Skip to content
This repository has been archived by the owner on May 6, 2019. It is now read-only.
/ Impostor Public archive
forked from avallbona/Impostor

Django app that enables staff to log in as other users using their own credentials.

License

Notifications You must be signed in to change notification settings

botify-hq/Impostor

 
 

Folders and files

NameName
Last commit message
Last commit date

Latest commit

 

History

22 Commits
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 

Repository files navigation

Impostor

Impostor is a Django application which allows staff members to login as a different user by using their own username and password.

Every such authentication is recorded in database and listed in admin interface to everyone with an access to ImpostorLog interface. However it is not possible to delete log entries through admin interface to make covering tracks more difficult.

Impostor was developed and tested with Django 1.2. It might work with other versions too. It also depends on Django's authentication system and assumes you use its usernames for authentication.

Impostor is a MMM project (http://mmm.si) developed by Marko Samastur (markos@gaivo.net) licensed under MIT license.

Installation

Impostor won't work, if you are not using Django's auth system. It currently also assumes that you use username to identify your users and not something else (like email).

First install impostor app files as you would any other Django app. Next some changes to your Django settings file are in order. To AUTHENTICATION_BACKENDS add:

'impostor.backend.AuthBackend'

This will add impostor auth backend to other backends. AUTHENTICATION_BACKENDS is a tuple listing backends and if you don't have it yet, then add following lines to your settings:

AUTHENTICATION_BACKENDS = (
    'django.contrib.auth.backends.ModelBackend',
    'impostor.backend.AuthBackend',
)

Also add 'impostor' app to INSTALLED_APPS.

Run 'python manage.py syncdb' to create needed table and you are set.

Usage

By now you should have a working system. This means that your superuser users (users with is_superuser flag set to True) can log in as different user by using their password and following concatenation:

staff_username as users_username

Example: Let's say my username is markos and I want to login as user fry. Then I would use 'markos as fry' as my username and my normal password for password.

Every such log in is logged in ImpostorLog table that can be seen through Django admin interface, but for obvious security reasons can't be manipulated there.

You can widen set of users who can impose as other users by adding a setting IMPOSTOR_GROUP to settings.py. Users belonging to a group with this name will also be able to pretend to be somebody else (but not superusers).

Impostor also provides a replacement authentication form, because two usernames can easily exceed 30 character limit of original form. Its name is BigAuthenticationForm and you can find it in impostor.forms.

NOTE: Only superuser users can use this (you have to turn on is_superuser for every user that needs this privilege) or those belonging to IMPOSTOR_GROUP and every such log in gets recorded.

Also use IMPOSTOR_GROUP cautiously because it still allows impersonating somebody with different set of permissions (and hence security breach).

TODO/Wishlist

  • add support for log in with emails
  • record when impostor logs out*
  • mark "hijacked" requests (so impostor can tell when he is using website as somebody else and avoid doing something stupid or that you can limit what is doable in such case)
  • framework for easy notification of hijacked users (so you can notify them that their account has been accessed if you wish)

[*] This feature depends on django auth signals coming in Django 1.3, which I am not using yet.

Known bugs

  • proper support for logging in with emails (currently broken)

About

Django app that enables staff to log in as other users using their own credentials.

Resources

License

Stars

Watchers

Forks

Releases

No releases published

Packages

No packages published

Languages

  • Python 82.7%
  • HTML 17.3%