The Drupal Association engineering team is preparing to switch over to our new single sign-on solution for user login. This is an important step in our work to upgrade Drupal.org, and in the future will give you the ability to use your Drupal.org identity in new ways.
This switchover was previously scheduled for Thursday, 25 July, but unfortunately we had to roll-back that attempt. After pausing for a week to avoid disrupting the Drupal 11 release window, we are ready to try again.
The switch-over is scheduled for:
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Thursday 8 August - from 9am to 1pm Pacific (16:00-20:00 UTC).
During this window you will not be able to update your Drupal.org profile, and during portions of this window you may not be able to login to Drupal.org, and may not be able to access related services which use your Drupal identity, such as git.drupalcode.org.
Below you'll find the details from our original blog post about how the login experience will look different:
If you are an existing user
When you click to login or create an account you will be redirected to: accounts.drupal.org
You will log in with your existing Drupal.org username or email and your current password, and your two factor authentication code if you have TFA enabled.
Once you log in, you will have to change your password.
If you have Two Factor Authentication enabled, you will also have to set up a new seed.
After that, you'll be taken back to Drupal.org as normal. You should be directed back to the path you came from.
If you are creating a new account
When you click 'create account' on Drupal.org you will be taken to the new account creation page:
After you complete the basic information, you will be taken to the Drupal.org welcome page to fill out the rest of your user profile.
If you need to change your account information
The majority of your account information will continue to live in your Drupal.org profile, however, some basic account information will now be stored and updated in the Drupal.org SSO system.
When you click to edit your first and last name, username, password, email address, or enable two factor authentication you'll be taken to the account page:
Setting up Two Factor Authentication
This account settings page is also where you can change your Two Factor Authentication settings. You can use the 'Account Security' tab in the sidebar to navigate to the Two Factor setup process:
If you need to reset your password
If you have forgotten your password, you can reset your password from the login page:
You will receive a password reset email from noreply@drupal.org allowing you to change your password.
If you encounter any issues with your account, please contact us at help@drupal.org
We want to thank two of our partners for supporting this project.
Cloud-IAM is our SSO partner. Cloud-IAM is a privacy centric provider of hosted solutions for Keycloak, an open source identity management service. They are enthusiastic supporters of the Drupal community, and would like to offer any site owners and agencies who are looking for their own identity and access management service 10% off, with promo code: DRUPAL10.
Our implementation partner on this project was Tag1Consulting. Tag1Consulting is a global team of Drupal experts working with clients from non-profits to the Fortune 500, and is one of the top contributors to Drupal. They have been the Drupal Association's infrastructure partner for many years.