# Which Problems Are Solved
ZITADEL's user account deactivation mechanism did not work correctly
with service accounts. Deactivated service accounts retained the ability
to request tokens, which could lead to unauthorized access to
applications and resources.
# How the Problems Are Solved
Additionally to checking the user state on the session API and login UI,
the state is checked on all oidc session methods resulting in a new
token or when returning the user information (userinfo, introspection,
id_token / access_token and saml attributes)
(cherry picked from commit 5b40af79f0)
# Which Problems Are Solved
ZITADEL's user grants deactivation mechanism did not work correctly.
Deactivated user grants were still provided in token, which could lead
to unauthorized access to applications and resources.
Additionally, the management and auth API always returned the state as
active or did not provide any information about the state.
# How the Problems Are Solved
- Correctly check the user grant state on active for tokens and user
information (userinfo, introspection, saml attributes)
- Map state in API and display in Console
(cherry picked from commit ca1914e235)
# Which Problems Are Solved
Some organizations / customers have the requirement, that there users
regularly need to change their password.
ZITADEL already had the possibility to manage a `password age policy` (
thought the API) with the maximum amount of days a password should be
valid, resp. days after with the user should be warned of the upcoming
expiration.
The policy could not be managed though the Console UI and was not
checked in the Login UI.
# How the Problems Are Solved
- The policy can be managed in the Console UI's settings sections on an
instance and organization level.
- During an authentication in the Login UI, if a policy is set with an
expiry (>0) and the user's last password change exceeds the amount of
days set, the user will be prompted to change their password.
- The prompt message of the Login UI can be customized in the Custom
Login Texts though the Console and API on the instance and each
organization.
- The information when the user last changed their password is returned
in the Auth, Management and User V2 API.
- The policy can be retrieved in the settings service as `password
expiry settings`.
# Additional Changes
None.
# Additional Context
- closes#8081
---------
Co-authored-by: Tim Möhlmann <tim+github@zitadel.com>
# Which Problems Are Solved
An admin / application might want to be able to reduce the amount of
roles returned in the token, for example if a user is granted to many
organizations or for specific cases where the application want to narrow
down the access for that token to a specific organization or multiple.
This can now be achieved by providing a scope with the id of the
organization, resp. multiple scopes for every organization, which should
be included.
```
urn:zitadel:iam:org:roles🆔{orgID}
```
**Note:** the new scope does not work when Introspection / Userinfo are
set to legacy mode.
# How the Problems Are Solved
The user info query now has two variants:
1. Variant that returns all organization authorization grants if the new
scope wasn't provided for backward compatibility.
2. Variant that filters the organizations based on the IDs passed in one
or more of the above scopes and returns only those authorization grants.
The query is defined as a `text/template` and both variants are rendered
once in package `init()`.
# Additional Changes
- In the integration tests `assertProjectRoleClaims` now also checks the
org IDs in the roles.
# Additional Context
- Closes#7996
* feat(oidc): optimize the userinfo endpoint
* store project ID in the access token
* query for projectID if not in token
* add scope based tests
* Revert "store project ID in the access token"
This reverts commit 5f0262f239.
* query project role assertion
* use project role assertion setting to return roles
* workaround eventual consistency and handle PAT
* do not append empty project id