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Login Security Solution – WordPress plugin

2022-05-29 01:52| 来源: 网络整理| 查看: 265

Description

A simple way to lock down login security for multisite and regular WordPress installations.

Blocks brute force and dictionary attacks without inconveniencing legitimate users or administrators

Tracks IP addresses, usernames, and passwords Monitors logins made by form submissions, XML-RPC requests and auth cookies If a login failure uses data matching a past failure, the plugin slows down response times. The more failures, the longer the delay. This limits attackers ability to effectively probe your site, so they’ll give up and go find an easier target. If an account seems breached, the “user” is immediately logged out and forced to use WordPress’ password reset utility. This prevents any damage from being done and verifies the user’s identity. But if the user is coming in from an IP address they have used in the past, an email is sent to the user making sure it was them logging in. All without intervention by an administrator. Can notify the administrator of attacks and breaches Supports IPv6

Thoroughly examines and enforces password strength. Includes full UTF-8 character set support if PHP’s mbstring extension is enabled. The tests have caught every password dictionary entry I’ve tried.

Minimum length (customizable) Doesn’t match blog info Doesn’t match user data Must either have numbers, punctuation, upper and lower case characters or be very long. Note: alphabets with only one case (e.g. Arabic, Hebrew, etc.) are automatically exempted from the upper/lower case requirement. Non-sequential codepoints Non-sequential keystrokes (custom sequence files can be added) Not in the password dictionary files you’ve provided (if any) Decodes “leet” speak The password/phrase is not found by the dict dictionary program (if available)

Blocks discovering user names via the “?author=” query string

Password aging (optional) (not recommended)

Users need to change password every x days (customizable) Grace period for picking a new password (customizable) Remembers old passwords (quantity is customizable)

Administrators can require all users to change their passwords

Done via a flag in each user’s database entry No mail is sent, keeping your server off of spam lists

Logs out idle sessions (optional) (idle time is customizable)

Maintenance mode (optional)

Publicly viewable content remains visible Disables logins by all users, except administrators Logs out existing sessions, except administrators Disables posting of comments Useful for maintenance or emergency reasons This is separate from WordPress’ maintenance mode

Prevents information disclosures from failed logins

Improvements Over Similar WordPress Plugins Multisite network support Monitors authentication cookies for bad user names and hashes Tracks logins from XML-RPC requests Adjusts WordPress’ password policy user interfaces Takes security seriously so the plugin itself does not open your site to SQL, HTML, or header injection vulnerabilities Notice-free code means no information disclosures if display_errors is on and error_reporting includes E_NOTICE Only loads files, actions, and filters needed for enabled options and the page’s context Provides an option to have deactivation remove all of this plugin’s data from the database Uses WordPress’ features rather than fighting or overriding them No advertising, promotions, or beacons Proper internationalization support Clean, documented code Unit tests covering 100% of the main class Internationalized unit tests

For reference, the similar plugins include:

6Scan Security Better WP Security Enforce Strong Password Force Strong Passwords Limit Login Attempts Login Lock Login LockDown PMC Lockdown Simple Login Lockdown Wordfence Security WP Login Security WP Login Security 2 Compatibility with Other Plugins

Some plugins provide similar functionality. These overlaps can lead to conflicts during program execution. Please read the FAQ!

Translations Deutsche, Deutschland (German, Germany) (de_DE) by Christian Foellmann Français, français (French, France) (fr_FR) by mermouy and and Fx Bénard Italiano, Italia (Italian, Italy) (it_IT) by Daniele Passalacqua 日本語, 日本国 (Japanese, Japan) (ja_JP) by motoyamayuki Nederlands, Nederland (Dutch, Netherlands) (nl_NL) by Friso van Wieringen polski, Polska (Polish, Poland) (pl_PL) by Michał Seweryniak miniol Português, Brasil (Portugese, Brazil) (pt_BR) by Valdir Trombini suomi, Suomi (Finnish, Finland) (fi_FI) by Juha Remes Newman101 Source Code, Bugs, and Feature Requests

Development of this plugin happens on GitHub. Please submit bug and feature requests, pull requests, wiki entries there. Releases are then squashed and pushed to WordPress’ Plugins SVN repository. This division is necessary due having being chastised that “the Plugins SVN repository is a release system, not a development system.”

Old tickets are in the Plugins Trac.

Strong, Unique Passwords Are Important

Yeah, creating, storing/remembering, and using a different, strong password for each site you use is a hassle. But it is absolutely necessary.

Password lists get stolen on a regular basis from big name sites (like Linkedin for example!). Criminals then have unlimited time to decode the passwords. In general, 50% of those passwords are so weak they get figured out in a matter of seconds. Plus there are computers on the Internet dedicated to pounding the sites with login attempts, hoping to get lucky.

Many people use the same password for multiple sites. Once an attacker figures out your password on one site, they’ll try it on your accounts at other sites. It gets ugly very fast.

But don’t despair! There are good, free tools that make doing the right thing a piece of cake. For example: KeePassX, KeePass, or 1Password

Securing Your WordPress Site is Important

You’re probably thinking “There’s nothing valuable on my website. No one will bother breaking into it.” What you need to realize is that attackers are going after your visitors. They put stealth code on your website that pushes malware into your readers’ browsers.

According to SophosLabs more than 30,000 websites are infected every day and 80% of those infected sites are legitimate. Eighty-five percent of all malware, including viruses, worms, spyware, adware and Trojans, comes from the web. Today, drive-by downloads have become the top web threat.

— Security Threat Report 2012

So if your site does get cracked, not only do you waste hours cleaning up, your reputation gets sullied, security software flags your site as dangerous, and worst of all, you’ve inadvertently helped infect the computers of your clients and friends. Oh, and if the attack involves malware, that malware has probably gotten itself into your computer.

Actions login_security_solution_insert_fail login_security_solution_notify_breach login_security_solution_notify_fail login_security_solution_fail_tier_dos Filters

The following filters allow customizing email subjects and messages. If either the “subject”or “message” filters in a method returns an empty string, the given method will skip calling wp_mail().

login_security_solution_notify_breach_subject login_security_solution_notify_breach_message login_security_solution_notify_breach_user_subject login_security_solution_notify_breach_user_message login_security_solution_notify_fail_subject login_security_solution_notify_fail_message Unit Tests

A thorough set of unit tests are found in the tests directory.

The plugin needs to be installed and activated before running the tests.

To execute the tests, cd into this plugin’s directory and call phpunit tests

Translations can be tested by changing the WPLANG value in wp-config.php.

Please note that the tests make extensive use of database transactions. Many tests will be skipped if your wp_options and wp_usermeta tables are not using the InnoDB storage engine.

Removal

This plugin offers the ability to remove all of this plugin’s settings from your database. Go to WordPress’ “Plugins” admin interface and click the “Settings” link for this plugin. In the “Deactivate” entry, click the “Yes, delete the damn data” button and save the form.

Use WordPress’ “Plugins” admin interface to click the “Deactivate” link

Remove the login-security-solution directory from the server

In the event you didn’t pick the “Yes, delete the damn data” option or you manually deleted the plugin, you can get rid of the settings by running three queries. These queries are exapmles, using the default table name prefix of, wp_. If you have changed your database prefix, adjust the queries accordingly.

DROP TABLE wp_login_security_solution_fail; DELETE FROM wp_options WHERE option_name LIKE 'login-security-solution%'; DELETE FROM wp_usermeta WHERE meta_key LIKE 'login-security-solution%';= Inspiration and References =

Password Research

Why passwords have never been weaker — and crackers have never been stronger, Dan Goodin You can never have too many passwords: techniques for evaluating a huge corpus, Joseph Bonneau Analyzing Password Strength, Martin Devillers Consumer Password Worst Practices, Imperva Preventing Brute Force Attacks on your Web Login, Bryan Rite Password Strength, Randall Munroe

Technical Info

The Extreme UTF-8 Table, infosnel.nl A Recommendation for IPv6 Address Text Representation, Seiichi Kawamura and Masanobu Kawashima

Password Lists

Dazzlepod Password List, Dazzlepod Common Passwords, Fravia The Top 500 Worst Passwords of All Time, Mark Burnett To Do Provide a user interface to the fail table. Installation

Before installing this plugin, read the FAQ!

If your WP install is behind a proxy or load balancer, please be aware that this plugin uses the REMOTE_ADDR provided by the web server (as does WordPress’ new comment functionality and the Akismet plugin). If you want our brute force tracking to work, we advise adjusting your wp-config.php file to manually set the REMOTE_ADDR to a data source appropriate for your environment. For example:

$_SERVER['REMOTE_ADDR'] = preg_replace('/^([^,]+).*$/', '\1', $_SERVER['HTTP_X_FORWARDED_FOR']);

Download the Login Security Solution zip file from WordPress’ plugin site: https://wordpress.org/plugins/login-security-solution/

Unzip the file.

Our existing tests are very effective, catching all of the 2 million entries in the Dazzlepod password list. But if you need to block specific passwords that my tests miss, this plugin offers the ability to provide your own dictionary files.

Add a file to the pw_dictionaries directory and place those passwords in it. One password per line.

Please be aware that checking the password files is computationally expensive. The following script runs through each of the password files and weeds out passwords caught by the other tests:

php utilities/reduce-dictionary-files.php

If your website has a large number of non-English-speaking users:

See if a keyboard sequence file exists in this plugin’s pw_sequences directory for your target languages. The following steps are for left-to-right languages. (For right-to-left languages, flip the direction of the motions indicated.)

Open a text editor and create a file in the pw_sequences directory Hold down the shift key Press the top left character key of the keyboard. NOTE: during this entire process, do not press function, control or whitespace keys (like tab, enter, delete, arrows, space, etc). Work your way across the top row, pressing each key across the row, one by one Press the left-most character key in the second row Go across the second row pressing each key Continue through the entire keyboard in the same manner Let go of the shift key Re-start the process at the top left key of the keyboard and work your way through the keyboard, now in lower-case mode Save the file and close the editor Feel free to submit the files to me so others can use it. See the features request section, below.

If a translation file for your language does not exist in this plugin’s languages directory, add one. Read https://codex.wordpress.org/I18n_for_WordPress_Developers for details. The files must use UTF-8 encoding. Send me the file and I’ll include it in future releases. See the features request section, below.

The last step of the new password validation process is checking if the password matches an entry in the dict program. See if dict is installed on your server and consider installing it if not. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dict

Upload the login-security-solution directory to your server’s /wp-content/plugins/ directory

Activate the plugin using WordPress’ admin interface:

Regular sites: Plugins Sites using multisite networks: My Sites | Network Admin | Plugins

Adjust the settings as desired. This plugin’s settings page can be reached via a sub-menu entry under WordPress’ “Settings” menu or this plugin’s entry on WordPress’ “Plugins” page. Sites using WordPress’ multisite network capability will find the “Settings” and “Plugin” menus under “My Sites | Network Admin”.

Run the “Change All Passwords” process. This is necessary to ensure all of your users have strong passwords. The user interface for doing so is accessible via a link in this plugin’s entry on WordPress’ “Plugins” page.

Ensure your password strength by changing it.

Hooks

Login Security Solution provides hooks in critical methods, allowing you to add custom behaviors.

FAQ Installation Instructions

Before installing this plugin, read the FAQ!

If your WP install is behind a proxy or load balancer, please be aware that this plugin uses the REMOTE_ADDR provided by the web server (as does WordPress’ new comment functionality and the Akismet plugin). If you want our brute force tracking to work, we advise adjusting your wp-config.php file to manually set the REMOTE_ADDR to a data source appropriate for your environment. For example:

$_SERVER['REMOTE_ADDR'] = preg_replace('/^([^,]+).*$/', '\1', $_SERVER['HTTP_X_FORWARDED_FOR']);

Download the Login Security Solution zip file from WordPress’ plugin site: https://wordpress.org/plugins/login-security-solution/

Unzip the file.

Our existing tests are very effective, catching all of the 2 million entries in the Dazzlepod password list. But if you need to block specific passwords that my tests miss, this plugin offers the ability to provide your own dictionary files.

Add a file to the pw_dictionaries directory and place those passwords in it. One password per line.

Please be aware that checking the password files is computationally expensive. The following script runs through each of the password files and weeds out passwords caught by the other tests:

php utilities/reduce-dictionary-files.php

If your website has a large number of non-English-speaking users:

See if a keyboard sequence file exists in this plugin’s pw_sequences directory for your target languages. The following steps are for left-to-right languages. (For right-to-left languages, flip the direction of the motions indicated.)

Open a text editor and create a file in the pw_sequences directory Hold down the shift key Press the top left character key of the keyboard. NOTE: during this entire process, do not press function, control or whitespace keys (like tab, enter, delete, arrows, space, etc). Work your way across the top row, pressing each key across the row, one by one Press the left-most character key in the second row Go across the second row pressing each key Continue through the entire keyboard in the same manner Let go of the shift key Re-start the process at the top left key of the keyboard and work your way through the keyboard, now in lower-case mode Save the file and close the editor Feel free to submit the files to me so others can use it. See the features request section, below.

If a translation file for your language does not exist in this plugin’s languages directory, add one. Read https://codex.wordpress.org/I18n_for_WordPress_Developers for details. The files must use UTF-8 encoding. Send me the file and I’ll include it in future releases. See the features request section, below.

The last step of the new password validation process is checking if the password matches an entry in the dict program. See if dict is installed on your server and consider installing it if not. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dict

Upload the login-security-solution directory to your server’s /wp-content/plugins/ directory

Activate the plugin using WordPress’ admin interface:

Regular sites: Plugins Sites using multisite networks: My Sites | Network Admin | Plugins

Adjust the settings as desired. This plugin’s settings page can be reached via a sub-menu entry under WordPress’ “Settings” menu or this plugin’s entry on WordPress’ “Plugins” page. Sites using WordPress’ multisite network capability will find the “Settings” and “Plugin” menus under “My Sites | Network Admin”.

Run the “Change All Passwords” process. This is necessary to ensure all of your users have strong passwords. The user interface for doing so is accessible via a link in this plugin’s entry on WordPress’ “Plugins” page.

Ensure your password strength by changing it.

Hooks

Login Security Solution provides hooks in critical methods, allowing you to add custom behaviors.

Compatibility with Other Plugins Better WP Security: Their “Enable Login Limits” and “Enable strong password enforcement” functionality conflict with our features. The good news is we provide more robust protection in those areas and the Better WP Security “Settings” page lets you disable those features in their plugin. This way you get to enjoy even better security than either plugin alone. Why should I pick a user name other than “admin”?

The WordPress installation process (currently) defaults to having the main administrator’s user’s name be “admin.” Many people don’t change it. Attackers know this, so now all they need to do to get into such sites is guess the password.

In addition, if you try to log in while your site is being attacked, this plugin will send you through the password reset process in order to verify your identity. While not the end of the world, it’s inconvenient.

Where did the “Change All Passwords” interface go?

A link to the page is found in this plugin’s entry in the “Plugins” admin interface:

Regular sites: Plugins Sites using multisite networks: My Sites | Network Admin | Plugins I just got hit with 500 failed logins! Why isn’t this plugin working?!?

Let’s turn the question around: “How long did it take to get in those 500 hits?” Chances are it took hours. (Six hours if they’re attacking with one thread, 2 hours if they’re coming at you with three threads, etc.) If this plugin wasn’t working, they’d have pulled it off under a minute. Similarly, without the slowed responses this plugin provides, an attacker given six hours against your site could probably get in over 170,000 hits.

Anyway, my real question for you is “Did they get in?” I’ll bet not. The strong passwords this plugin requires from your users lowers the chances of someone breaking in to just about zero.

And even if they do get lucky and figure out a password, Login Security Solution realizes they’re miscreants and kicks them out.

Will you provide lock outs / blocks in addition to slow downs?

If you look at it the right way, Login Security Solution provides lockouts (where “lockout” means “denies access” to attackers.) Below is a comparison of the attack handling logic used by Limit Login Attempts and Login Security Solution.

Limit Login Attempts

Invalid or Valid Credentials by Attacker or Actual User

Process authentication request (check IP address) Error message: “Too many failed login attempts.” (ACCESS DENIED.)

Note, this approach means an actual user can be denied access for 12 hours after making 4 mistakes.

Login Security Solution

Invalid Credentials by Attacker or Actual User

Process authentication request (check IP, user name, and password) Slow down the response Error message: “Incorrect username or password.” (ACCESS DENIED.)

Valid Credentials by Attacker

Process authentication request (check IP, user name, and password) Slow down the response Set force password change flag for user Error message: “Your password must be reset. Please submit this form to reset it.” (ACCESS DENIED.)

Valid Credentials by Actual User

Process authentication request (check IP, user name, and password) (If user is coming from their verified IP address, let them in, END) Slow down the response Error message: “Your password must be reset. Please submit this form to reset it.” (ACCESS DENIED.) On subsequent request… user verifies their identity via password reset process User’s IP address is added to their verified IP list for future reference

So both plugins deny access to attackers. But Login Security Solution has the bonuses of letting legitimate users log in and slowing the attacks down. Plus LSS monitors user names, passwords, and IP’s for attacks, while all of the other plugins just watch the IP address.

Won’t the slowdowns open my website to Denial of Service (DOS) attacks?

Yeah, the DOS potential is there. I mitigated it for the most part by disconnecting the database link (the most precious resource in most situations) before sleeping. But remember, distributed denial of service attacks are fairly easy to initiate these days. If someone really wants to shut down your site, they’ll be able to do it without even touching this plugin’s login failure process.

Where should I report bugs and feature requests?

Development of this plugin happens on GitHub. Please submit bug and feature requests, pull requests, wiki entries on our GitHub.

Information for Translators Do not commit the .mo files! They get created as part of the release process. Translation commits and pull requests should only touch the .po file. If you have other changes you wish to see made, please do so via separate commits in separate pull requests. When translating a new feature, please make that one commit. If other parts of the translation need updating, please make them in a separate commit. Please don’t change formatting inside the .po file Run git diff before all commits. Ensure only expected changes are being made. Do NOT translate items that have a comment above them saying Translation from WordPress. DO NOT TRANSLATE IT IN THIS PLUGIN. When starting a new translation, please take a look at an existing .po file to see which strings they are. Those phrases are already translated in WordPress’ core. Leaving them untranslated here ensures consistency with the rest of WordPress.

To start a new translation:

cd languages Adjust “CC” to your country code.

cp login-security-solution.pot login-security-solution-lc_CC.po

Edit the new login-security-solution-lc_CC.po file. Translation Information for Developers

To update the .pot file:

WordPress’ makepot utility directory should be in the same directory as the login-security-solution directory. If you don’t have this setup, here’s what to do:

cd into the directory above this one. svn checkout https://i18n.svn.wordpress.org/tools/trunk/ makepot

So, now you’ll have:

parent dir |- login-security-solution/ |- makepot/

cd login-security-solution/languages

./makepot.sh

Then, bringing the .po files up to date is as easy as:

./updatepos.sh

Finally, to update the .mo files for testing or release:

./makemos.sh Reviews Excellent plugin stephaneleveteau January 8, 2019 Bonjour, Merci au développeur, ce plugin fonctionne très bien et a bloqué par trois reprises une tentative en force brute. Excellent plugin Steve May 21, 2018 Another must have! It works well tomkinsrichard September 3, 2016 This plugin is effective. ip, user and date, enable you to track origins of attacks. The plugin prevents attacks from succeeding. It works with WordPress 4.5 and successfully blocked a brut force attack ppotier September 3, 2016 I received a mail of few minutes ago about a brut force attack, from an IP address, in Turquie. Many thanks to you !!! version 0.55.0 works fine with wordpress 4.5 Regards 5 stars idmesspass December 24, 2016 Good work team! It is exactly what i needed and you made a great job with it! Thank you! Message needs to be corrected. oclyocly September 3, 2016 case 'pw_grace': $ours = __('Your password has expired. Please log and change it.', 'login-security-solution'); Read all 53 reviews Contributors & Developers

“Login Security Solution” is open source software. The following people have contributed to this plugin.

Contributors Daniel Convissor

“Login Security Solution” has been translated into 5 locales. Thank you to the translators for their contributions.

Translate “Login Security Solution” into your language.

Interested in development?

Browse the code, check out the SVN repository, or subscribe to the development log by RSS.

Changelog 0.56.0 (2016-08-13) Fix translation domain to be string in one __() call. 0.55.0 (2016-01-30) Block discovering user names via the “?author=” query string 0.54.0 (2016-01-27) Fix memory exhaustion on sites with many users during plugin activation if password history is enabled Put “in” in “Please log and change it” 0.53.0 (2015-09-25) Change translation domain from constant to string in preparation for integration with translate.wordpress.org 0.52.0 (2015-05-25) Silence safe mode warnings from is_readable() Add Polish translation Add Finnish translation Rename Japanese translation files from ja_JP to ja 0.51.0 (2015-03-15) Security Fixes: Remove calls to dict. Parse dict file if available instead. Remove use of grep. 0.50.0 (2014-12-25) Take advantage of WP 4.1’s new password_hint filter Add Italian translation 0.49.0 (2014-11-10) Fix password policy hint on password reset form broken by changes in WP 0.48.0 (2014-10-17) Fix “DoS Tier” setting validation so it can be set to 0. 0.47.0 (2014-10-15) Add the “DoS Tier,” above “Delay Tier 3,” beyond which respones are no longer slowed down, keeping sites from befalling Denial of Service conditions Add the “Deletion Interval” and “Deletion Days” settings for automatically removing old data Added “action” hooks: login_security_solution_insert_fail login_security_solution_notify_breach login_security_solution_notify_fail login_security_solution_fail_tier_dos Added “filter” hooks. See “Hooks” in the “Installation” tab for more info. login_security_solution_notify_breach_subject login_security_solution_notify_breach_message login_security_solution_notify_breach_user_subject login_security_solution_notify_breach_user_message login_security_solution_notify_fail_subject login_security_solution_notify_fail_message Escape WP’s table_prefix before use Use WP’s remove_submenu_page() (instead of using an empty title) to keep Change All Passwords off the settings menu Add label/id for settings fields 0.46.0 (2014-10-03) Fix password policy hint broken by changes in WP 3.9 Adjust unit tests for new auth cookie format in WP 4.0 0.45.0 (2014-08-17) Adjust for password reset process for security changes in WP 3.9.2 0.44.0 (2014-05-30) Handle mysqli usage Indicate that setting “Match Time” to 0 disables slowdowns, notifications, and breach confirmations. If “Match Time” is 0, return empty values rather than running queries. 0.43.0 (2014-01-16) By popular demand, notification emails now include the full IP address. 0.42.0 (2013-07-06) Have Maintenence Mode messaging say who turned it on and how to turn it off. Added pw_sequence for German T1 keyboard layout. (cfoellmann) 0.41.0 (2013-06-26) Fix “authenticate filter not called” when auth process lacks a user name. 0.40.0 (2013-06-22) Track the age of verified IP’s and use that to prevent users being locked out by “attacks” from one’s own IP address. Unit tests pass using PHP 5.3.27-dev, 5.4.17-dev, 5.5.0-dev Tested under WordPress 3.4.2, 3.5.2 and 3.6beta4 using regular and multisite. 0.39.0 (2013-05-29) Enforce password history during password reset process. 0.38.0 (2013-05-27) Mention that the password force change process does not touch the admin that presses the button. Remove HTML special characters when using WP’s blogname setting. Unit tests pass using PHP 5.3.27-dev, 5.4.17-dev, 5.5.0-dev Tested under WordPress 3.5.1 and 3.6beta3 using regular and multisite. 0.37.0 (2013-04-29) Monitor login attempts from XML-RPC requests. Fix “te ernstig te” in the Dutch translation (thanks fwieringen@github). 0.36.0 (2013-04-13) Have the password reset page say why a password isn’t strong enough. Add Dutch translation. 0.35.0 (2013-02-22) Don’t track cookie failures if name or hash is empty. Add German translation. Update French translation. Documentation improvements. 0.34.0 (2012-10-21) Have login_errors filter check $wp_error also, not just $errors. Skip exec() calls if safe_mode is on. Unit tests pass using WordPress 3.5 RC2 under PHP 5.4.5-dev and 5.3.19-dev. 0.33.0 (2012-10-18) Add text to failure alerts saying the attacker will be denied access. Have failure alerts say there won’t be further emails. 0.32.0 (2012-10-04) SIGNIFICANT CHANGE: Reduce the number of emails sent to administrators: add the “Multiple Failure Notifications” setting and make the default “No.” Remove the (superfluous) “If it WAS YOU…” part of the user notification emails. Use wp_cache_flush() in unit tests, wp_cache_reset() deprecated in 3.5. Unit tests pass using PHP 5.4.5-dev, 5.3.16-dev. Tested under WordPress 3.4.2 and 3.5beta1 using regular and multisite. 0.31.0 (2012-09-25) Have breach notification emails detail the exact situation depending on the system’s settings. 0.30.0 (2012-09-17) Translate “Confirm” and “No thanks” phrases on the settings screen. Adjust readme to indicate that development has moved to GitHub. 0.29.0 (2012-09-17) Adjust formatting of the CREATE TABLE statement in activate() to prevent WordPress’ dbDelta() from creating duplicate keys each time the plugin is activated. 0.28.1 (2012-09-15) Update .mo translation files. 0.28.0 (2012-09-15) Remove loophole: slow down successful logins as well (for non-verified IP addresses). Keeps attackers from using timeouts to skip our delayed responses to failed login attempts. Reduce false positives for breach notifications and password resets: Allow users through without incident if the user’s Network IP failure count is less than the “Breach Email Confirm” setting. The old behavior was to do so only if the Network IP failure count was 0. Add user’s current IP to their verified IP list whenever they save their profile page, not just when they change their password. Fix when user notifications are sent. Do so if the IP address is NOT verified instead of if the IP address IS verified. Duh. Don’t notify administrators of a successful login if the user is coming in from a verified IP address. Change subject line of user notification emails to differentiate them from emails sent to admins. Reword user notification email and have it explain how to reduce future hassles. Remove URIs from user notification email to avoid phishing imitations. Add pt_BR translation. Thanks to Valdir Trombini. Put plugin version number in admin notification emails. Update the fr_FR translation: update password policy, add settings page. Put Unicode flag on the two preg calls that didn’t have it. Fixes password parsing problem on Windows. Add date to log() messages. Unit tests pass using PHP 5.4.5-dev, 5.3.16-dev, and 5.2.18-dev. Tested under WordPress 3.4.2 using regular and multisite. Also tested on Windows 7 using WordPress 3.4.1 and PHP 5.4.5 with mbstring enabled and disabled. 0.27.0 (2012-09-04) Remove the password policy explanation link added in 0.26.0. 0.26.0 (2012-09-01) Put a link in the password policy to an explanation of why it’s necessary. 0.25.0 (2012-08-30) Load text domain for password policy on password reset page. Have password policy mention that it can’t contain words related to the user or the website. 0.24.0 (2012-08-29) Keep the password strength indicator from being enabled. Narrow down when the password policy text filter is enabled. 0.23.0 (2012-08-24) Split user and site info into components before comparing them. Increase minimum password length to 10 characters. 0.22.0 (2012-08-17) Track a given IP, user name, password combination only once. Prevent “not a valid MySQL-Link resource” on auth cookie failure. Increase default value of login_fail_notify from 20 to 50. Add partial French translation. Settings page needs doing. Thanks mermouy! 0.21.0 (2012-08-07) Fix is_pw_outside_ascii() to permit spaces. In multisite mode, send notifications to network admin, not blog admin. Add “Notifications To” setting for admins to specify the email addresses the failure and breach notifications get sent to. (Request #1560) Clarify that the Change All Passwords link just goes to the UI. Get all unit tests to pass when mbstring isn’t enabled. Internationalize the unit tests. Rename admin.inc to admin.php. Rename temporary files holding actual test results. (Bug #1552 redux) Unit tests pass using PHP 5.4.5-dev, 5.3.16-dev, and 5.2.18-dev. Tested under WordPress 3.4.1 using regular and multisite. Also tested on Windows 7 using PHP 5.4.5 and WordPress 3.4.1. 0.20.2 (2012-07-12) Ugh, update the translation pot file. 0.20.1 (2012-07-12) Add “numbers” to the password policy text. 0.20.0 (2012-07-12) Replace WP’s password policy text with our own. 0.19.0 (2012-07-11) Remove inadvertent log call added in 0.17.0. 0.18.0 (2012-07-11) Keep legit user from having to repeatedly reset pw during active attacks against their user name. 0.17.0 (2012-07-09) Fix network IP query in get_login_fail(). (Bug #1553, deanmarktaylor) Rename files holding expected test results. (Bug #1552, deanmarktaylor) 0.16.0 (2012-07-08) Have shell script gracefully handle value already being the desired value. 0.15.0 (2012-07-06) Log auth cookie failures too. Clean up sleep logic. (Bug #1549, deanmarktaylor) 0.14.0 (2012-07-05) Fix emails being mistakenly sent in multisite mode that say “There have been at least 0 failed attempts to log in”. (Bug #1548, deanmarktaylor) Add an .htaccess file that blocks access to this plugin’s directory. 0.13.0 (2012-07-01) Add a script for turning our “Disable Logins” feature on and off from the command line. 0.12.0 (2012-06-30) Display a notice on top of admin pages when our maintenance mode is enabled. 0.11.0 (2012-06-28) Use POST value for $user_name in login_errors() because global value isn’t always set. Add some more (commented out) log() calls to help users help me help them. 0.10.0 (2012-06-16) Catch $user_ID not being set during “Change All Passwords” submission. Add (commented out) log() calls in important spots. Enables users to help me help them. 0.9.0 (2012-06-16) Fix change that prevented users from logging in after using the password reset process with an insecure password. Users can now pick a better password right on the spot. Regenerate translation POT file. Tested under WordPress 3.3.2 and 3.4RC3, both using regular and multisite. Unit tests pass using PHP 5.4.0RC8-dev, 5.3.11-dev, and 5.2.18-dev. 0.8.0 (2012-04-29) Fix logging user out a second time after WordPress expires cookies. It turns out this plugin requires WordPress 3.3, not 3.0. Tested under WordPress 3.3.2 regular and 3.4beta2 multisite. Unit tests pass using PHP 5.4.0RC8-dev, 5.3.11-dev, and 5.2.18-dev. 0.7.0 (2012-04-25) The “lost your password” process now validates passwords. Tested under WordPress 3.3.1 regular and 3.4beta2 multisite. Unit tests pass using PHP 5.4.0RC8-dev, 5.3.11-dev, and 5.2.18-dev. 0.6.1 (2012-04-19) Minor wording adjustments. 0.6.0 (2012-04-18) Use ENT_QUOTES instead of ENT_COMPAT in htmlspecialchars() calls because WordPress mixes and matches the double and single quotes to delimit attributes. Tested under WordPress 3.3.1 regular and 3.4beta2 multisite. Unit tests pass using PHP 5.4.0RC8-dev, 5.3.11-dev, and 5.2.18-dev. 0.5.0 (2012-04-18) Have multisite network mode use the saved options instead of the defaults. Close more HTML injection vectors. (One would think WordPress’ built in functions would already do this. Alas…) Get the success/error messages to work when saving settings via the Network Admin page. Improve unit tests by ensuring the fail table uses InnoDB. Tested under WordPress 3.3.1 regular and 3.4beta2 multisite. Unit tests pass using PHP 5.4.0RC8-dev, 5.3.11-dev, and 5.2.18-dev. 0.4.0 (2012-04-17) Add multisite network support. Keep unit tests from deleting settings. Note: removes the ability to run the unit tests without activating the plugin. Tested under WordPress 3.3.1 regular and 3.4beta2 multisite. Unit tests pass using PHP 5.4.0RC8-dev, 5.3.11-dev, and 5.2.18-dev. 0.3.0 (2012-04-04) Use UTF-8 encoding for htmlspecialchars() instead of DB_CHARSET. Tested under WordPress 3.3.1. Unit tests pass using PHP 5.4.0RC8-dev, 5.3.11-dev, and 5.2.18-dev. 0.2.1 (2012-04-03) Ensure all files are in the state I intended. Needed because WordPress’ plugin site automatically rolls releases. 0.2.0 (2012-04-03) Utilize the $encoding parameter of htmlspecialchars() to avoid problems under PHP 5.4. Tested under WordPress 3.3.1. Unit tests pass using PHP 5.4.0RC8-dev, 5.3.11-dev, and 5.2.18-dev. 0.1.0 (2012-03-26) Beta release. 0.0.4 (2012-03-22) Initial import to plugins.svn.wordpress.org. 0.0.3 Fix mix ups in the code saving the “Change All Passwords” admin UI. Adjust IdleTest so it doesn’t radically change wp_users auto increment. Tested under WordPress 3.3.1. Unit tests pass using PHP 5.4.0RC8-dev, 5.3.11-dev, and 5.2.18-dev. 0.0.2 Use Unicode character properties to improve portability. Stop tests short if not in a WordPress install. Skip dict test if dict not available. Skip database tests if transactions are not available. Tested under WordPress 3.3.1. Unit tests pass using PHP 5.4.0RC8-dev, 5.3.11-dev, and 5.2.18-dev. 0.0.1 (2012-03-19) Post the code for public review. Tested under WordPress 3.3.1.


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