Use the authentication method system for the demo login and the
generated accounts. This makes it possible to toggle it off on
production systems as these shouldn't have it enabled at all.
If a session is rotate in the middle of a server side rendering then
some random portions of requests made on the server side will fail with
a session taken error as the server is not going to update the cookies
of the client during these requests.
To avoid this pitfall extend the expiry time of sessions to be 10
seconds after the session has been rotated. This is accomplished by
introducing a new timestamp on sessions called the rotateAt at time
alongside the expiresAt time. Sessions used after rotateAt that haven't
been rotated get rotated into a new session and the existing session
gets the expiresAt time set to 10 seconds in the future. Sessions that
are past the expiredAt time have no access.
This makes the logic around session expiry simpler, and also makes it
possible to audit when a session got rotated, and to mark sessions as
expired without a chance to rotate to a new session without having to
resort to a finished flag.
When a session expires close any event streams that have been opened
with that session. This prevents an attacker with a leaked session
cookie from opening a stream and receiving updates indefinitely without
being detected.
By sending the session the event stream is opened with when the stream
is established this closure on session expiry also serves as a way for
a user agent to be notified whenever its own access level changes.
In order to minimise the window of opportunity to steal a session,
automatically rotate it onto a new session on a frequent basis. This
makes a session cookie older than the automatic rollover time less
likely to grant access and more likely to be detected.
Should a stolen session cookie get rotated while the attacker is using
it, the user will be notificed that their session has been taken the
next time they open the app if the user re-visits the website before the
session is discarded.
I firmly believe in free software.
The application I'm making here have capabilities that I've not seen in
any system. It presents itself as an opportunity to collaborate on a
tool that serves the people rather than corporations. Whose incentives
are to help people rather, not make the most money. And whose terms
ensure that these freedoms and incentives cannot be taken back or
subverted.
I license this software under the AGPL.
Add routes and admin panel elements for creating a database backup,
restoring from a backup, deleting the existing schedule, and replacing
the database with the demo schedule. These server as crude ways to
manage the data stored in the system.
Rename the base Entity type to ApiEntity, and the base EntityToombstone
to ApiTombstone to better reflect the reality that its only used in the
API interface and that the client and server types uses its own base if
any.
Remove EntityLiving and pull EntityTombstone out of of the base entity
type so that the types based on ApiEntity are always living entities and
if it's possible for it to contain tombstone this will be explicitly
told with the type including a union with ApiTombstone.
Refactor the types of the ClientEntity and ClientMap to better reflect
the types of the entities it stores and converts to/from.
Rename accounts to users to be consistent with the new naming scheme
where account only referes to the logged in user of the session and
implement live updates of users via a user store which listens for
updates from the event stream.
Start the work of clearly distingushing client side types, server side
types and types shared over the API by renaming "AccountSession" and
"Session" names used on the server to "ServerSession".