no translation support. Please see backwards compatibility
  notes below.

* (#352) Fix issue with adding/deleting permissions - all mutating
  methods must be at the datastore layer so that db.put() can be
  called. Added "UserDatastore.add_permissions_to_role()" and
  "UserDatastore.remove_permissions_from_role()". The methods
  "RoleMixin.add_permissions()" and "RoleMixin.remove_permissions()"
  have been deprecated.

* (#395) Provide ability to change table names for User and Role
  tables in the fsqla model.

* (#338) All sessions are invalidated when a user changes or resets
  their password. This is accomplished by changing the user's
  *fs_uniquifier*. The user is automatically re-logged in (and a new
  session created) after a successful change operation.

* (#418) Two-factor (and to a lesser extent unified sign in) QRcode
  fetching wasn't protected via CSRF. The fix makes things secure and
  simpler (always good); however read below for compatibility
  concerns. In addition, the elements that make up the QRcode (key,
  username, issuer) area also made available to the form and returned
  as part of the JSON return value - this allows for manual or other
  ways to initialize the authenticator app.

* (#421) GET on */login* and */change* could return the callers
  authentication_token. This is a security concern since GETs don't
  have CSRF protection. This bug was introduced in 3.3.0.


Backwards Compatibility Concerns
--------------------------------

* (#328) Remove dependence on Flask-Mail and refactor. The
  "send_mail_task" and "send_mail" methods as part of Flask-Security
  initialization have been removed and replaced with a new "MailUtil"
  class. The utility method "send_mail()" can still be used. If your
  application didn't use either of the deprecated methods, then the
  only change required is to add Flask-Mail to your package
  requirements (since Flask-Security no longer lists it). Please see
  the Emails for updated examples.

* (#335) Convert two-factor setup flow to use the freshness feature
  rather than its own verify password endpoint. This COMPLETELY
  removes the "/tf-confirm" endpoint and associated form:
  "two_factor_verify_password_form". Now, when /tf-setup is invoked,
  the "flask_security.check_and_update_authn_fresh()" is invoked, and
  if the current session isn't 'fresh' the caller will be redirected
  to a verify endpoint (either "SECURITY_VERIFY_URL" or
  "SECURITY_US_VERIFY_URL"). The simplest change would be to call
  "/verify" everywhere the application used to call "/tf-confirm".

* (#339) Require "fs_uniquifier". In 3.3 the "fs_uniquifier" was added
  in the UserModel to fix the slow authentication token issue. In 3.4
  the "fs_uniquifier" was used to implement Flask-Login's *Alternative
  Token* feature - thus decoupling the primary key (id) from any
  security context. All along, there have been a few issues with
  applications not wanting to use the name 'id' in their model, or
  wanting a different type for their primary key. With this change,
  Flask-Security no longer interprets or uses the UserModel primary
  key - just the "fs_uniquifier" field. See the changes section for
  3.3 for information on how to do the schema and data upgrades
  required to add this field. There is also an API change - the JSON
  response (via UserModel.get_security_payload()) returned the
  "user.id" field. With this change the default is an empty directory
  - override "UserMixin.get_security_payload()" to return any portion
  of the UserModel you need.

* (#349) "SECURITY_USER_IDENTITY_ATTRIBUTES" has changed syntax and
  semantics. It now contains the combined information from the old
  "SECURITY_USER_IDENTITY_ATTRIBUTES" and the newly introduced in 3.4
  "SECURITY_USER_IDENTITY_MAPPINGS". This enabled changing the
  underlying way we validate credentials in the login form and unified
  sign in form. In prior releases we simply tried to look up the form
  value as the PK of the UserModel - this often failed and then looped
  through the other "SECURITY_USER_IDENTITY_ATTRIBUTES". This had a
  history of issues, including many applications not wanting to have a
  standard PK for the user model. Now, using the mapping
  configuration, the UserModel attribute/column the input corresponds
  to is determined, then the UserModel is queried specifically for
  that *attribute:value* pair. If you application didn't change the
  variable, no modifications are required.

* (#354) The "flask_security.PhoneUtil" is now initialized as part of
  Flask-Security initialization rather than
  "@app.before_first_request" (since that broke the CLI). Since it
  isn't called in an application context, the *app* being initialized
  is passed as an argument to *__init__*.

* (#381) When using Flask-Babel (>= 2.0) it is required that the
  application initialize Flask-Babel (e.g. Babel(app)). Flask-BabelEx
  would self-initialize so it didn't matter. Flask-Security will throw
  a run time error upon first request if Flask-Babel OR FLask-BabelEx
  is installed, but not initialized. Also, Flask-Security no longer
  has a dependency on either Flask-Babel or Flask-BabelEx - if neither
  are installed, it falls back to a dummy translation. *If your
  application expects translation services, it must specify the
  appropriate* *dependency AND initialize it.*

* (#394) Email input is now normalized prior to being stored in the
  DB. Previously, it was validated, but the raw input was stored.
  Normalization and validation rely on the email_validator package.
  The "MailUtil" class provides the interface for normalization and
  validation - allowing all this to be customized. If you have unicode
  local or domain parts - existing users may have difficulties logging
  in. Administratively you need to read each user record, normalize
  the email (see "MailUtil"), and write it back.

* (#381) Passwords are now, by default, normalized using Python's
  unicodedata.normalize() method. The
  "SECURITY_PASSWORD_NORMALIZE_FORM" defaults to "NKFD". This brings
  Flask-Security in line with the NIST recommendations outlined in
  Memorized Secret Verifiers If your users have unicode passwords they
  may have difficulty authenticating. You can turn off this
  normalization or have your users reset their passwords. Password
  normalization and validation has been encapsulated in a new
  "PasswordUtil" class. This replaces the method "password_validator"
  introduced in 3.4.0.

* (#403) By default all forms that have an email as input now use the
  wtforms html5 "EmailField". For most applications this will make the
  user experience slightly nicer - especially for mobile devices. Some
  applications use the email form field for other identity attributes
  (such as username). If your application does this you will probably
  need to subclass "LoginForm" and change the email type back to
  StringField.

* (#338) By default, both passwords and authentication tokens use the
  same attribute "fs_uniquifier" to uniquely identify the user. This
  means that if the user changes or resets their password, all
  authentication tokens also become invalid. This could be viewed as a
  feature or a bug. If this behavior isn't desired, add another
  uniquifier: "fs_token_uniquifier" to your UserModel and that will be
  used to generate authentication tokens.

* (#418) Fix CSRF vulnerability w.r.t. getting QRcodes. Both two-
  factor and unified-signup had a separate GET endpoint to fetch the
  QRcode when setting up an authenticator app. GETS don't have any
  CSRF protection. Both of those endpoints have been completely
  removed, and the QRcode is embedded in a successful POST of the
  setup form. The changes to the templates are minimal and of course
  if you didn't override the template - there is no compatibility
  concern.

* (#421) Fix CSRF vulnerability on */login* and */change* that could
  return the callers authentication token. Now, callers can only get
  the authentication token on successful POST calls.


Version 3.4.5
=============

Released January 8, 2021

Security Vulnerability Fix.

Two CSRF vulnerabilities were reported: qrcode and login. This release
fixes the more severe of the 2 - the */login* vulnerability. The
QRcode issue has a much smaller risk profile since a) it is only for
two-factor authentication using an authenticator app b) the qrcode is
only available during the time the user is first setting up their
authentication app. The QRcode issue has been fixed in 4.0.


Fixed
-----

* (#421) GET on */login* and */change* could return the callers
  authentication_token. This is a security concern since GETs don't
  have CSRF protection. This bug was introduced in 3.3.0.


Backwards Compatibility Concerns
--------------------------------

* (#421) Fix CSRF vulnerability on */login* and */change* that could
  return the callers authentication token. Now, callers can only get
  the authentication token on successful POST calls.


Version 3.4.4
=============

Released July 27, 2020

Bug/regression fixes.


Fixed
-----

* (#359) Basic Auth broken. When the unauthenticated handler was
  changed to provide a more uniform/consistent response - it broke
  using Basic Auth from a browser, since it always redirected rather
  than returning 401. Now, if the response headers contain  "WWW-
  Authenticate" (which is set if "basic" @auth_required method is
  used), a 401 is returned. See below for backwards compatibility
  concerns.

* (#362) As part of figuring out issue 359 - a redirect loop was
  found. In release 3.3.0 code was put in to redirect to
  "SECURITY_POST_LOGIN_VIEW" when GET or POST was called and the
  caller was already authenticated. The method used would honor the
  request "next" query parameter. This could cause redirect loops. The
  pre-3.3.0 behavior of redirecting to "SECURITY_POST_LOGIN_VIEW" and
  ignoring the "next" parameter has been restored.

* (#347) Fix peewee. Turns out - due to lack of unit tests - peewee
  hasn't worked since 'permissions' were added in 3.3. Furthermore,
  changes in 3.4 around get_id and alternative tokens also didn't work
  since peewee defines its own *get_id* method.


Compatibility Concerns
----------------------

In 3.3.0, "flask_security.auth_required()" was changed to add a
default argument if none was given. The default include all current
methods - "session", "token", and "basic". However "basic" really
isn't like the others and requires that we send back a "WWW-
Authenticate" header if authentication fails (and return a 401 and not
redirect). "basic" has been removed from the default set and must once
again be explicitly requested.


Version 3.4.3
=============

Released June 12, 2020

Minor fixes for a regression and a couple other minor changes


Fixed
-----

* (#340) Fix regression where tf_phone_number was required, even if
  SMS wasn't configured.

* (#342) Pick up some small documentation fixes from 4.0.0.


Version 3.4.2
=============

Released May 2, 2020

Only change is to move repo to the Flask-Middleware github
organization.


Version 3.4.1
=============

Released April 22, 2020

Fix a bunch of bugs in new unified sign in along with a couple other
major issues.


Fixed
-----

* (#298) Alternative ID feature ran afoul of postgres/psycopg2
  finickiness.

* (#300) JSON 401 responses had WWW-Authenticate Header attached -
  that caused browsers to pop up their own login/password form. Not
  what applications want.

* (#280) Allow admin/api to setup TFA (and unified sign in) out of
  band. Please see "UserDatastore.tf_set()",
  "UserDatastore.tf_reset()", "UserDatastore.us_set()",
  "UserDatastore.us_reset()" and "UserDatastore.reset_user_access()".

* (#305) We used form._errors which wasn't very pythonic, and it was
  removed in WTForms 2.3.0.

* (#310) WTForms 2.3.0 made email_validator optional - we need it.


Version 3.4.0
=============

Released March 31, 2020


Features
--------

* (#257) Support a unified sign in feature. Please see Unified Sign
  In.

* (#265) Add phone number validation class. This is used in both
  unified sign in as well as two-factor when using "sms".

* (#274) Add support for 'freshness' of caller's authentication. This
  permits endpoints to be additionally protected by ensuring a recent
  authentication.

* (#99, #195) Support pluggable password validators. Provide a default
  validator that offers complexity and breached support.

* (#266) Provide interface to two-factor send_token so that
  applications can provide error mitigation. Defaults to returning
  errors if can't send the verification code.

* (#247) Updated all-inclusive data models (fsqlaV2). Add fields
  necessary for the new unified sign in feature and changed 'username'
  to be unique (but not required).

* (#245) Use fs_uniquifier as the default Flask-Login 'alternative
  token'. Basically this means that changing the fs_uniquifier will
  cause outstanding auth tokens, session and remember me cookies to be
  invalidated. So if an account gets compromised, an admin can easily
  stop access. Prior to this cookies were storing the 'id' which is
  the user's primary key - difficult to change! (kishi85)


Fixed
-----

* (#273) Don't allow reset password for accounts that are disabled.

* (#282) Add configuration that disallows GET for logout. Allowing GET
  can cause some denial of service issues. The default still allows
  GET for backwards compatibility. (kantorii)

* (#258) Reset password wasn't integrated into the two-factor feature
  and therefore two-factor auth could be bypassed.

* (#254) Allow lists and sets as underlying permissions. (pffs)

* (#251) Allow a registration form to have additional fields that
  aren't part of the user model that are just passed to the
  user_registered.send signal, where the application can perform
  arbitrary additional actions required during registration. (kuba-
  lilz)

* (#249) Add configuration to disable the 'role-joining' optimization
  for SQLAlchemy. (pffs)

* (#238) Fix more issues with atomically setting the new TOTP secret
  when setting up two-factor. (kishi85)

* (#240) Fix Quart Compatibility. (ristellise)

* (#232) CSRF Cookie not being set when using 'Remember Me' cookie to
  re-sign in. (kishi85)

* (#229) Two-factor enabled accounts didn't work with the Remember Me
  feature. (kishi85)

As part of adding unified sign in, there were many similarities with
two-factor. Some refactoring was done to unify naming, configuration
variables etc. It should all be backwards compatible.

* In TWO_FACTOR_ENABLED_METHODS "mail" was changed to "email". "mail"
  will still be honored if already stored in DB. Also
  "google_authenticator" is now just "authenticator".

* TWO_FACTOR_SECRET, TWO_FACTOR_URI_SERVICE_NAME,
  TWO_FACTOR_SMS_SERVICE, and TWO_FACTOR_SMS_SERVICE_CONFIG have all
  been deprecated in favor of names that are the same for two-factor
  and unified sign in.

Other changes with possible backwards compatibility issues:

* "/tf-setup" never did any phone number validation. Now it does.

* "two_factor_setup.html" template - the chosen_method check was
  changed to "email". If you have your own custom template - be sure
  make that change.


Version 3.3.3
=============

Released February 11, 2020

Minor changes required to work with latest released Werkzeug and
Flask-Login.


Version 3.3.2
=============

Released December 7, 2019

* (#215) Fixed 2FA totp secret regeneration bug (kishi85)

* (#172) Fixed 'next' redirect error in login view

* (#221) Fixed regressions in login view when already authenticated
  user again does a GET or POST.

* (#219) Added example code for unit testing FS protected routes.

* (#223) Integrated two-factor auth into registration and
  confirmation.

Thanks to kuba-lilz and kishi85 for finding and providing detailed
issue reports.

In Flask-Security 3.3.0 the login view was changed to allow already
authenticated users to access the view. Prior to 3.3.0, the login view
was protected with @anonymous_user_required - so any access (via GET
or POST) would simply redirect the user to the "POST_LOGIN_VIEW". With
the 3.3.0 changes, both GET and POST behaved oddly. GET simply
returned the login template, and POST attempted to log out the current
user, and log in the new user. This was problematic since this
couldn't possibly work with CSRF. The old behavior has been restored,
with the subtle change that older Flask-Security releases did not look
at "next" in the form or request for the redirect, and now, all
redirects from the login view will honor "next".


Version 3.3.1
=============

Released November 16, 2019

* (#197) Add Quart compatibility (Ristellise)

* (#194) Add Python 3.8 support into CI (jdevera)

* (#196) Improve docs around Single Page Applications and React
  (acidjunk)

* (#201) fsqla model was added to __init__.py making Sqlalchemy a
  required package. That is wrong and has been removed. Applications
  must now explicitly import from "flask_security.models"

* (#204) Fix/improve examples and quickstart to show one MUST call
  hash_password() when creating users programmatically. Also show real
  SECRET_KEYs and PASSWORD_SALTs and how to generate them.

* (#209) Add argon2 as an allowable password hash.

* (#210) Improve integration with Flask-Admin. Actually - this PR
  improves localization support by adding a method "_fsdomain" to
  jinja2's global environment. Added documentation around
  localization.


Version 3.3.0
=============

Released September 26, 2019

**There are several default behavior changes that might break existing
applications. Most have configuration variables that restore prior
behavior**.

**If you use Authentication Tokens (rather than session cookies) you
MUST make a (small) change. Please see below for details.**

* (#120) Native support for Permissions as part of Roles. Endpoints
  can be protected via permissions that are evaluated based on role(s)
  that the user has.

* (#126, #93, #96) Revamp entire CSRF handling. This adds support for
  Single Page Applications and having CSRF protection for
  browser(session) authentication but ignored for token based
  authentication. Add extensive documentation about all the options.

* (#156) Token authentication is slow. Please see below for details on
  how to enable a new, fast implementation.

* (#130) Enable applications to provide their own "render_json()"
  method so that they can create unified API responses.

* (#121) Unauthorized callback not quite right. Split into 2 different
  callbacks - one for unauthorized and one for unauthenticated. Made
  default unauthenticated handler use Flask-Login's unauthenticated
  method to make everything uniform. Extensive documentation added.
  *.Security.unauthorized_callback* has been deprecated.

* (#120) Add complete User and Role model mixins that support all
  features. Modify tests and Quickstart documentation to show how to
  use these. Please see Responses for details.

* Improve documentation for "UserDatastore.create_user()" to make
  clear that hashed password should be passed in.

* Improve documentation for "UserDatastore" and
  "verify_and_update_password()" to make clear that caller must commit
  changes to DB if using a session based datastore.

* (#122) Clarify when to use "confirm_register_form" rather than
  "register_form".

* Fix bug in 2FA that didn't commit DB after using
  *verify_and_update_password*.

* Fix bug(s) in UserDatastore where changes to user "active" flag
  weren't being added to DB.

* (#127) JSON response was failing due to LazyStrings in error
  response.

* (#117) Making a user inactive should stop all access immediately.

* (#134) Confirmation token can no longer be reused. Added
  *SECURITY_AUTO_LOGIN_AFTER_CONFIRM* option for applications that
  don't want the user to be automatically logged in after confirmation
  (defaults to True - existing behavior).

* (#159) The "/register" endpoint returned the Authentication Token
  even though confirmation was required. This was a huge security hole
  - it has been fixed.

* (#160) The 2FA totp_secret would be regenerated upon submission,
  making QRCode not work. (malware-watch)

* (#166) *default_render_json* uses "flask.make_response" and forces
  the Content-Type to JSON for generating the response (koekie)

* (#166) *SECURITY_MSG_UNAUTHENTICATED* added to the configuration.

* (#168) When using the @auth_required or @auth_token_required
  decorators, the token would be verified twice, and the DB would be
  queried twice for the user. Given how slow token verification is -
  this was a significant issue. That has been fixed.

* (#84) The "anonymous_user_required()" was not JSON friendly - always
  performing a redirect. Now, if the request 'wants' a JSON response -
  it will receive a 400 with an error message defined by
  *SECURITY_MSG_ANONYMOUS_USER_REQUIRED*.

* (#145) Improve 2FA templates to that they can be localized. (taavie)

* (#173) *SECURITY_UNAUTHORIZED_VIEW* didn't accept a url (just an
  endpoint). All other view configurations did. That has been fixed.


Possible compatibility issues
-----------------------------

* (#164) In prior releases, the Authentication Token was returned as
  part of the JSON response to each successful call to */login*,
  */change*, or */reset/{token}* API call. This is not a great idea
  since for browser-based UIs that used JSON request/response, and
  used session based authentication - they would be sent this token -
  even though it was likely ignored. Since these tokens by default
  have no expiration time this exposed a needless security hole. The
  new default behavior is to ONLY return the Authentication Token from
  those APIs if the query param "include_auth_token" is added to the
  request. Prior behavior can be restored by setting the
  *SECURITY_BACKWARDS_COMPAT_AUTH_TOKEN* configuration variable.

* (#120) "RoleMixin" now has a method "get_permissions()" which is
  called as part each request to add Permissions to the authenticated
  user. It checks if the RoleModel has a property "permissions" and
  assumes it is a comma separated string of permissions. If your model
  already has such a property this will likely fail. You need to
  override "get_permissions()" and simply return an emtpy set.

* (#121) Changes the default (failure) behavior for views protected
  with @auth_required, @token_auth_required, or @http_auth_required.
  Before, a 401 was returned with some stock html. Now, Flask-
  Login.unauthorized() is called (the same as @login_required does) -
  which by default redirects to a login page/view. If you had provided
  your own *.Security.unauthorized_callback* there are no changes -
  that will still be called first. The old default behavior can be
  restored by setting *SECURITY_BACKWARDS_COMPAT_UNAUTHN* to True.
  Please see Responses for details.

* (#127) Fix for LazyStrings in json error response. The fix for this
  has Flask-Security registering its own JsonEncoder on its blueprint.
  If you registered your own JsonEncoder for your app - it will no
  longer be called when serializing responses to Flask-Security
  endpoints. You can register your JsonEncoder on Flask-Security's
  blueprint by sending it as *json_encoder_cls* as part of
  initialization. Be aware that your JsonEncoder needs to handle
  LazyStrings (see speaklater).

* (#84) Prior to this fix - anytime the decorator
  "anonymous_user_required()" failed, it caused a redirect to the
  post_login_view. Now, if the caller wanted a JSON response, it will
  return a 400.

* (#156) Faster Authentication Token introduced the following non-
  backwards compatible behavior change:

     * Since the old Authentication Token algorithm used the (hashed)
       user's password, those tokens would be invalidated whenever the
       user changed their password. This is not likely to be what most
       users expect. Since the new Authentication Token algorithm
       doesn't refer to the user's password, changing the user's
       password won't invalidate outstanding Authentication Tokens.
       The method "UserDatastore.set_uniquifier()" can be used by an
       administrator to change a user's "fs_uniquifier" - but nothing
       the user themselves can do to invalidate their Authentication
       Tokens. Setting the
       *SECURITY_BACKWARDS_COMPAT_AUTH_TOKEN_INVALIDATE* configuration
       variable will cause the user's "fs_uniquifier" to be changed
       when they change their password, thus restoring prior behavior.


New fast authentication token implementation
--------------------------------------------

Current auth tokens are slow because they use the user's password
(hashed) as a uniquifier (the user id isn't really enough since it
might be reused). This requires checking the (hashed) password against
what is in the token on EVERY request - however hashing is (on
purpose) slow. So this can add almost a whole second to every request.

To solve this, a new attribute in the User model was added -
"fs_uniquifier". If this is present in your User model, then it will
be used instead of the password for ensuring the token corresponds to
the correct user. This is very fast. If that attribute is NOT present
- then the behavior falls back to the existing (slow) method.


DB Migration
~~~~~~~~~~~~

To use the new UserModel mixins or to add the column
"user.fs_uniquifier" to speed up token authentication, a schema AND
data migration needs to happen. If you are using Alembic the schema
migration is easy - but you need to add "fs_uniquifier" values to all
your existing data. You can add code like this to your
migrations::update method:

   # be sure to MODIFY this line to make nullable=True:
   op.add_column('user', sa.Column('fs_uniquifier', sa.String(length=64), nullable=True))

   # update existing rows with unique fs_uniquifier
   import uuid
   user_table = sa.Table('user', sa.MetaData(), sa.Column('id', sa.Integer, primary_key=True),
                         sa.Column('fs_uniquifier', sa.String))
   conn = op.get_bind()
   for row in conn.execute(sa.select([user_table.c.id])):
       conn.execute(user_table.update().values(fs_uniquifier=uuid.uuid4().hex).where(user_table.c.id == row['id']))

   # finally - set nullable to false
   op.alter_column('user', 'fs_uniquifier', nullable=False)

   # for MySQL the previous line has to be replaced with...
   # op.alter_column('user', 'fs_uniquifier', existing_type=sa.String(length=64), nullable=False)


Version 3.2.0
=============

Released June 26th 2019

* (#80) Support caching of authentication token (eregnier opr #839).
  This adds a new configuration variable
  *SECURITY_USE_VERIFY_PASSWORD_CACHE* which enables a cache (with
  configurable TTL) for authentication tokens. This is a big
  performance boost for those accessing Flask-Security via token as
  opposed to session.

* (#81) Support for JSON/Single-Page-Application. This completes
  support for non-form based access to Flask-Security. See PR for
  details. (jwag956)

* (#79 Add POST logout to enhance JSON usage (jwag956).

* (#73) Fix get_user for various DBs (jwag956). This is a more
  complete fix than in opr #633.

* (#78, #103) Add formal openapi API spec (jwag956).

* (#86, #94, #98, #101, #104) Add Two-factor authentication (opr #842)
  (baurt, jwag956).

* (#108) Fix form field label translations (jwag956)

* (#115) Fix form error message translations (upstream #801) (jwag956)

* (#87) Convert entire repo to Black (baurt)


Version 3.1.0
=============

Released never

* (#53) Use Security.render_template in mails too (noirbizarre opr
  #487)

* (#56) Optimize DB accesses by using an SQL JOIN when retrieving a
  user. (nfvs opr #679)

* (#57) Add base template to security templates (grihabor opr #697)

* (#73) datastore: get user by numeric identity attribute (jirikuncar
  opr #633)

* (#58) bugfix: support application factory pattern (briancappello opr
  #703)

* (#60) Make SECURITY_PASSWORD_SINGLE_HASH a list of scheme ignoring
  double hash (noirbizarre opr #714)

* (#61) Allow custom login_manager to be passed in to Flask-Security
  (jaza opr #717)

* (#62) Docs for OAauth2-based custom login manager (jaza opr #727)

* (#63) core: make the User model check the password (mklassen opr
  #779)

* (#64) Customizable send_mail (abulte opr #730)

* (#68) core: fix default for UNAUTHORIZED_VIEW (jirijunkar opr #726)

These should all be backwards compatible.

Possible compatibility issues:

* #487 - prior to this, render_template() was overridable for views,
  but not emails. If anyone actually relied on this behavior, this has
  changed.

* #703 - get factory pattern working again. There was a very complex
  dance between Security() instantiation and init_app regarding
  kwargs. This has been rationalized (hopefully).

* #679 - SqlAlchemy SQL improvement. It is possible you will get the
  following error:

     Got exception during processing: <class 'sqlalchemy.exc.InvalidRequestError'> -
     'User.roles' does not support object population - eager loading cannot be applied.

  This is likely solvable by removing "lazy='dynamic'" from your Role
  definition.

Performance improvements:

* #679 - for sqlalchemy, for each request, there would be 2 DB
  accesses - now there is one.

Testing: For datastores operations, Sqlalchemy, peewee, pony were all
tested against sqlite, postgres, and mysql real databases.


Version 3.0.2
=============

Released April 30th 2019

* (opr #439) HTTP Auth respects SECURITY_USER_IDENTITY_ATTRIBUTES
  (pnpnpn)

* (opr #660) csrf_enabled` deprecation fix (abulte)

* (opr #671) Fix referrer loop in _get_unauthorized_view(). (nfvs)

* (opr #675) Fix AttributeError in _request_loader (sbagan)

* (opr #676) Fix timing attack on login form (cript0nauta)

* (opr #683) Close db connection after running tests (reambus)

* (opr #691) docs: add password salt to SQLAlchemy app example
  (KshitijKarthick)

* (opr #692) utils: fix incorrect email sender type (switowski)

* (opr #696) Fixed broken Click link (williamhatcher)

* (opr #722) Fix password recovery confirmation on deleted user
  (kesara)

* (opr #747) Update login_user.html (rickwest)

* (opr #748) i18n: configurable the dirname domain (escudero)

* (opr #835) adds relevant user to reset password form for validation
  purposes (fuhrysteve)

These are bug fixes and a couple very small additions. No change in
behavior and no new functionality. 'opr#' is the original pull request
from https://github.com/mattupstate/flask-security


Version 3.0.1
=============

Released April 28th 2019

* Support 3.7 as part of CI

* Rebrand to this forked repo

* (#15) Build docs and translations as part of CI

* (#17) Move to msgcheck from pytest-translations

* (opr #669) Fix for Read the Docs (jirikuncar)

* (opr #710) Spanish translation (maukoquiroga)

* (opr #712) i18n: improvements of German translations (eseifert)

* (opr #713) i18n: add Portuguese (Brazilian) translation (dinorox)

* (opr #719) docs: fix anchor links and typos (kesara)

* (opr #751) i18n: fix missing space (abulte)

* (opr #762) docs: fixed proxy import (lsmith)

* (opr #767) Update customizing.rst (allanice001)

* (opr #776) i18n: add Portuguese (Portugal) translation (micael-
  grilo)

* (opr #791) Fix documentation for mattupstate#781 (fmerges)

* (opr #796) Chinese translations (Steinkuo)

* (opr #808) Clarify that a commit is needed after login_user
  (christophertull)

* (opr #823) Add Turkish translation (Admicos)

* (opr #831) Catalan translation (miceno)

These are all documentation and i18n changes - NO code changes. All
except the last 3 were accepted and reviewed by the original Flask-
Security team. Thanks as always to all the contributors.


Version 3.0.0
=============

Released May 29th 2017

* Fixed a bug when user clicking confirmation link after confirmation
  and expiration causes confirmation email to resend. (see #556)

* Added support for I18N.

* Added options *SECURITY_EMAIL_PLAINTEXT* and *SECURITY_EMAIL_HTML*
  for sending respectively plaintext and HTML version of email.

* Fixed validation when missing login information.

* Fixed condition for token extraction from JSON body.

* Better support for universal bdist wheel.

* Added port of CLI using Click configurable using options
  *SECURITY_CLI_USERS_NAME* and *SECURITY_CLI_ROLES_NAME*.

* Added new configuration option *SECURITY_DATETIME_FACTORY* which can
  be used to force default timezone for newly created datetimes. (see
  mattupstate/flask-security#466)

* Better IP tracking if using Flask 0.12.

* Renamed deprecated Flask-WFT base form class.

* Added tests for custom forms configured using app config.

* Added validation and tests for next argument in logout endpoint.
  (see #499)

* Bumped minimal required versions of several packages.

* Extended test matric on Travis CI for minimal and released package
  versions.

* Added of .editorconfig and forced tests for code style.

* Fixed a security bug when validating a confirmation token, also
  checks if the email that the token was created with matches the
  user's current email.

* Replaced token loader with request loader.

* Changed trackable behavior of *login_user* when IP can not be
  detected from a request from 'untrackable' to *None* value.

* Use ProxyFix instead of inspecting X-Forwarded-For header.

* Fix identical problem with app as with datastore.

* Removed always-failing assertion.

* Fixed failure of init_app to set self.datastore.

* Changed to new style flask imports.

* Added proper error code when returning JSON response.

* Changed obsolete Required validator from WTForms to DataRequired.
  Bumped Flask-WTF to 0.13.

* Fixed missing *SECURITY_SUBDOMAIN* in config docs.

* Added cascade delete in PeeweeDatastore.

* Added notes to docs about *SECURITY_USER_IDENTITY_ATTRIBUTES*.

* Inspect value of *SECURITY_UNAUTHORIZED_VIEW*.

* Send password reset instructions if an attempt has expired.

* Added "Forgot password?" link to LoginForm description.

* Upgraded passlib, and removed bcrypt version restriction.

* Removed a duplicate line ('retype_password': 'Retype Password') in
  forms.py.

* Various documentation improvement.


Version 1.7.5
=============

Released December 2nd 2015

* Added *SECURITY_TOKEN_MAX_AGE* configuration setting

* Fixed calls to *SQLAlchemyUserDatastore.get_user(None)* (this now
  returns *False* instead of raising a *TypeError*

* Fixed URL generation adding extra slashes in some cases (see GitHub
  #343)

* Fixed handling of trackable IP addresses when the *X-Forwarded-For*
  header contains multiple values

* Include WWW-Authenticate headers in *@auth_required* authentication
  checks

* Fixed error when *check_token* function is used with a json list

* Added support for custom *AnonymousUser* classes

* Restricted *forgot_password* endpoint to anonymous users

* Allowed unauthorized callback to be overridden

* Fixed issue where passwords cannot be reset if currently set to
  *None*

* Ensured that password reset tokens are invalidated after use

* Updated *is_authenticated* and *is_active* functions to support
  Flask-Login changes

* Various documentation improvements


Version 1.7.4
=============

Released October 13th 2014

* Fixed a bug related to changing existing passwords from plaintext to
  hashed

* Fixed a bug in form validation that did not enforce case
  insensitivity

* Fixed a bug with validating redirects


Version 1.7.3
=============

Released June 10th 2014

* Fixed a bug where redirection to *SECURITY_POST_LOGIN_VIEW* was not
  respected

* Fixed string encoding in various places to be friendly to unicode

* Now using *werkzeug.security.safe_str_cmp* to check tokens

* Removed user information from JSON output on */reset* responses

* Added Python 3.4 support


Version 1.7.2
=============

Released May 6th 2014

* Updated IP tracking to check for *X-Forwarded-For* header

* Fixed a bug regarding the re-hashing of passwords with a new
  algorithm

* Fixed a bug regarding the *password_changed* signal.


Version 1.7.1
=============

Released January 14th 2014

* Fixed a bug where passwords would fail to verify when specifying a
  password hash algorithm


Version 1.7.0
=============

Released January 10th 2014

* Python 3.3 support!

* Dependency updates

* Fixed a bug when *SECURITY_LOGIN_WITHOUT_CONFIRMATION = True* did
  not allow users to log in

* Added *SECURITY_SEND_PASSWORD_RESET_NOTICE_EMAIL* configuration
  option to optionally send password reset notice emails

* Add documentation for *@security.send_mail_task*

* Move to *request.get_json* as *request.json* is now deprecated in
  Flask

* Fixed a bug when using AJAX to change a user's password

* Added documentation for select functions in the
  *flask_security.utils* module

* Fixed a bug in *flask_security.forms.NextFormMixin*

* Added *CHANGE_PASSWORD_TEMPLATE* configuration option to optionally
  specify a different change password template

* Added the ability to specify addtional fields on the user model to
  be used for identifying the user via the *USER_IDENTITY_ATTRIBUTES*
  configuration option

* An error is now shown if a user tries to change their password and
  the password is the same as before. The message can be customed with
  the *SECURITY_MSG_PASSWORD_IS_SAME* configuration option

* Fixed a bug in *MongoEngineUserDatastore* where user model would not
  be updated when using the *add_role_to_user* method

* Added *SECURITY_SEND_PASSWORD_CHANGE_EMAIL* configuration option to
  optionally disable password change email from being sent

* Fixed a bug in the *find_or_create_role* method of the PeeWee
  datastore

* Removed pypy tests

* Fixed some tests

* Include CHANGES and LICENSE in MANIFEST.in

* A bit of documentation cleanup

* A bit of code cleanup including removal of unnecessary utcnow call
  and simplification of get_max_age method


Version 1.6.9
=============

Released August 20th 2013

* Fix bug in SQLAlchemy datastore's *get_user* function

* Fix bug in PeeWee datastore's *remove_role_from_user* function

* Fixed import error caused by new Flask-WTF release


Version 1.6.8
=============

Released August 1st 2013

* Fixed bug with case sensitivity of email address during login

* Code cleanup regarding token_callback

* Ignore validation errors in find_user function for
  MongoEngineUserDatastore


Version 1.6.7
=============

Released July 11th 2013

* Made password length form error message configurable

* Fixed email confirmation bug that prevented logged in users from
  confirming their email


Version 1.6.6
=============

Released June 28th 2013

* Fixed dependency versions


Version 1.6.5
=============

Released June 20th 2013

* Fixed bug in
  *flask.ext.security.confirmable.generate_confirmation_link*


Version 1.6.4
=============

Released June 18th 2013

* Added *SECURITY_DEFAULT_REMEMBER_ME* configuration value to unify
  behavior between endpoints

* Fixed Flask-Login dependency problem

* Added optional *next* parameter to registration endpoint, similar to
  that of login


Version 1.6.3
=============

Released May 8th 2013

* Fixed bug in regards to imports with latest version of MongoEngine


Version 1.6.2
=============

Released April 4th 2013

* Fixed bug with http basic auth


Version 1.6.1
=============

Released April 3rd 2013

* Fixed bug with signals


Version 1.6.0
=============

Released March 13th 2013

* Added Flask-Pewee support

* Password hashing is now more flexible and can be changed to a
  different type at will

* Flask-Login messages are configurable

* AJAX requests must now send a CSRF token for security reasons

* Form messages are now configurable

* Forms can now be extended with more fields

* Added change password endpoint

* Added the user to the request context when successfully
  authenticated via http basic and token auth

* The Flask-Security blueprint subdomain is now configurable

* Redirects to other domains are now not allowed during requests that
  may redirect

* Template paths can be configured

* The welcome/register email can now optionally be sent to the user

* Passwords can now contain non-latin characters

* Fixed a bug when confirming an account but the account has been
  deleted


Version 1.5.4
=============

Released January 6th 2013

* Fix bug in forms with *csrf_enabled* parameter not accounting
  attempts to login using JSON data


Version 1.5.3
=============

Released December 23rd 2012

* Change dependency requirement


Version 1.5.2
=============

Released December 11th 2012

* Fix a small bug in *flask_security.utils.login_user* method


Version 1.5.1
=============

Released November 26th 2012

* Fixed bug with *next* form variable

* Added better documentation regarding Flask-Mail configuration

* Added ability to configure email subjects


Version 1.5.0
=============

Released October 11th 2012

* Major release. Upgrading from previous versions will require a bit
  of work to accommodate API changes. See documentation for a list of
  new features and for help on how to upgrade.


Version 1.2.3
=============

Released June 12th 2012

* Fixed a bug in the RoleMixin eq/ne functions


Version 1.2.2
=============

Released April 27th 2012

* Fixed bug where *roles_required* and *roles_accepted* did not pass
  the next argument to the login view


Version 1.2.1
=============

Released March 28th 2012

* Added optional user model mixin parameter for datastores

* Added CreateRoleCommand to available Flask-Script commands


Version 1.2.0
=============

Released March 12th 2012

* Added configuration option *SECURITY_FLASH_MESSAGES* which can be
  set to a boolean value to specify if Flask-Security should flash
  messages or not.


Version 1.1.0
=============

Initial release
