Stable releases for this project are covered by the security advisory policy. Authentication plugin interface up to MediaWiki 1.26.Created by anarcat on 1 April 2009, updated 3 November 2017 2-) MediaWiki will default the password to a non-encrypted string (the user will never be able to login if the pwd is not changed).Module categories: Import/Export, Security, User Access & Authentication, Utility.Learn more about dealing with unsupported (abandoned) projects abandoned), and no longer being developed. The module was ported to Drupal 6 by Antoine Beaupré from, and to Drupal 7 by joseph28. There is also some code from Shibboleth_Authentication and Ryan Lane. Support for separate databases is based on Auth_phpBB. The code has changed a fair bit from the original, modifications by Maarten van Dantzich. This implementation started with the code written by TazzyTazzy (Mitch Schwenk) available on the DCCwiki. This project maintains the Drupal part of the module and is useless without the associated Mediawiki extension. When the user logs out of the Drupal site, both the special cookie and any of the wiki's session cookies are removed so the user is also signed out of the wiki. When the user visits the wiki, the wiki extension sees the cookie, extracts the username, and logs the user in. This complicates comparing the two scenarios. The login integration works as follows: when the user signs in to Drupal, an extra cookie is created containing their identity. 1.32, as I stated on the original discussion, the internal MediaWiki authentication code was significantly rewritten in MediaWiki 1.27, and the PluggableAuth extension was similarly rewritten to accommodate the new authentication system. This does not include content exchange or wiki parsing, for that, see the Mediawiki module. User entries are still created in the wiki's user table and are kept up to date on each login with email and real name. It means, we have an extension in our MediaWiki that allows users. It is set up so that users sign in to the Drupal site, and as a result they automatically become logged in to the wiki. Moodle docs does share authentication with. This module provides single sign-in and user database integration for MediaWiki as slave of Drupal.
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