So I have this login system for my admin panel based on Aura Auth which works pretty well, but I am thinking of a secure way to let the admin change their password if they forgot the password. So I have a "Reset Password" page that lets you type in a password and get the password_hash() for it, and then gives you instructions on resetting it in the database
I don't know if I could be more secure than that ^^
@Alesana why dont u do it the normal way? clicks Reset pwd -> types in email address, gets the expirable url with unique token in the email, clicks it, changes pwd
@JapanGuy There is one user for the whole script, I don't want to require them to provide an email address to install the script
And the user would upload it to their server and would have access to the DB. I can't think of any other way to securely let them reset their password. Also, someone else accessing the script would be drastically bad.
@JapanGuy Oh awesome, I've been wondering, do you think I will have a hard time finding English speakers in the Kyoto/Osaka area? I am spending a month there so I hope I can meet some people haha
or you can apply to rakuten, that is where i work at, i applied as a new grad and the hiring was super easy, figured that they require minimal japanese skill
@JapanGuy I was reading about it and I found out that the company you are working for has to convince the JP gov't that they had reason to hire a foreigner instead of a Japanese citizen, and without a 4 year degree it's almost impossible. Unfortunately I don't have that
@Alesana never heard about that, all of the engineers here in my office came to japan to travel, then interviewed at rakuten and got the job. I am not sure if you can apply without a bachelor's tho.. we have a couple of engineers who do not have a degree. So maybe for mid-careers if you re good enough, you dont need a degree.
What I read is that it's not that the company won't hire you without a degree but if they decide to they must prove to the government that you had special expertise that they wouldn't be able to find in a regular citizen, which unless you have a lot of years of experience or a degree isn't going to be easy, but I am definitely going to try it!
Right now I am looking at the site you shared
She was actually a data analysis for Rakuten Marketing which I guess is a separate company
oh right, it is a tech company and they help you get an engineer visa if you get hired. One of the requirements for an engineer visa is a bachelors. So i am guessing, you either need a degree or be extremely skilled to work for the company in japan
it is essentially the same company, the company is huge so.
@Alesana of course there is. All of the 9 major cities in japan do have subway. And if you want to travel to another city, if you're rich you can use shinkansen (bullet train) it costs 125 usd, or you can use a bus which is around 40 usd. Food is good too, i wont say much but you ll love it regardless of where u r from
there is wifi at almost all stations in all cities. you can use hyperdia.com if you re using subway or JR (japan railways) for travelling or willerexpress.com/en for a bus transportation
@JapanGuy So I have the idea to not bring much cash with me and try to exchange BTC when I need money in Japan because my perception of Japan is that it's really easy to do do BTC exchanges, do you know anything about that?
@FélixGagnon-Grenier ah i see.. i have a simple cakephp project with unit tests written using phpunit, and now i also want to implement/learn about interface testing. Selenium was an option but seems like phpunit doesnt support it
@Alesana you might want to reconsider not bringing cash. All of the expensive or moderate priced places accept cards, but if you are planning on having a cheaper experience, things are usually handled with cash only
somewhat-related yuuge props at @Fabor for joining in on a late project and helping me bring online the brand new Quebec film director's website. 5/7 would hire a smarter than me guy to do the hard stuff again.
@JapanGuy Ah I don't know why I was expecting it to be dangerous
Although before I go to Japan I'll be staying in Chile for a couple nights which is pretty dangerous, I might still look into exchanging BTC for Yen when I get there
@JennaSloan Haha the only one I can think of that has a lot of crime is Death Note but now that I think about it I guess that's where I got the idea from
Does anyone have any suggestion with dealing with account lockouts? Should I make it to 5 consecutive failed attempts to login within an hour locks the account out for an hour, or 5 consecutive failed attempts over any amount of time?
I don't really know why I can't find much information online about locking out accounts , maybe I am bad at searching
I am thinking one table has attempts and every login attempt logs it as failed or successful, if it was a failed attempt it checks if it is the 5th within the last hour, if so then it changes the locked status of the user from 0 to 1 and then changes locked_time to the time it was locked
Not sure but if you are carrying this much risk then why can't you do it like gmail and skype as they are taking registered devices (MAC Address or something) if any other comes OTP will be mandatory. @Alesana
well, this basically amounts to two things. either someone dedicated brute forces their way on the server, in which case no amount of php throttling will prevent the server from crashing, or someones gets a data dump of the database and can crack the password as slowly as they like
preventing any kind of sql injection from uncovered entry points to the application sounds as sensible as blocking ips to ensure security.
The only entry point someone who isn't the owner of the app has is the login, and I use Aura Auth for that, I think it does well to prevent sql injection.
The server crashing will be one thing that the server admin will have to deal with, with minimal losses. Gaining access to the DB or the Admin Panel could lead to bigger losses.
There will be only one username but it has no default name so an attacker wouldn't know what to go off of, and I give no hints as to why the user couldn't log in when they attempt
But would throttling be more effective then just having it so if you try to log in more than 5 times in an hour you're locked out for an hour?
@Alesana - I'm in the same boat. That's something that drives me nuts. I can't lock anything down to just my IP address. I have a very messy workaround on a proxy of mine, all because I have a dyn IP.
@jhmckimm Yeah it's pretty annoying. I was going through a proxy but the speeds speeds weren't the best so I guess I would just have to use a better proxy
i installed it in my cakephp composer, it got installed in /vendor/facebook/ folder, i made my test file but dont know how to run it.. i must be blind but they dont mention it in their README
@Alesana i was introduced to browser automated testing at work and i found it quite interesting, but at work we use mostly java, so i wanted to implement the same thing in my php projects
@Alesana it is basically like phpunit but for front end
well english is like php, you can say "broken" or "supposed to be incorrect" words and everyone will still understand you (it will still work for whatever reason)
I've not really gotten into web development because I really suck with front-end stuff. If being good with HTML/CSS/JS a mandatory requirement of being a PHP dev? Nobody looks for just a PHP dev, right?
Nobody looks for just a PHP dev, right? -- this is not quite correct. I ve seen loads of job postings where they need look for solely php developers, nothing else.
@Alesana it should be minimal with little colors. like apple. but also with some hints of lufthansa orange, but more like salmon. and make the logo bigger. and find a way to display meetings and pdf downloads in a prominent way.
i installed it in my cakephp composer, it got installed in /vendor/facebook/ folder, i made my test file but dont know how to run it.. i must be blind but they dont mention it in their README
Well no that wasn't her fault but yeah it was pretty bad then something else happened while I was doing it and I ended up in the hospital and now I've got a big scar on my back
when you run the test, it launches the browser, goes to url and follows the steps you provided. that example is very basic. And yes, asserting just checks if it is there
@Alesana how we do it is: before writing the code, we make a empty test cases to have an idea of what functions we will have on the page and when to show errors and etc, then we write the actual controllers, and then complete the testcases and run them
then rewrite everything until all testcases are successfully passed. One really good thing about this testing is that in the future if you change some part of your code, you can just run the test again to see if everything is working normally like before you changed the code. You dont have to do things manually. And you can create a test-db for your actual db and insert data into it using phpunit rather than doing it manually and check if everything works
then you open terminal or any command line tool and cd into your project root and run phpunit
if everything goes well, if you only have 2 tests (like i do in the link above) you will see two dots. If assertion didnt match what you wrote in your test it will print F instead of a dot
in php it may not be that necessary, but a month ago when i didnt know about unit testing, I was supposed to make a javascript addon for Slack (chatbox) that would recognise specific commands, then save the data after the command in the google drive file. Every time i implemented a function i would do the checking manually and it was taking forever to send a command, close and log out, log into google drive, check if new data was there.
Then last week my sempai (? person ranked above me at work) showed me how to test it with js unit framework and i was pissed off at myself
@jhmckimm in a nutshell: imagine you want to write a sort algorithm. Let's call it AscendingSort. Before you actually write any code for it, you create a testcase. in the testcase you put a test method, like itShouldSortInAscendingOrder. In that method you put the code to execute the sort algo, e.g. something like $res = asc_sort([7,4,9,3,6]) and a check that $res actually returns the numbers in ascending order. then you exec the test. it will fail because you haven't written any code yet.
then you implement just enough code to make the test succeed.
@Nazimch no offense, but if you have to ask how to call a url in php and dont know the difference between exec and file_get_contents, working on some api is maybe something too advanced right now. how about doing some basic php course first?
@Nazimch on a side note: 2fa.api-docs.io/v1/send-sms-otp has code examples for the most common programming languages, including php. they suggest to use curl instead of file_get_contents.