
Security News
Follow-up and Clarification on Recent Malicious Ruby Gems Campaign
A clarification on our recent research investigating 60 malicious Ruby gems.
= reCAPTCHA
Author:: Jason L Perry (http://ambethia.com) Copyright:: Copyright (c) 2007 Jason L Perry License:: {MIT}[http://creativecommons.org/licenses/MIT/] Info:: http://ambethia.com/recaptcha Git:: http://github.com/ambethia/recaptcha/tree/master Bugs:: http://github.com/ambethia/recaptcha/issues
This plugin adds helpers for the {reCAPTCHA API}[http://recaptcha.net]. In your views you can use the +recaptcha_tags+ method to embed the needed javascript, and you can validate in your controllers with +verify_recaptcha+.
Beforehand you need to configure Recaptcha with your custom private and public key. You may find detailed examples below. Exceptions will be raised if you call these methods and the keys can't be found.
== About this fork
This fork tries to introduces a more convenient way to configure recaptcha's settings. The API will be inspired by {Thoughtbot's Hoptoad}[http://robots.thoughtbot.com/post/344833329/mygem-configure-block].
== Rails Installation
reCAPTCHA for Rails, add this to your Gemfile:
gem "recaptcha", :require => "recaptcha/rails"
Or, it can be installed as a gem:
config.gem "recaptcha", :lib => "recaptcha/rails"
Or, as a standard rails plugin:
script/plugin install git://github.com/ambethia/recaptcha.git
== Merb Installation
reCAPTCHA can also be used in a Merb application when installed as a gem:
dependency "alm-recaptcha", ">=0.2.2.1", :require_as => "recaptcha/merb"
Initial Merb compatability funded by ALM Labs.
== Setting up your API Keys
There are multiple ways to setup your reCAPTCHA API key once you {obtain}[http://recaptcha.net/whyrecaptcha.html] a pair.
=== Recaptcha.configure
You may use the block style configuration. The following code could be placed into a +config/initializers/recaptcha.rb+ when used in a Rails project.
Recaptcha.configure do |config| config.public_key = '6Lc6BAAAAAAAAChqRbQZcn_yyyyyyyyyyyyyyyyy' config.private_key = '6Lc6BAAAAAAAAKN3DRm6VA_xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx' config.proxy = 'http://myrpoxy.com.au:8080' end
This way, you may also set additional options to fit recaptcha into your deployment environment.
== Recaptcha#with_configuration
If you want to temporarily overwrite the configuration you set with Recaptcha.configure
(when testing, for example), you can use a Recaptcha#with_configuration
block:
Recaptcha.configure(:public_key => '12345') do # Do stuff with the overwritten public_key. end
=== Shell environment
Or, you can keep your keys out of your code base by exporting the following environment variables. You might do this in the .profile/rc, or equivalent for the user running your application:
export RECAPTCHA_PUBLIC_KEY = '6Lc6BAAAAAAAAChqRbQZcn_yyyyyyyyyyyyyyyyy' export RECAPTCHA_PRIVATE_KEY = '6Lc6BAAAAAAAAKN3DRm6VA_xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx'
=== Per call
You can also pass in your keys as options at runtime, for example:
recaptcha_tags :public_key => '6Lc6BAAAAAAAAChqRbQZcn_yyyyyyyyyyyyyyyyy'
and later,
verify_recaptcha :private_key => '6Lc6BAAAAAAAAKN3DRm6VA_xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx'
This option might be useful, if the same code base is used for multiple reCAPTCHA setups.
== To use 'recaptcha'
Add +recaptcha_tags+ to each form you want to protect.
And, add +verify_recaptcha+ logic to each form action that you've protected.
=== +recaptcha_tags+
Some of the options available:
:ssl:: Uses secure http for captcha widget (default +false+) :noscript:: Include content (default +true+) :display:: Takes a hash containing the +theme+ and +tabindex+ options per the API. (default +nil+) :ajax:: Render the dynamic AJAX captcha per the API. (default +false+) :public_key:: Your public API key, takes precedence over the ENV variable (default +nil+) :error:: Override the error code returned from the reCAPTCHA API (default +nil+)
You can also override the html attributes for the sizes of the generated +textarea+ and +iframe+ elements, if CSS isn't your thing. Inspect the source of +recaptcha_tags+ to see these options.
=== +verify_recaptcha+
This method returns +true+ or +false+ after processing the parameters from the reCAPTCHA widget. Why isn't this a model validation? Because that violates MVC. You can use it like this, or how ever you like. Passing in the ActiveRecord object is optional, if you do--and the captcha fails to verify--an error will be added to the object for you to use.
Some of the options available:
:model:: Model to set errors :attribute:: Model attribute to receive errors (default :base) :message:: Custom error message :private_key:: Your private API key, takes precedence over the ENV variable (default +nil+). :timeout:: The number of seconds to wait for reCAPTCHA servers before give up. (default +3+)
respond_to do |format| if verify_recaptcha(:model => @post, :message => "Oh! It's error with reCAPTCHA!") && @post.save # ... else # ... end end
== I18n support reCAPTCHA passes two types of error explanation to a linked model. It will use the I18n gem to translate the default error message if I18n is available. To customize the messages to your locale, add these keys to your I18n backend:
recaptcha.errors.verification_failed:: error message displayed if the captcha words didn't match recaptcha.errors.recaptcha_unavailable:: displayed if a timout error occured while attempting to verify the captcha
== TODO
FAQs
Unknown package
We found that recaptcha-rails3 demonstrated a not healthy version release cadence and project activity because the last version was released a year ago. It has 1 open source maintainer collaborating on the project.
Did you know?
Socket for GitHub automatically highlights issues in each pull request and monitors the health of all your open source dependencies. Discover the contents of your packages and block harmful activity before you install or update your dependencies.
Security News
A clarification on our recent research investigating 60 malicious Ruby gems.
Security News
ESLint now supports parallel linting with a new --concurrency flag, delivering major speed gains and closing a 10-year-old feature request.
Research
/Security News
A malicious Go module posing as an SSH brute forcer exfiltrates stolen credentials to a Telegram bot controlled by a Russian-speaking threat actor.