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docs/register-user.md
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29
docs/register-user.md
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# Registering users manually
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You might want to disable registration in your [instance config](/configuration), but still have a quick way to manually register users upon request. To do so, first set up a separate instance that only listens on localhost, has registration enabled,
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and captchas as well as background jobs disabled. Make sure you have a way to start it easily with just one or a few commands, e.g. via a systemd service. Then, use something like the script below (in the example, the instance is started via a systemd
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service called `podman-invidious_register`, and it listens on localhost port 21742. **Warning**: This script is vulnerable to SQL injections. Only use trusted inputs; if you want to make a custom signup form and use this as a backend, be sure to
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sanitize inputs.
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```sh
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#!/usr/bin/env bash
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set -e
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systemctl start podman-invidious_register
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CONTINUE='y'
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while [ "$CONTINUE" = 'y' ]; do
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read -rp 'User ID: ' ID
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if [ "$(su postgres -c "psql invidious -c \"SELECT email FROM users WHERE email = '\"'$ID'\"';\"" | tail -n 2 | head -n 1)" != '(0 rows)' ]; then
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echo 'Error: User ID is already taken'
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continue
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fi
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read -rsp 'Password: ' PASSWORD
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curl -L 'http://localhost:21742/login' --form-string "email=$ID" --form-string "password=$PASSWORD" -F 'action=signin' >/dev/null
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read -rp 'Register more accounts? [y/N] ' CONTINUE
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done
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systemctl stop podman-invidious_register
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```
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@ -4,10 +4,11 @@ Resetting a user's invidious password needs you to edit the database.
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Firstly, generate a bcrypt-encrypted hash for the new password you want to set for the user.
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This can be done with the `bcrypt` python module, though there are other ways of doing the same.
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This can, for example, be done with the `bcrypt` python module or the `mkpasswd` shell utility (the latter should be preinstalled on most systems):
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```
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python3 -c 'import bcrypt; print(bcrypt.hashpw(b"<INSERT PASSWORD HERE>", bcrypt.gensalt(rounds=10)).decode("ascii"))'
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python3 -c 'import bcrypt; print(bcrypt.hashpw(b"<INSERT PASSWORD HERE>", bcrypt.gensalt(rounds=10)).decode("ascii"))' # python
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mkpasswd --method=bcrypt-a -R 10 # mkpasswd
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```
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To do so, first attach to the database:
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@ -23,3 +24,19 @@ UPDATE users SET password = 'HASH' WHERE email = 'USERNAME';
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```
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After that, the password should be reset.
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This script bundles all needed commands so you don't have to enter everything manually every time, and also checks that the username exists before writing to the database:
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```sh
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#!/bin/sh
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set -e
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printf 'User ID: '
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read -r ID
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if [ "$(su postgres -c "psql invidious -c \"SELECT email FROM users WHERE email = '$ID';\"" | tail -n 2 | head -n 1)" != '(1 row)' ]; then
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echo 'Error: User ID does not exist'
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exit 1
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fi
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HASH="$(mkpasswd --method=bcrypt-a -R 10)"
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su postgres -c "psql invidious -c \"UPDATE users SET password = '\"'$HASH'\"' WHERE email = '\"'$ID'\"';\""
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```
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