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OFTC Webverify

Human verification of OFTC Services accounts with the help of hCaptcha.

Implemented in Python as a Flask app intended to run on uWSGI. Makes use of requests and psycopg2.

Known to work on Python 3.5 and 3.7.

Application Configuration

The application expects webverify.cfg to exist in the root directory. webverify.example.cfg is included as a template. All parameters are required.

Setup

Prerequisites

The following build prerequisites need to be met:

  • A C compiler and related tools
  • python3-dev
  • libpq-dev

Which on Debian can be satisfied with apt-get install build-essential python3-dev libpq-dev

Virtual Env

Set up the virtual env: python3 -m venv venv

and activate it: . venv/bin/activate

Python Dependencies

  • Flask
  • requests
  • psycopg2
  • uWSGI

Install them with:

pip3 install -r requirements.txt

or if you like living on the edge:

pip3 install flask requests psycopg2 uwsgi

Running

Ensure that the virtual env has been activated with . venv/bin/activate

Production

uWSGI can be configured in webverify.uwsgi.ini. webverify.uwsgi.example.ini is included as a template.

Two settings that are important to consider are http-socket that sets the address and port to bind on, and processes that sets the number of workers that will be spawned to handle requests. Each worker will establish its own connection to the database.

Additionally, if running on uWSGI, a uWSGI cache named verified is expected to exist with blocksize=1 and keysize=20, set up as:

cache2 = name=verified,items=1000,blocksize=1,keysize=20

The included webverify.uwsgi.example.ini watches two files to perform reloading and to reopen the log. The latter can for instance be used as a postrotate command in logrotate.

Reload: touch run/webverify.uwsgi.touch-reload

Reopen log: touch run/webverify.uwsgi.touch-logreopen

Standalone

uwsgi webverify.uwsgi.ini

Systemd Service

A systemd service file suitable to be used as a user service is provided in webverify.service as an example.

It expects oftc-webverify to be installed in /opt/oftc-webverify.

Install webverify.service in ~/.config/systemd/user/webverify.service

Run systemctl --user start webverify to start it

Run systemctl --user enable webverify to have it start automatically on boot.

Logrotate

A suitable logrotate example configuration is provided in webverify.logrotate.

It can, for instance, be installed as /etc/logrotate.d/webverify on some distributions.

It expects oftc-webverify to be installed in /opt/oftc-webverify and to be running as the user oftc-webverify

Development

For development you can use the Flask built-in server that provides some debugging help:

FLASK_ENV=development FLASK_APP=webverify/webverify flask run

Verification Token

The token format is base16(nick):epoch:sha1hmac(nick+':'+epoch)

The nick is base16-encoded due to IRC supporting characters in nicks that are not URL-safe, and because base16 encoding is already available and used in Services.

Currently, Services SHA1-hash the secret to produce the key used in the HMAC.

Example Token Generation

import time, base64, hmac, hashlib

secret = b'secret'
hash_key = True
nick = 'MyAwesomeNick'
epoch = str(int(time.time()))
message = 'nick' + ':' + epoch

if hash_key:
  key = hashlib.sha1(secret).digest()
else:
  key = secret

msg = (nick + ':' + epoch).encode()
auth = hmac.new(key, message.encode(), hashlib.sha1).hexdigest()

b16nick = base64.b16encode(nick.encode()).decode() 
token = b16nick + ':' + epoch + ':' + auth
print(token)

License

OFTC Webverify is released under Apache License 2.0