It takes in an email and plain text password to verify. If it fails to find a password stored for email, it returns not_found. If it finds the password hash stored but that hash doesn't match the password passed via the API, it returns verified = false, else it returns verified = true.
Co-authored-by: Alban Seurat <alban.seurat@me.com>
This allows users of the LDAP connector to give users of Dex' login
prompt an idea of what they should enter for a username.
Before, irregardless of how the LDAP connector was set up, the prompt
was
Username
[_________________]
Password
[_________________]
Now, this is configurable, and can be used to say "MyCorp SSO Login" if
that's what it is.
If it's not configured, it will default to "Username".
For the passwordDB connector (local users), it is set to "Email
Address", since this is what it uses.
Signed-off-by: Stephan Renatus <srenatus@chef.io>
This PR reworks the web layout so static files can be provided and
a "themes" directory to allow a certain degree of control over logos,
styles, etc.
This PR does NOT add general support for frontend customization,
only enough to allow us to start exploring theming internally.
The dex binary also must now be run from the root directory since
templates are no longer "compiled into" the binary.
The docker image has been updated with frontend assets.
Bcrypt'd hashes have "$" characters in them. This means that #667
(accepting actually bcrypted values) combined with #627 (expanding
config with environment variables) broke the example config.
For now, allow storages and connectors to expand their configs from
the environment, but don't do this anywhere else.
Allow users to define config values which are read form environemnt
variables. Helpful for sensitive variables such as OAuth2 client IDs
or LDAP credentials.
Since we don't have a good strategy which takes a username and password
add a mock connector which implementes PasswordConnector so we can
develop the frontend screens.