Webhooks now stored encrypted (webhooks.enc) instead of plain text: - Automatic migration from webhooks.json to webhooks.enc - Uses same AES-256-GCM encryption as nodes and email configs - Original file backed up as webhooks.json.backup - Protects sensitive webhook URLs and authentication headers This addresses the security concern where webhook URLs containing API tokens (like Telegram bot tokens) were stored in plain text.
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Pulse Security
Mandatory Authentication
Starting with v4.5.0, authentication setup is prompted for all new Pulse installations. This protects your Proxmox API credentials from unauthorized access.
First-Run Security Setup
When you first access Pulse, you'll be guided through a mandatory security setup:
- Create your admin username and password
- Automatic API token generation for automation
- Settings are applied immediately without restart
- Your existing nodes and settings are preserved
Smart Security Context
Public Access Detection
Pulse automatically detects when it's being accessed from public networks:
- Private Networks: Local/RFC1918 addresses (192.168.x.x, 10.x.x.x, etc.)
- Public Networks: Any non-private IP address
- Stronger Warnings: Red alerts when accessed from public IPs without authentication
Trusted Networks Configuration (Deprecated)
Note: Authentication is now mandatory regardless of network location.
Legacy configuration (no longer applicable):
# Environment variable (comma-separated CIDR blocks)
PULSE_TRUSTED_NETWORKS=192.168.1.0/24,10.0.0.0/24
# Or in systemd
sudo systemctl edit pulse-backend
[Service]
Environment="PULSE_TRUSTED_NETWORKS=192.168.1.0/24,10.0.0.0/24"
When configured:
- Access from trusted networks: No auth required
- Access from outside: Authentication enforced
- Useful for: Mixed home/remote access scenarios
Security Warning System
Pulse now includes a non-intrusive security warning system that helps you understand your security posture:
Security Score
Your instance receives a score from 0-5 based on:
- ✅ Credentials encrypted at rest (always enabled)
- ✅ Export/import protection
- ⚠️ Authentication enabled
- ⚠️ HTTPS connection
- ⚠️ Audit logging
Dismissing Warnings
If you're comfortable with your security setup, you can dismiss warnings:
- For 1 day - Reminder tomorrow
- For 1 week - Reminder next week
- Forever - Won't show again
Credential Security
Encrypted at Rest (AES-256-GCM)
- Node Credentials: Passwords and API tokens (
/etc/pulse/nodes.enc) - Email Settings: SMTP passwords (
/etc/pulse/email.enc) - Webhook Data: URLs and auth headers (
/etc/pulse/webhooks.enc) - v4.1.9+ - Encryption Key: Auto-generated (
/etc/pulse/.encryption.key)
Security Features
- Logs: Token values masked with
***in all outputs - API: Frontend receives only
hasToken: true, never actual values - Export: Requires API_TOKEN authentication to extract credentials
- Migration: Use passphrase-protected export/import (see Migration Guide)
- Auto-Migration: Unencrypted configs automatically migrate to encrypted format
Export/Import Protection
By default, configuration export/import is blocked for security. You have two options:
Option 1: Set API Token (Recommended)
# Using systemd (secure)
sudo systemctl edit pulse-backend
# Add:
[Service]
Environment="API_TOKEN=your-48-char-hex-token"
# Then restart:
sudo systemctl restart pulse-backend
# Docker
docker run -e API_TOKEN=your-token rcourtman/pulse:latest
Option 2: Allow Unprotected Export (Homelab)
# Using systemd
sudo systemctl edit pulse-backend
# Add:
[Service]
Environment="ALLOW_UNPROTECTED_EXPORT=true"
# Docker
docker run -e ALLOW_UNPROTECTED_EXPORT=true rcourtman/pulse:latest
Note: For production deployments, consider using Docker secrets or systemd environment variables instead of .env files for sensitive data.
Security Features
Core Protection
- Encryption: All credentials encrypted at rest (AES-256-GCM)
- Export Protection: Exports always encrypted with passphrase
- Minimum Passphrase: 12 characters required for exports
- Security Tab: Check status in Settings → Security
Enterprise Security (When Authentication Enabled)
- Password Security:
- Bcrypt hashing with cost factor 12 (60-character hash)
- Passwords NEVER stored in plain text
- Automatic hashing on security setup
- CRITICAL: Bcrypt hashes MUST be exactly 60 characters
- API Token Security:
- 64-character hex tokens (32 bytes of entropy)
- SHA3-256 hashed before storage (64-char hash)
- Raw token shown only once during generation
- Tokens NEVER stored in plain text
- Live reloading when .env file changes
- API-only mode supported (no password auth required)
- CSRF Protection: All state-changing operations require CSRF tokens
- Rate Limiting:
- Authentication endpoints: 10 attempts/minute per IP
- General API: 500 requests/minute per IP
- Real-time endpoints exempt for functionality
- Session Management:
- Secure HttpOnly cookies
- 24-hour session expiry
- Session invalidation on password change
- Security Headers:
- Content-Security-Policy with strict directives
- X-Frame-Options: DENY (prevents clickjacking)
- X-Content-Type-Options: nosniff
- X-XSS-Protection: 1; mode=block
- Referrer-Policy: strict-origin-when-cross-origin
- Permissions-Policy restricting sensitive APIs
- Audit Logging: All authentication events logged with IP addresses
What's Encrypted in Exports
- Node credentials (passwords, API tokens)
- PBS credentials
- Email settings passwords
- Webhook URLs and authentication headers (v4.1.9+)
What's NOT Encrypted
- Node hostnames and IPs
- Threshold settings
- General configuration
- Alert rules and schedules
Authentication
Pulse supports multiple authentication methods that can be used independently or together:
Password Authentication
Quick Security Setup (Recommended)
The easiest way to enable authentication is through the web UI:
- Go to Settings → Security
- Click "Enable Security Now"
- Enter username and password
- Save the generated API token (shown only once!)
- Security is enabled immediately (no restart needed)
This automatically:
- Generates a secure random password
- Hashes it with bcrypt (cost factor 12)
- Creates secure API token (SHA3-256 hashed, raw token shown once)
- For systemd: Configures systemd with hashed credentials
- For Docker: Saves to
/data/.envwith hashed credentials (properly quoted to prevent shell expansion) - Restarts service/container with authentication enabled
Manual Setup (Advanced)
# Using systemd (password will be hashed automatically)
sudo systemctl edit pulse-backend
# Add:
[Service]
Environment="PULSE_AUTH_USER=admin"
Environment="PULSE_AUTH_PASS=$2a$12$..." # Use bcrypt hash, not plain text!
# Docker (credentials persist in volume via .env file)
# IMPORTANT: Always quote bcrypt hashes to prevent shell expansion!
docker run -e PULSE_AUTH_USER=admin -e PULSE_AUTH_PASS='$2a$12$...' rcourtman/pulse:latest
# Or use Quick Security Setup and restart container
Important: Always use hashed passwords in configuration. Use the Quick Security Setup or generate bcrypt hashes manually.
Features
- Web UI login required when authentication enabled
- Change/remove password from Settings → Security
- Passwords ALWAYS hashed with bcrypt (cost 12)
- Session-based authentication with secure HttpOnly cookies
- 24-hour session expiry
- CSRF protection for all state-changing operations
- Session invalidation on password change
API Token Authentication
For programmatic access and automation. API tokens are SHA3-256 hashed for security.
Token Setup via Quick Security
The Quick Security Setup automatically:
- Generates a cryptographically secure token
- Hashes it with SHA3-256
- Stores only the 64-character hash
Manual Token Setup
# Using systemd (use SHA3-256 hash, not plain text!)
sudo systemctl edit pulse-backend
# Add:
[Service]
Environment="API_TOKEN=<64-char-sha3-256-hash>"
# Docker
docker run -e API_TOKEN=<64-char-sha3-256-hash> rcourtman/pulse:latest
Security Note: API tokens are automatically hashed with SHA3-256. Never store plain text tokens in configuration.
Token Management (Settings → Security → API Token)
- Generate new tokens via web UI when authenticated
- View existing token anytime (authenticated users only)
- Regenerate tokens without disrupting service
- Delete tokens to disable API access
- All tokens stored as SHA3-256 hashes
Usage
# Include the ORIGINAL token (not hash) in X-API-Token header
curl -H "X-API-Token: your-original-token" http://localhost:7655/api/health
# Or in query parameter for export/import
curl "http://localhost:7655/api/export?token=your-original-token"
Auto-Registration Security
Default Mode
- All access requires authentication
- Nodes can auto-register with the API token
- Setup scripts work without additional configuration
Secure Mode
- Require API token for all operations
- Protects auto-registration endpoint
- Enable by setting API_TOKEN environment variable
CORS (Cross-Origin Resource Sharing)
By default, Pulse only allows same-origin requests (no CORS headers). This is the most secure configuration.
Configuring CORS for External Access
If you need to access Pulse API from a different domain:
# Docker
docker run -e ALLOWED_ORIGINS="https://app.example.com" rcourtman/pulse:latest
# systemd
sudo systemctl edit pulse-backend
[Service]
Environment="ALLOWED_ORIGINS=https://app.example.com"
# Multiple origins (comma-separated)
ALLOWED_ORIGINS="https://app.example.com,https://dashboard.example.com"
# Development mode (allows localhost)
PULSE_DEV=true
Security Note: Never use ALLOWED_ORIGINS=* in production as it allows any website to access your API.
Security Best Practices
Credential Storage
- ✅ DO: Use Quick Security Setup for automatic hashing
- ✅ DO: Store only bcrypt hashes for passwords
- ✅ DO: Store only SHA3-256 hashes for API tokens
- ❌ DON'T: Store plain text passwords in config files
- ❌ DON'T: Store plain text API tokens in config files
- ❌ DON'T: Log credentials or include them in backups
Authentication Setup
- ✅ DO: Use strong, unique passwords (16+ characters)
- ✅ DO: Rotate API tokens periodically
- ✅ DO: Use HTTPS in production environments
- ❌ DON'T: Share API tokens between users/services
- ❌ DON'T: Embed credentials in client-side code
Verification
Run the security verification script to ensure no plain text credentials:
/opt/pulse/testing-tools/security-verification.sh
This checks:
- No hardcoded credentials in code
- No credentials exposed in logs
- All passwords/tokens properly hashed
- Secure file permissions
- No credential leaks in API responses
Troubleshooting
Export blocked? You're on a public network - login with password, set API_TOKEN, or set ALLOW_UNPROTECTED_EXPORT=true Rate limited? Wait 1 minute and try again Can't login? Check PULSE_AUTH_USER and PULSE_AUTH_PASS environment variables API access denied? Verify API_TOKEN is correct (use original token, not hash) CORS errors? Configure ALLOWED_ORIGINS for your domain Forgot password? Use Settings → Security → Remove Password (requires filesystem access)