76 lines
3.4 KiB
Markdown
76 lines
3.4 KiB
Markdown
---
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stage: Manage
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group: Authentication and Authorization
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info: To determine the technical writer assigned to the Stage/Group associated with this page, see https://about.gitlab.com/handbook/product/ux/technical-writing/#assignments
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---
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# User passwords **(FREE)**
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If you use a password to sign in to GitLab, a strong password is very important. A weak or guessable password makes it
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easier for unauthorized people to log into your account.
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Some organizations require you to meet certain requirements when choosing a password.
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Improve the security of your account with [two-factor authentication](account/two_factor_authentication.md)
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## Choose your password
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You can choose a password when you [create a user account](account/create_accounts.md).
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If you register your account using an external authentication and
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authorization provider, you do not need to choose a password. GitLab
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[sets a random, unique, and secure password for you](../../security/passwords_for_integrated_authentication_methods.md).
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## Change your password
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You can change your password. GitLab enforces [password requirements](#password-requirements) when you choose your new
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password.
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1. On the top bar, in the top-right corner, select your avatar.
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1. Select **Edit profile**.
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1. On the left sidebar, select **Password**.
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1. In the **Current password** text box, enter your current password.
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1. In the **New password** and **Password confirmation** text box, enter your new password.
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1. Select **Save password**.
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If you don't know your current password, select the **I forgot my password** link. A password reset email is sent to the
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account's **primary** email address.
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## Password requirements
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Your passwords must meet a set of requirements when:
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- You choose a password during registration.
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- You choose a new password using the forgotten password reset flow.
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- You change your password proactively.
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- You change your password after it expires.
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- An an administrator creates your account.
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- An administrator updates your account.
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By default GitLab enforces the following password requirements:
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- Minimum and maximum password lengths. For example,
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see [the settings for GitLab.com](../gitlab_com/index.md#password-requirements).
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- Disallowing [weak passwords](#block-weak-passwords).
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Self-managed installations can configure the following additional password requirements:
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- [Password minimum and maximum length limits](../../security/password_length_limits.md).
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- [Password complexity requirements](../admin_area/settings/sign_up_restrictions.md#password-complexity-requirements).
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## Block weak passwords
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> [Introduced](https://gitlab.com/gitlab-org/gitlab/-/issues/23610) in GitLab 15.4 [with a flag](../../administration/feature_flags.md) named `block_weak_passwords`, weak passwords aren't accepted. Disabled by default.
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FLAG:
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On self-managed GitLab, by default blocking weak passwords is not available. To make it available, ask an administrator
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to [enable the feature flag](../../administration/feature_flags.md) named `block_weak_passwords`. On GitLab.com, this
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feature is available but can be configured by GitLab.com administrators only.
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GitLab disallows weak passwords. Your password is considered weak when it:
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- Matches one of 4500+ known, breached passwords.
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- Contains part of your name, username, or email address.
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- Contains a predictable word (for example, `gitlab` or `devops`).
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Weak passwords are rejected with the error message: **Password must not contain commonly used combinations of words and letters**.
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