even when token is invalid or has no password.
Returning the uid as loginname is wrong, and leads to problems when
these differ. E.g. the getapppassword API was creating app token with
the uid as loginname. In a scenario with external authentication (such
as LDAP), these tokens were then invalidated next time their underlying
password was checked, and systematically ceased to function.
Co-authored-by: kesselb <mail@danielkesselberg.de>
for: switch to consistent camelCase
Signed-off-by: Lionel Elie Mamane <lionel@mamane.lu>
To continue this formatting madness, here's a tiny patch that adds
unified formatting for control structures like if and loops as well as
classes, their methods and anonymous functions. This basically forces
the constructs to start on the same line. This is not exactly what PSR2
wants, but I think we can have a few exceptions with "our" style. The
starting of braces on the same line is pracrically standard for our
code.
This also removes and empty lines from method/function bodies at the
beginning and end.
Signed-off-by: Christoph Wurst <christoph@winzerhof-wurst.at>
Some user backends (like the database backend) allow us to obtain a user
case insensitive. However the UID itself is case sensitive.
Example:
* create a user User1
* login as User1
- This results the data/User1 folder to be created etc
* now have some code somewhere that obtains the userFolder (from
IRootFolder) but pas in 'uSER1' as uid
- The code will check if that is a valid user. And in this case it is
since User1 and uSER1 both map to the same user
- However the the UID in the user object is used for the folder a new
folder fill be create data/uSER1
With this PR this is avoided now. Since we obtain the real UID casing in
the backend before creating the user object.
Signed-off-by: Roeland Jago Douma <roeland@famdouma.nl>
On some backends (saml for example) users can't revalidate their
passwords as Nextcloud has no way to do verify it.
Signed-off-by: Roeland Jago Douma <roeland@famdouma.nl>