0.59.0 (2023-12-13)#

Note worthy changes#

  • The MFA authenticator model now features “created at” an “last used “at” timestamps.

  • The MFA authenticator model is now registered with the Django admin.

  • Added MFA signals emitted when authenticators are added, removed or (in case of recovery codes) reset.

  • There is now an MFA adapter method can_delete_authenticator(authenticator) available that can be used to prevent users from deactivating e.g. their TOTP authenticator.

  • Added a new app, user sessions, allowing users to view a list of all their active sessions, as well as offering a means to end these sessions.

  • A configurable timeout (SOCIALACCOUNT_REQUESTS_TIMEOUT) is now applied to all upstream requests.

  • Added a setting ACCOUNT_EMAIL_UNKNOWN_ACCOUNTS to disable sending of emails to unknown accounts.

  • You can now override the MFA forms via the MFA_FORMS setting.

Backwards incompatible changes#

  • The account adapter method should_send_confirmation_mail() signature changed. It now takes an extra signup (boolean) parameter.

  • Removed OAuth 1.0 based Bitbucket provider and LinkedIn provider.

0.58.2 (2023-11-06)#

Fixes#

  • Added rate limiting to the MFA login form.

0.58.1 (2023-10-29)#

Fixes#

  • Fixed missing {% load allauth %} in the login cancelled and verified email required template.

0.58.0 (2023-10-26)#

Note worthy changes#

  • The SocialAccount.extra_data field was a custom JSON field that used TextField as the underlying implementation. It was once needed because Django had no JSONField support. Now, this field is changed to use the official JSONField(). Migrations are in place.

  • Officially support Django 5.0.

  • In previous versions, users could never remove their primary email address. This is constraint is now relaxed. In case the email address is not required, for example, because the user logs in by username, removal of the email address is allowed.

  • Added a new setting ACCOUNT_REAUTHENTICATION_REQUIRED that, when enabled, requires the user to reauthenticate before changes (such as changing the primary email address, adding a new email address, etc.) can be performed.

Backwards incompatible changes#

  • Refactored the built-in templates, with the goal of being able to adjust the look and feel of the whole project by only overriding a few core templates. This approach allows you to achieve visual results fast, but is of course more limited compared to styling all templates yourself. If your project provided its own templates then this change will not affect anything, but if you rely on (some of) the built-in templates your project may be affected.

  • The Azure provider has been removed in favor of keeping the Microsoft provider. Both providers were targeting the same goal.

Security notice#

  • Facebook: Using the JS SDK flow, it was possible to post valid access tokens originating from other apps. Facebook user IDs are scoped per app. By default that user ID (not the email address) is used as key while authenticating. Therefore, such access tokens can not be abused by default. However, in case SOCIALACCOUNT_EMAIL_AUTHENTICATION was explicitly enabled for the Facebook provider, these tokens could be used to login.

0.57.0 (2023-09-24)#

Note worthy changes#

  • Added Django password validation help text to password1 on set/change/signup forms.

  • Microsoft: the tenant parameter can now be configured per app.

  • SAML: Added support for additional configuration parameters, such as contacts, and support for certificate rotation.

  • The enumeration prevention behavior at signup is now configurable. Whether or not enumeration can be prevented during signup depends on the email verification method. In case of mandatory verification, enumeration can be properly prevented because the case where an email address is already taken is indistinguishable from the case where it is not. However, in case of optional or disabled email verification, enumeration can only be prevented by allowing the signup to go through, resulting in multiple accounts sharing same email address (although only one of the accounts can ever have it verified). When enumeration is set to True, email address uniqueness takes precedence over enumeration prevention, and the issue of multiple accounts having the same email address will be avoided, thus leaking information. Set it to "strict" to allow for signups to go through.

Fixes#

  • Fixed ?next= URL handling in the SAML provider.

  • During 2FA, pending logins were incorrectly removed when e.g. Django was asked to serve a /favicon.ico URL.

0.56.1 (2023-09-08)#

Security notice#

  • ImmediateHttpResponse exceptions were not handled properly when raised inside adapter.pre_login(). If you relied on aborting the login using this mechanism, that would not work. Most notably, django-allauth-2fa uses this approach, resulting in 2FA not being triggered.

0.56.0 (2023-09-07)#

Note worthy changes#

  • Added builtin support for Two-Factor Authentication via the allauth.mfa app.

  • The fact that request is not available globally has left its mark on the code over the years. Some functions get explicitly passed a request, some do not, and some constructs have it available both as a parameter and as self.request. As having request available is essential, especially when trying to implement adapter hooks, the request has now been made globally available via:

    from allauth.core import context
    context.request
    
  • Previously, SOCIALACCOUNT_STORE_TOKENS = True did not work when the social app was configured in the settings instead of in the database. Now, this functionality works regardless of how you configure the app.

Backwards incompatible changes#

  • Dropped support for Django 3.1.

  • The "allauth.account.middleware.AccountMiddleware" middleware is required to be present in your settings.MIDDLEWARE.

  • Starting from September 1st 2023, CERN upgraded their SSO to a standard OpenID Connect based solution. As a result, the previously builtin CERN provider is no longer needed and has been removed. Instead, use the regular OpenID Connect configuration:

    SOCIALACCOUNT_PROVIDERS = {
        "openid_connect": {
            "APPS": [
                {
                    "provider_id": "cern",
                    "name": "CERN",
                    "client_id": "<insert-id>",
                    "secret": "<insert-secret>",
                    "settings": {
                        "server_url": "https://auth.cern.ch/auth/realms/cern/.well-known/openid-configuration",
                    },
                }
            ]
        }
    }
    
  • The Keycloak provider was added before the OpenID Connect functionality landed. Afterwards, the Keycloak implementation was refactored to reuse the regular OIDC provider. As this approach led to bugs (see 0.55.1), it was decided to remove the Keycloak implementation altogether. Instead, use the regular OpenID Connect configuration:

    SOCIALACCOUNT_PROVIDERS = {
        "openid_connect": {
            "APPS": [
                {
                    "provider_id": "keycloak",
                    "name": "Keycloak",
                    "client_id": "<insert-id>",
                    "secret": "<insert-secret>",
                    "settings": {
                        "server_url": "http://keycloak:8080/realms/master/.well-known/openid-configuration",
                    },
                }
            ]
        }
    }
    

0.55.2 (2023-08-30)#

Fixes#

  • Email confirmation: An attribute error could occur when following invalid email confirmation links.

0.55.1 (2023-08-30)#

Fixes#

  • SAML: the lookup of the app (SocialApp) was working correctly for apps configured via the settings, but failed when the app was configured via the Django admin.

  • Keycloak: fixed reversal of the callback URL, which was reversed using "openid_connect_callback" instead of "keycloak_callback". Although the resulting URL is the same, it results in a NoReverseMatch error when allauth.socialaccount.providers.openid_connect is not present in INSTALLED_APPS.

0.55.0 (2023-08-22)#

Note worthy changes#

  • Introduced a new setting ACCOUNT_PASSWORD_RESET_TOKEN_GENERATOR that allows you to specify the token generator for password resets.

  • Dropped support for Django 2.x and 3.0.

  • Officially support Django 4.2.

  • New providers: Miro, Questrade

  • It is now possible to manage OpenID Connect providers via the Django admin. Simply add a SocialApp for each OpenID Connect provider.

  • There is now a new flow for changing the email address. When enabled (ACCOUNT_CHANGE_EMAIL), users are limited to having exactly one email address that they can change by adding a temporary second email address that, when verified, replaces the current email address.

  • Changed spelling from “e-mail” to “email”. Both are correct, however, the trend over the years has been towards the simpler and more streamlined form “email”.

  • Added support for SAML 2.0. Thanks to Dskrpt for sponsoring the development of this feature!

  • Fixed Twitter OAuth2 authentication by using basic auth and adding scope tweet.read.

  • Added (optional) support for authentication by email for social logins (see SOCIALACCOUNT_EMAIL_AUTHENTICATION).

Security notice#

  • Even with account enumeration prevention in place, it was possible for a user to infer whether or not a given account exists based by trying to add secondary email addresses . This has been fixed – see the note on backwards incompatible changes.

Backwards incompatible changes#

  • Data model changes: when ACCOUNT_UNIQUE_EMAIL=True (the default), there was a unique constraint on set on the email field of the EmailAddress model. This constraint has been relaxed, now there is a unique constraint on the combination of email and verified=True. Migrations are in place to automatically transition, but if you have a lot of accounts, you may need to take special care using CREATE INDEX CONCURRENTLY.

  • The method allauth.utils.email_address_exists() has been removed.

  • The Mozilla Persona provider has been removed. The project was shut down on November 30th 2016.

  • A large internal refactor has been performed to be able to add support for providers oferring one or more subproviders. This refactor has the following impact:

    • The provider registry methods get_list(), by_id() have been removed. The registry now only providers access to the provider classes, not the instances.

    • provider.get_app() has been removed – use provider.app instead.

    • SocialApp.objects.get_current() has been removed.

    • The SocialApp model now has additional fields provider_id, and settings.

    • The OpenID Connect provider SOCIALACCOUNT_PROVIDERS settings structure changed. Instead of the OpenID Connect specific SERVERS construct, it now uses the regular APPS approach. Please refer to the OpenID Connect provider documentation for details.

    • The Telegram provider settings structure, it now requires to app. Please refer to the Telegram provider documentation for details.

  • The Facebook provider loaded the Facebook connect sdk.js regardless of the value of the METHOD setting. To prevent tracking, now it only loads the Javascript if METHOD is explicitly set to "js_sdk".

0.54.0 (2023-03-31)#

Note worthy changes#

  • Dropped support for EOL Python versions (3.5, 3.6).

Security notice#

  • Even when account enumeration prevention was turned on, it was possible for an attacker to infer whether or not a given account exists based upon the response time of an authentication attempt. Fixed.

0.53.1 (2023-03-20)#

Note worthy changes#

  • Example base template was missing {% load i18n %}, fixed.

0.53.0 (2023-03-16)#

Note worthy changes#

  • You can now override the use of the UserTokenForm over at the PasswordResetFromKeyView by configuring ACCOUNT_FORMS["user_token"] to allow the change of the password reset token generator.

  • The Google API URLs are now configurable via the provider setting which enables use-cases such as overriding the endpoint during integration tests to talk to a mocked version of the API.