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159 lines
6.7 KiB
Plaintext
159 lines
6.7 KiB
Plaintext
MediaWiki extension: SpamBlacklist
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----------------------------------
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SpamBlacklist is a simple edit filter extension. When someone tries to save the
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page, it checks the text against a potentially very large list of "bad"
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hostnames. If there is a match, it displays an error message to the user and
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refuses to save the page.
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To enable it, first download a copy of the SpamBlacklist directory and put it
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into your extensions directory. Then put the following at the end of your
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LocalSettings.php:
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wfLoadExtension ( 'SpamBlacklist' );
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The list of bad URLs can be drawn from multiple sources. These sources are
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configured with the $wgBlacklistSettings global variable. This global variable
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can be set in LocalSettings.php.
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$wgBlacklistSettings is an array, where first key is either spam or email and
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their value containing either a URL, a filename or a database location.
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Specifying a database location allows you to draw the
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blacklist from a page on your wiki. The format of the database location
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specifier is "DB: <db name> <title>".
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Example:
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wfLoadExtension ( 'SpamBlacklist' );
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$wgBlacklistSettings = [
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'spam' => [
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"$IP/extensions/SpamBlacklist/wikimedia_blacklist", // Wikimedia's list
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"DB: wikidb My_spam_blacklist", // database (wikidb), title (My_spam_blacklist)
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]
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];
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The local pages [[MediaWiki:Spam-blacklist]] and [[MediaWiki:Spam-whitelist]]
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will always be used, whatever additional files are listed.
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Compatibility
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-----------
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This extension is primarily maintained to run on the latest release version
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of MediaWiki (1.33.x as of this writing) and development versions.
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If you are using an older version of MediaWiki, you can checkout an
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older release branch, for example MediaWiki 1.20 would use REL1_20.
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File format
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-----------
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In simple terms:
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* Everything from a "#" character to the end of the line is a comment
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* Every non-blank line is a regex fragment which will only match inside URLs
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Internally, a regex is formed which looks like this:
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!http://[a-z0-9\-.]*(line 1|line 2|line 3|....)!Si
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A few notes about this format. It's not necessary to add www to the start of
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hostnames, the regex is designed to match any subdomain. Don't add patterns
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to your file which may run off the end of the URL, e.g. anything containing
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".*". Unlike in some similar systems, the line-end metacharacter "$" will not
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assert the end of the hostname, it'll assert the end of the page.
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Performance
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-----------
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This extension uses a small "loader" file, to avoid loading all the code on
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every page view. This means that page view performance will not be affected
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even if you are not running a PHP bytecode cache such as Turck MMCache. Note
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that a bytecode cache is strongly recommended for any MediaWiki installation.
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The regex match itself generally adds an insignificant overhead to page saves,
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on the order of 100ms in our experience. However loading the spam file from disk
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or the database, and constructing the regex, may take a significant amount of
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time depending on your hardware. If you find that enabling this extension slows
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down saves excessively, try installing MemCached or another supported data
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caching solution. The SpamBlacklist extension will cache the constructed regex
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if such a system is present.
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Caching behavior
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----------------
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Blacklist files loaded from remote web sites are cached locally, in the cache
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subsystem used for MediaWiki's localization. (This usually means the objectcache
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table on a default install.)
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By default, the list is cached for 15 minutes (if successfully fetched) or
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10 minutes (if the network fetch failed), after which point it will be fetched
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again when next requested. This should be a decent balance between avoiding
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too-frequent fetches if your site is frequently used and staying up to date.
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Fully-processed blacklist data may be cached in memcached or another shared
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memory cache if it's been configured in MediaWiki.
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Stability
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---------
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This extension has not been widely tested outside Wikimedia. Although it has
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been in production on Wikimedia websites since December 2004, it should be
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considered experimental. Its design is simple, with little input validation, so
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unexpected behavior due to incorrect regular expression input or non-standard
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configuration is entirely possible.
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Obtaining or making blacklists
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------------------------------
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The primary source for a MediaWiki-compatible blacklist file is the Wikimedia
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spam blacklist on meta:
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https://meta.wikimedia.org/wiki/Spam_blacklist
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In the default configuration, the extension loads this list from our site
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once every 10-15 minutes.
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The Wikimedia spam blacklist can only be edited by trusted administrators.
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Wikimedia hosts large, diverse wikis with many thousands of external links,
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hence the Wikimedia blacklist is comparatively conservative in the links it
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blocks. You may want to add your own keyword blocks or even ccTLD blocks.
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You may suggest modifications to the Wikimedia blacklist at:
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https://meta.wikimedia.org/wiki/Talk:Spam_blacklist
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To make maintenance of local lists easier, you may wish to add a DB: source to
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$wgBlacklistSettings and hence create a blacklist on your wiki. If you do this,
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it is strongly recommended that you protect the page from general editing.
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Besides the obvious danger that someone may add a regex that matches everything,
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please note that an attacker with the ability to input arbitrary regular
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expressions may be able to generate segfaults in the PCRE library.
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Whitelisting
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------------
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You may sometimes find that a site listed in a centrally-maintained blacklist
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contains something you nonetheless want to link to.
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A local whitelist can be maintained by creating a [[MediaWiki:Spam-whitelist]]
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page and listing hostnames in it, using the same format as the blacklists.
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URLs matching the whitelist will be ignored locally.
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Logging
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-------
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To aid with tracking which domains are being spammed, this extension has
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multiple logging features. By default, hits are included in the standard
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debug log (controlled by $wgDebugLogFile). You can grep for 'SpamBlacklistHit',
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which includes the IP of the user and the URL they tried to submit. This
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file is only availible for people with server access and includes private info.
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You can also enable logging to [[Special:Log]] by setting $wgLogSpamBlacklistHits to
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true. This will include the account which tripped the blacklist, the page title the
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edit was attempted on, and the specific URL. By default this log is only viewable
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to wiki administrators, and you can grant other groups access by giving them the
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"spamblacklistlog" permission.
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Copyright
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---------
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This extension and this documentation was written by Tim Starling (with later
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contributions by others) and is available under GPLv2 or any later version.
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