I'm building a system using Devise as the gem responsible for handling users.
What I'm looking for it's a way to send the confirmation email always to the same email(it would be the admin), so that he can choose if the person should, or not, be allowed into the system.
You can refer to this How To to let admin confirm the user before signin, you probably won't need comfirmable module.
Related
I was wondering if we can allow Admins to add Accounts for the Member Models? with out them having to confirm it if the Admin adds it?
I have two Devise Models
Admins
Members
To Launch the application i want to restrict Registration and Admins will create the Logins for Members from the Admin Scope. When he adds the Member i dont want them to confirm their account but just send a welcome Email may be with the login details.
I don't want them to confirm their account but just send a welcome Email may be with the login details
One way you could do this is by simply writing a new user form, saving the user and manually sending an email. If you are using Devise confirmable, then you must call confirm! on the built object, in order for them to log in.
However, sending a password in plain text is generally speaking a dodgy thing to do. Surely you'd then want to force each user to change their password anyway, for security reasons? As such, I'd recommend going for the more standard approach of Devise invitable - which will send an invitation token to the user, and ask them to set their initial password. You achieve this by calling invite! on the built user object.
Here are two RailsCast videos about Devise, which you may find helpful for further reference and examples:
http://railscasts.com/episodes/209-introducing-devise
http://railscasts.com/episodes/210-customizing-devise
Yes you can, just create the object and call confirm on it :)
However, as members will need a password to access their account, it could be nice to email them a link to enter this password, so this link could also confirm the account for you.
IMHO, It's a bad practice to send any password by email, a lot of email servers don't implement any secured protocol, better let your users chose it, with a one-time link
a have a client with a website built on RoR by other developer, the website uses devise for user authentication and registration.
The website allows users to registrate and then send them a confirmation email, when they confirm their email, then they can login, BUT they can't see the content until they are approved to see it.
My client ask me to don't allow users to login until two things happen: They confirm their email and him(my client) approve them to see the content.
I tried this adding active_for_authentication? to the user model and returning true or false deppending if they are approved or not, but like the documentation of devise saids: the method active_for_authentication? is overriden by other modules like confirmable.
How can i perform this two validation using devise?
thanks for your help
You have to add authorization control in your application.
So I advice you to use CanCan gem it's easy to set and it allows you to define access rules based on your criteria.
Within a rails app i'm working on. I'm trying to add the ability for users to signup simply by entering their email address and then confirming their account via the confirmation email. I don't want the user to have to enter in any password. How would I go about doing this?
This example is useful, but requires for the user to enter a password: https://github.com/plataformatec/devise/wiki/How-To:-Email-only-sign-up
Should I just automatically use one password for all users?
Devise is built for authentication, which is either a password, or a quick check with a social network that this is actually the person they claim to be. The email address is used as identification.
If you just want to identify a person by their email, I suggest you create your own system for it. You can even add some of the Devise features in if you like. First, create a User model with an email attribute:
rails generate model User email:string
Once you've migrated the database, create a controller for it:
rails generate controller users
Then create a Session model and let each User create sessions by logging in. There'll be plenty of great tutorials on the web of how to create a system like this. Writing helper methods like current_user or user_signed_in? should be quite easy too.
Now for the last point, if you want people to sign in after they signed up using the email confirmation, how will you make sure that it is actually the same person signing in as the person who confirmed the email? Any malicious user could simply use an already confirmed account to sign in, unless you have to do an email confirmation every time you sign in...
So while you can do the above, I would seriously recommend to have some kind of authentication, whether it be with a password, or using OmniAuth to connect to social networks. There's a railscast for that here.
Not sure if this would help you, but based on the simplicity of the authentication process, I would suggest not to use Devise at all. You can just create an action in your SessionsController, which will compare the params[:email] (or however you are calling it in your app) against the emails listed in the UsersTable.
I've upgraded to Devise 3.2.1 and Rails 4.0, and I'm trying to figure out my signup now that one doesn't login on confirmation.
I allow users to create a message and specify the recipient of the message via an email address. Then I send emails notifying the recipient that they've received a message on the service. If the recipient doesn't have an account on the service, I create the account without a password, and the email I send to the recipient acts a confirmation email. With prior versions, the recipient would then click on the link, thus confirming, and then be taken to a password creation stage and then finally, they'd have a confirmed account created with password and can go see the message.
With Devise 3.1, they no longer allow login via confirmation as they consider it a security risk, however I fear it may greatly increase the complexity of my sign up process. I can no longer redirect to a password creation page as they aren't logged in. I'm toying with the idea of taking them to a special signup page or creating the account and then sending a special form of password reset.
I don't want to notify them via email, then send them a second email as a confirmation. That adds unnecessary complexity to my signup.
I wondered if anyone else has dealt with this issue and how they handled it. I'd like to avoid using:
config.allow_insecure_sign_in_after_confirmation = true
as that will go away soon and is really not the right way.
Is there a secure, yet fast way to do this with Devise 3.2?
Thanks!
I'm switching to using sorcery ( https://github.com/NoamB/sorcery ) for greater control over authentication and building my flow with that.
This is precisely the problem that devise invitable gem solves in a secure manner. I would recommend using this tool, rather than trying to hand-roll your own solution which is more likely to contain security flaws.
The gem workflow is basically:
An admin invites a new user.
The new user is created with a random password. (I actually helped write this bit!)
The user is sent an invitation email. (This is fully customisable in how it works, but has some simple default settings.)
The user receives a link, which contains a URL with a unique invitation_token.
After clicking this link, the user must choose their real password.
I am developing an application which uses Devise for user authentication. It performs all standard task that Devise handles (e.g.: Email verification during user sign up). But a user may have multiple email addresses to access his account and I want to verify all those addresses too.
My design is: user will get a email field in his profile page to add another email address to access his account along with his existing email address. After clicking submit, an email verification will occur like first time sign up process and user will be able to use both of this email address after successful verification.
Is there any gem available for this? If I need to implement it by myself, how can I do this without breaking the existing system?
It's very late to reply but recently I faced similar issue and found one gem which lets user have many emails, user can login with any email, set one email as primary, and provides support for confirmable, authenticable and validatable for each email.
Here is the link to gem:
https://github.com/allenwq/devise-multi_email
Hope it helps someone facing same situation :)