The new v2 OAuth token endpoint mints a fresh session without going
through NewUserAuthTokenResponse, so those logins were missing from the
audit trail. The refresh grant stays unaudited like the v1 refresh.
ProjectUser.Create and friends are called with a nil auth in tests;
the old interface-typed Doer just serialized as null, so a nil doer
keeps that behavior (and maps to the system actor in the audit entry).
GetUserOrLinkShareUser re-fetches the account and fails its status
check, which broke deleting a disabled user's projects (the deletion
runs with the disabled account as doer). Convert the authenticated
principal directly instead — it also matches what the events serialized
before the doer became concrete, and drops a query per event.
ProjectUpdated/Deleted, ProjectSharedWith* and TeamCreated/Deleted
carried an interface-typed Doer that could not be unmarshaled, forcing
the audit registrations to decode anonymous mirror structs. Hydrate the
doer via GetUserOrLinkShareUser at the dispatch sites like the task
events already do, register the events directly and drop the untyped
audit registration path.
Webhook payloads for these events now serialize link share doers as
their pseudo-user (negative id) instead of the raw link share object,
consistent with task events.
Thread the request context through CheckUserCredentials so the
LoginFailedEvent carries IP, user agent and request id — without it,
failed logins were the one auth event useless for brute-force tracing.
All four callers have the request at hand.
Link share JWTs carry no sid claim so they returned before the event
fired, but the id claim was read without checking the token type. Make
the guard explicit so a link share id can never appear as a user id.
If both the rename and the reopen fail, logFile stayed nil while
initialized was still true, panicking on the next write. Propagate the
reopen error and retry the open on the next write so it self-heals.
Echo's RequestID middleware reuses the X-Request-Id header from a proxy
or generates one, so logging and audit all see the same ID. RequestMeta
previously read the request header before any later middleware could
have set one, leaving the audit request_id mostly empty.
The register handler, local/LDAP login and the OIDC callback all queue
the user.created event via DispatchOnCommit but never called
DispatchPending, so the event was silently dropped and its queue entry
leaked. Flush after commit and discard on rollback.
Every DispatchPending caller either has the request context in scope or
is genuinely request-less, so passing it as a parameter replaces the
stored-context mechanism on the pending queue and satisfies
contextcheck. Also fixes lint findings in the audit package.
One config-gated block in RegisterListeners maps every opted-in event
to its audit entry. Events with interface-typed doers are decoded via
a small doer ref that distinguishes link shares by their hash field.
LoginSucceededEvent fires from NewUserAuthTokenResponse (the chokepoint
where local, LDAP and OIDC logins converge), LoginFailedEvent from
handleFailedPassword on every failed password check, LogoutEvent from
the logout handler, and APIToken issued/revoked/used events from the
token model and auth middleware. The token events carry IDs only since
the freshly created token struct holds the raw token string and the
poison queue logs message payloads.
None of these events have a listener yet — the audit registration adds
them. Dispatching to a topic without subscribers is a no-op.
Entry schema with constructor-enforced actor/target types, a generic
RegisterEventForAudit helper that maps opted-in events to entries on
the existing watermill bus (license-gated per event since licenses are
runtime-mutable), and a JSONL writer with size-based rotation,
age-based cleanup of rotated files and batched fsync.
Adds a RequestMeta context bridge so events dispatched during an HTTP
request can be attributed to it: a middleware stashes IP/UA/request-id
on the request context, the generic Do* handlers associate that context
with the transaction key, and DispatchPending/DispatchWithContext copy
the metadata onto the watermill message at publish time. Existing
dispatch call sites are unchanged.
Per review: when registration is disabled, skip registering the
/register route entirely instead of registering it and returning 404 on
every request. A request to a disabled instance still 404s (unknown
route). ServiceEnableRegistration is static config, so the gate belongs
in the registrar.
Add webtests mirroring the v1 coverage for the v2 auth surface:
register (incl. registration-disabled 404), password reset request +
reset, email confirm, link-share auth (password matrix), the OAuth token
flow in both JSON and form-urlencoded encodings, oauth/authorize, the
token-test/check endpoints (200, not 418), /routes and link-share token
renewal (incl. user-token rejection).
Also make the link-share auth body optional so a passwordless share
authenticates with no request body, matching v1.
Port the token introspection helpers and link-share token renewal to
/api/v2:
- GET/POST /token/test both return a plain 200 "ok"; v1's POST 418
teapot easter egg becomes an ordinary success.
- GET /routes lists the scoped-token routes for both API versions
(models.GetAPITokenRoutes already merges v1 + v2).
- POST /user/token renews a link-share JWT; user tokens are rejected
(they must use the refresh-token flow), mirroring v1.
The renew response inlines the token field rather than returning
auth.Token directly, since Huma names schemas by bare type and a
top-level auth.Token body would collide with user.Token.
Port oauth/token and oauth/authorize to /api/v2, delegating to the
shared oauth2server.ExchangeToken / Authorize cores.
The token endpoint accepts spec-compliant application/x-www-form-urlencoded
bodies (RFC 6749) in addition to JSON; a form-urlencoded format is
registered on the v2 API that binds into the same json-tagged request
struct. The response carries Cache-Control: no-store. The token endpoint
is public; authorize inherits the global JWT auth.
Port the unauthenticated local-account flows and link-share auth to
/api/v2, delegating to the shared business logic:
- POST /register (404 when registration is disabled)
- POST /user/password/token, POST /user/password/reset
- POST /user/confirm
- POST /shares/{share}/auth
Local-account routes register only when local auth is enabled and the
link-share route only when link sharing is enabled, mirroring v1. Each
operation opts out of global auth and its path is added to
unauthenticatedAPIPaths.
Pull the HTTP-independent core out of the v1 auth handlers so both
/api/v1 and the upcoming /api/v2 routes share one implementation:
- oauth2server: ExchangeToken and Authorize take plain inputs and return
typed responses; HandleToken/HandleAuthorize keep binding + headers.
- pkg/routes/api/shared: AuthenticateLinkShare, RegisterUser,
ResetPassword (+ session clear), RequestPasswordResetToken and
ConfirmEmail, plus the shared UserRegister and LinkShareToken types.
v1 handlers now delegate to these; their wire output is unchanged.
Replace huma_backgrounds_misc_test.go with huma_background_test.go,
huma_info_test.go, huma_webhook_event_test.go and huma_user_search_test.go so
each route area's tests live in their own file.
Extract the duplicated user-search business logic into two helpers both API
versions call, and refactor v1's handlers onto them:
- user.SearchUsers wraps ListUsers + email obfuscation (global search)
- models.SearchUsersForProject wraps the project read check + ListUsersFromProject
Each handler keeps its own forbidden mapping (v1 echo.ErrForbidden vs v2
huma) so v1 stays byte-identical on the wire.
Port to /api/v2:
- GET /users (global user search by username/name/email; emails are blanked)
- GET /projects/{project}/users/search (users with access to a project, for
share autocomplete; requires project read access)
Both are custom routes: the project search loads the project and enforces
CanRead explicitly.
Add GET /api/v2/webhooks/events, listing the events a webhook target can
subscribe to. Gated on webhooks.enabled via a registrar early-return, mirroring
v1.
Add GET /api/v2/info (public — no auth). Extract the /info response type and
its assembly out of the v1 handler into pkg/routes/api/shared.BuildInfo() so
both API versions return byte-identical info; refactor v1's handler onto it.
Add the v2 path to unauthenticatedAPIPaths.
Port to /api/v2:
- DELETE /projects/{project}/background (remove background, returns the updated project)
- GET /backgrounds/unsplash/search (q, page; gated on the unsplash provider)
- PUT /projects/{project}/backgrounds/unsplash (set, gated on the unsplash provider)
Custom routes load the project and enforce CanUpdate explicitly. Backgrounds
are gated on the static backgrounds config via a registrar early-return.
Tag background.Image fields with doc: for the v2 schema, and add a scoped
contextcheck exclusion since the unsplash provider's shared interface bottoms
out in context.Background().
The admin set-admin-flag, set-status and delete-user operations were
implemented twice — once in the v1 echo handlers, once in the v2 Huma handlers.
Extract the load/guard/mutate logic into models.SetUserAdminFlag,
models.SetUserStatusAsAdmin and models.DeleteUserAsAdmin so both APIs call the
same code; each handler keeps only its own request binding, validation and
response shape. v1 stays byte-identical on the wire.
The patch-admin, patch-status and delete-user handlers each repeated the same
session open/load/commit/rollback scaffold. Extract it into adminMutateUser,
which owns the transaction and takes a closure for each handler's distinct
guard-and-write step.
Port the admin action endpoints to the Huma-backed /api/v2:
- GET /admin/overview instance counts + license snapshot
- POST /admin/users create a user (201)
- PATCH /admin/users/{id}/admin promote/demote (*bool, nil = unchanged)
- PATCH /admin/users/{id}/status set status (*Status, nil = unchanged)
- DELETE /admin/users/{id} delete (mode=now|scheduled, 204)
- PATCH /admin/projects/{id}/owner reassign project owner
All sit behind the existing gateV2AdminRoutes path middleware (admin + license
gate, 404 on failure), so no per-handler permission checks are added. The
hand-registered PATCH routes carry genuine partial semantics, which AutoPatch
does not synthesise. The admin user response reuses the existing
pkg/routes/api/shared package.
Move the admin overview computation and struct into models.BuildOverview /
models.Overview, the admin create-user flow into models.CreateUserAsAdmin /
models.CreateUserBody, and the admin user response view into a new
pkg/routes/api/shared package (shared.AdminUser / shared.NewAdminUser) so both
the v1 and v2 admin routes call the same code. The v1 handlers are refactored
onto these helpers and stay byte-identical on the wire.
Add /api/v2 auth/status/migrate endpoints for the three OAuth-based
migrators. One generic helper registers all three ops per migrator
behind its static config gate, so there's no copy-pasted block per
migrator.
The migrate kick-off orchestration (already-running guard + event
dispatch) is extracted into migrationHandler.StartMigration so v1 and
v2 share it; v1's wire output is unchanged. The guard now surfaces as a
typed migration.ErrMigrationAlreadyRunning (412) so v2 can translate it
through the standard error bridge.
Ports v1's task-list surface to /api/v2 as four endpoints. v1 served a
single polymorphic endpoint; v2 makes it monomorphic:
GET /tasks flat []*Task, all projects
GET /projects/{project}/tasks flat []*Task
GET /projects/{project}/views/{view}/tasks flat []*Task (even kanban)
GET /projects/{project}/views/{view}/buckets/tasks []*Bucket with tasks
The three task endpoints force flat tasks via TaskCollection so a kanban
view path no longer returns buckets; the dedicated buckets endpoint keeps
the polymorphic kanban branch and is not paginated (bounded by the view's
bucket config). Search is exposed as q; multi-value sort_by/order_by/expand
use ,explode. Hitting the buckets endpoint with a non-kanban view is a 400
rather than a type-mismatch 500.
v1's TaskCollection.ReadAll is polymorphic: a kanban view returns
[]*Bucket, everything else []*Task. v2 splits the task list into a
flat-tasks endpoint and a separate buckets-with-tasks endpoint, so the
flat endpoint needs ReadAll to return tasks even for a kanban view.
SetForceFlatTasks toggles that; v1 leaves it unset and keeps its shape.
Port the current-user account and settings endpoints from /api/v1 to the
Huma-backed /api/v2, calling the shared orchestration extracted into
models/user/openid:
- GET /user current user + settings + computed
auth_provider/is_local_user/is_admin
- POST /user/password change password (200, creates nothing)
- PUT /user/settings/email update email (kicks off confirmation)
- PUT /user/settings/general update general settings
- GET /user/settings/avatar/provider get avatar provider
- PUT /user/settings/avatar/provider set avatar provider
- GET /user/timezones list available time zones
These are current-user-scoped custom handlers (no per-resource Can*): each
pulls the authed user from the request context and operates on it. The avatar
provider get/set live on /user/settings/avatar/provider because v2 already
maps /user/settings/avatar to the binary avatar upload (PUT).
Pull the business logic out of the v1 current-user account/settings handlers
into reusable functions so both v1 and the upcoming v2 handlers call one
implementation. No behavior change — the v1 handlers keep their HTTP-layer
quirks (input binding, validation, error mapping); only orchestration moves.
Homes are forced by the import graph:
- shared.GetAuthProviderName (new pkg/routes/api/shared, above openid+user so it
can combine both without a cycle; routes-only helper)
- user.ChangeUserEmail (CheckUserCredentials + UpdateEmail, both in user)
- models.ChangeUserPassword (needs models.DeleteAllUserSessions; user can't import models)
- models.UpdateUserGeneralSettings / UpdateUserAvatarProvider
(need avatar.FlushAllCaches; user can't import avatar)
The general settings get a single shared wire struct, models.UserGeneralSettings
(tagged for both swaggo/govalidator and Huma): it is the update request body and
the nested settings on GET /user for v1 (replacing v1's UserSettings) and v2.
ExtraSettingsLinks is readOnly — populated from the user on read, ignored on
write. A dedicated struct is required because user.User's settings fields are
json:"-" so they don't leak when it is embedded in other responses.
User-controlled fields rendered into notification emails (task title via the
conversational header, comment and description bodies) were sanitized with a
bluemonday UGCPolicy that permits remote <img> sources. An attacker with write
access to a shared project could therefore inject an external image that acts
as a tracking pixel in a subscriber's inbox, leaking email-open time and IP.
Restrict notification-email images to inline data URIs (used by avatars) by
adding a RewriteSrc hook that blanks any non-data image src. The policy was
duplicated in three places, so extract it into newNotificationSanitizer.
Refs GHSA-2vr2-r3qw-rjvq
Port the per-user webhook endpoints (/user/settings/webhooks) from /api/v1 to
the Huma-backed /api/v2: list, available events, create, update, delete. They
are the project-less sibling of the project webhooks (#2858) and share the
webhooks.enabled gate, checked inside the registrar.
Webhook.ReadAll is extended to serve the user-level list (scoped to the
authenticated user) so the v2 list handler can go through handler.DoReadAll like
the project list; the project branch is unchanged. Credentials are masked on
read via the model's existing maskCredentials, matching #2858.
Ports the current-user TOTP (2FA) endpoints from /api/v1 to the Huma-backed
/api/v2: get status, enroll, enable, and disable. Each is a custom,
current-user-scoped handler that resolves the authenticated user and refuses
non-local (OIDC/LDAP) accounts, preserving v1's local-account-only guard.
The image/jpeg QR-code endpoint is intentionally not ported here; it is a
binary-streaming route deferred to a later wave.