Files
sneakyklaus/docs/decisions/0002-authentication-strategy.md
Phil Skentelbery b077112aba chore: initial project setup
Initialize Sneaky Klaus project with:
- uv package management and pyproject.toml
- Flask application structure (app.py, config.py)
- SQLAlchemy models for Admin and Exchange
- Alembic database migrations
- Pre-commit hooks configuration
- Development tooling (pytest, ruff, mypy)

Initial structure follows design documents in docs/:
- src/app.py: Application factory with Flask extensions
- src/config.py: Environment-based configuration
- src/models/: Admin and Exchange models
- migrations/: Alembic migration setup

🤖 Generated with [Claude Code](https://claude.com/claude-code)

Co-Authored-By: Claude <noreply@anthropic.com>
2025-12-22 11:28:15 -07:00

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# 0002. Authentication Strategy
Date: 2025-12-22
## Status
Accepted
## Context
Sneaky Klaus has two distinct user types with different authentication needs:
1. **Administrator**: Single admin account for entire installation. Needs persistent access to manage exchanges. Must be able to recover access if password is forgotten.
2. **Participants**: Multiple participants across multiple exchanges. Should have frictionless authentication without password management burden. Same participant may join multiple exchanges using same email.
Key requirements:
- **Security**: Authentication must be secure and follow best practices
- **Simplicity for participants**: No password required; minimal friction to access information
- **Admin control**: Admin needs traditional authenticated session for management tasks
- **Password recovery**: Admin must be able to recover access via email
- **Session management**: Sessions should persist appropriately but expire for security
- **Email verification**: Participant email addresses must be verified (implicit via magic link)
## Decision
We will implement a **dual authentication strategy**:
### Admin Authentication: Password-Based
**Login Flow**:
1. Admin enters email and password
2. Password hashed with bcrypt, compared to stored hash
3. On success, session created with admin role
4. Session cookie set with appropriate security flags
**Password Requirements**:
- Minimum 12 characters
- No complexity requirements (no mandatory special chars, numbers, etc.)
- This follows modern NIST guidance: length matters more than complexity
**Password Recovery Flow**:
1. Admin requests password reset from login page
2. System sends time-limited reset token (1 hour expiration) to admin email
3. Reset link directs to password reset form
4. Token validated, new password set
5. Token invalidated after single use
**Session Management**:
- Server-side sessions stored in database or cache
- 7-day sliding expiration window (extends on activity)
- Secure, HTTP-only session cookies
- SameSite=Lax for CSRF protection
- Logout explicitly destroys session
### Participant Authentication: Magic Links
**Magic Link Flow**:
1. Participant requests access (from registration page or email)
2. System generates cryptographically random token (256-bit)
3. Token stored in database with 1-hour expiration
4. Email sent with magic link: `/participant/auth/{token}`
5. Clicking link validates token and creates session
6. Token invalidated after single use
**Session Management**:
- Server-side sessions stored in database
- 7-day sliding expiration window (extends on activity)
- Secure, HTTP-only session cookies
- SameSite=Lax for CSRF protection
- Sessions scoped to participant's exchanges only
- No explicit logout needed (session expires naturally)
**Token Generation**:
- Use Python's `secrets` module for cryptographic randomness
- Tokens are 32-byte random values, URL-safe base64 encoded
- Tokens stored as hashed values in database (using SHA-256)
- Original token never stored in plain text
### Security Measures
**Password Storage**:
- bcrypt with cost factor 12 (adjustable)
- Passwords never logged or exposed in error messages
- Password reset tokens hashed before storage
**Session Security**:
- Session IDs are cryptographically random
- Sessions stored server-side (not client-side JWTs)
- Session data includes: user ID, role (admin/participant), creation time, last activity
- Cookie flags: `Secure=True` (HTTPS only), `HttpOnly=True`, `SameSite=Lax`
**Rate Limiting**:
- Login attempts: 5 per email per 15 minutes
- Magic link requests: 3 per email per hour
- Password reset requests: 3 per email per hour
- Implemented at application level, tracked in database or cache
**Token Expiration**:
- Magic link tokens: 1 hour
- Password reset tokens: 1 hour
- Admin sessions: 7 days (sliding window)
- Participant sessions: 7 days (sliding window)
## Consequences
### Positive
- **Participant convenience**: No password to remember; access via email
- **Email verification**: Magic links implicitly verify participant email addresses
- **Admin security**: Traditional password-based auth provides familiar security model
- **Password recovery**: Admin can self-serve password reset without external support
- **Sliding sessions**: Activity extends session, reducing re-authentication friction
- **Security best practices**: Modern password requirements (length over complexity)
- **CSRF protection**: SameSite cookies prevent cross-site request forgery
- **Token security**: One-time-use tokens prevent replay attacks
### Negative
- **Email dependency**: Magic links require working email delivery (mitigated by Resend reliability)
- **Token expiration UX**: 1-hour expiration may frustrate slow email checkers (acceptable trade-off for security)
- **Session storage**: Server-side sessions require database/cache storage (minimal overhead)
- **No remember-me for admin**: 7-day max session requires re-login (acceptable for security)
### Neutral
- **Dual auth complexity**: Maintaining two auth flows adds implementation complexity (necessary for different user needs)
- **Rate limiting overhead**: Requires tracking attempts per user (minimal performance impact)
- **Session cleanup**: Expired sessions must be periodically purged (handled via background job)
## Implementation Details
### Database Schema
**Admin User**:
```python
class Admin(Model):
id: int
email: str (unique, indexed)
password_hash: str
created_at: datetime
updated_at: datetime
```
**Participant** (simplified for auth):
```python
class Participant(Model):
id: int
email: str (indexed)
exchange_id: int (foreign key)
# ... other fields
```
**Session**:
```python
class Session(Model):
id: str (session ID, primary key)
user_id: int
user_type: str ('admin' | 'participant')
created_at: datetime
last_activity: datetime
expires_at: datetime
data: JSON (optional additional session data)
```
**Auth Token** (magic links and password reset):
```python
class AuthToken(Model):
id: int
token_hash: str (indexed)
token_type: str ('magic_link' | 'password_reset')
email: str
participant_id: int (nullable, for magic links)
exchange_id: int (nullable, for magic links)
created_at: datetime
expires_at: datetime
used_at: datetime (nullable)
```
**Rate Limit**:
```python
class RateLimit(Model):
id: int
key: str (e.g., "login:admin@example.com", indexed)
attempts: int
window_start: datetime
expires_at: datetime
```
### Flask Session Configuration
```python
app.config['SESSION_TYPE'] = 'sqlalchemy' # Server-side sessions
app.config['SESSION_PERMANENT'] = True
app.config['PERMANENT_SESSION_LIFETIME'] = timedelta(days=7)
app.config['SESSION_COOKIE_SECURE'] = True # HTTPS only
app.config['SESSION_COOKIE_HTTPONLY'] = True
app.config['SESSION_COOKIE_SAMESITE'] = 'Lax'
app.config['SESSION_REFRESH_EACH_REQUEST'] = True # Sliding window
```
### Authentication Decorators
```python
@login_required # Requires any authenticated user
@admin_required # Requires admin role
@participant_required # Requires participant role
```
### URL Structure
**Admin**:
- `/admin/login` - Login form
- `/admin/logout` - Logout
- `/admin/forgot-password` - Request password reset
- `/admin/reset-password/{token}` - Reset password form
**Participant**:
- `/participant/auth/{token}` - Magic link endpoint
- `/participant/logout` - Optional logout
## Alternatives Considered
### OAuth/Social Login
**Rejected**: Adds external dependencies, complicates self-hosting, and provides minimal benefit for a self-hosted application where users control the deployment.
### JWT Tokens
**Rejected for sessions**: JWTs are stateless, making them difficult to invalidate (e.g., on logout or security incident). Server-side sessions provide better control.
**Considered for magic links**: Could use JWTs for magic links, but custom tokens are simpler and equally secure.
### Passkeys/WebAuthn
**Deferred**: Modern and secure but adds implementation complexity. Could be added in future version for admin auth.
### Email Verification Codes
**Rejected**: 6-digit codes are less secure than magic links and require users to manually copy/paste, reducing convenience.
### Participant Passwords
**Rejected**: Violates core principle of frictionless participant experience. Participants joining Secret Santa events shouldn't need to manage yet another password.
### Longer Magic Link Expiration
**Rejected**: 1 hour balances security with usability. Longer expiration increases risk if email account is compromised.
### Shorter Session Duration
**Considered**: 24-hour sessions would be more secure but require frequent re-authentication. 7-day sliding window balances security with convenience.
## Security Considerations
### Password Reset Token Timing Attack
To prevent email enumeration via timing attacks:
- Always show "If an account exists, you'll receive an email" message
- Perform same-time operations regardless of email existence
- Don't reveal whether email is registered
### Magic Link Security
- Tokens are single-use and time-limited
- Token hashing prevents database compromise from exposing valid tokens
- Rate limiting prevents brute force token guessing
- Tokens scoped to specific participant and exchange
### Session Fixation Prevention
- New session ID generated on login
- Old session destroyed on logout
- Session ID rotated on privilege elevation
### Brute Force Protection
- Rate limiting on all auth endpoints
- Progressive delays on repeated failures (optional enhancement)
- Account lockout not implemented (single admin, participant magic links)
## Future Enhancements
Potential improvements for future versions:
1. **Admin 2FA**: Time-based OTP for additional admin security
2. **Passkeys**: WebAuthn support for passwordless admin auth
3. **Session device tracking**: Show admin active sessions and allow revocation
4. **Remember-me for admin**: Optional extended session with re-authentication for sensitive actions
5. **Magic link preview protection**: Use confirmation step before activating magic link
## References
- NIST Password Guidelines: https://pages.nist.gov/800-63-3/sp800-63b.html
- OWASP Authentication Cheat Sheet: https://cheatsheetseries.owasp.org/cheatsheets/Authentication_Cheat_Sheet.html
- Flask Session Management: https://flask.palletsprojects.com/en/latest/quickstart/#sessions
- Python secrets module: https://docs.python.org/3/library/secrets.html