The algorithm is highly inspired from WordPress :
1) in a single field, you give a username or an email
2) Piwigo sends an email with the activation key
3) the user clicks on the link in the email (with the activation key) and is able to set a new password
The "lost password" feature is no longer limited to "classic" users:
administrators and webmasters can use it too (no need to tell webmasters
that they can only change their password in the database)
git-svn-id: http://piwigo.org/svn/trunk@11992 68402e56-0260-453c-a942-63ccdbb3a9ee
higher privacy level than user privacy level.
For an acceptable solution at performance level, I have implemented a cache:
for a given user, each album has a representative_picture_id. This cache also
avoids to perform numerous "order by rand()" SQL queries which is the case
when $conf['allow_random_representative'] = true;
git-svn-id: http://piwigo.org/svn/trunk@8802 68402e56-0260-453c-a942-63ccdbb3a9ee
- insert into syntax not correct for posgresql or sqlite
- add languages table
- incorrect function for row count (sqlite)
git-svn-id: http://piwigo.org/svn/trunk@5452 68402e56-0260-453c-a942-63ccdbb3a9ee
- permalink that use if() syntax
- add tables themes for other database engines that mysql
git-svn-id: http://piwigo.org/svn/trunk@5192 68402e56-0260-453c-a942-63ccdbb3a9ee
manages template/theme in a simpler "theme only level" architecture. It
supports multiple level inheritance.
git-svn-id: http://piwigo.org/svn/trunk@5123 68402e56-0260-453c-a942-63ccdbb3a9ee
- add postgres database engine
- change installation process to allow postgres or mysql database
git-svn-id: http://piwigo.org/svn/trunk@4410 68402e56-0260-453c-a942-63ccdbb3a9ee