bajsicki.com/content/blog/misskey-resetting-admin-password.md

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2024-11-18 18:28:17 +01:00
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title = "MissKey: Resetting Admin Password"
publishDate = 2023-08-11T00:00:00+02:00
2024-12-08 03:32:04 +01:00
lastmod = 2024-12-08T03:32:02+01:00
2024-11-18 18:28:17 +01:00
tags = ["misskey", "admin", "postgres"]
categories = ["tech"]
draft = false
meta = true
type = "list"
[menu]
[menu.posts]
weight = 3002
identifier = "misskey-resetting-admin-password"
+++
So recently I had the need to reset the admin password in [MissKey](https://github.com/misskey-dev/misskey/).
Alas, there was no recovery email configured, nor other users on the instance, so I needed to do some digging in the database.
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So here is the short of it.
1. Log in with your misskey user into postgres (assuming that's what you're running MissKey on).
2. Connect to the database.
3. `select * from "user" where "isAdmin" = true;`
4. Grab the `userId` for the user you're resetting the password for.
5. `select * from user_profile where "userId" = 'your-userId';` to confirm that you're getting the right info.
6. Get the hashed password with `bcrypt`, such as:
`python -c 'import bcrypt; print(bcrypt.hashpw("new-password", bcrypt.gensalt(log_rounds=10)))'`
7. `UPDATE user_profile SET password = 'hashed-password' WHERE "userId" = 'your-userId';`
Notes:
- Step 6 requires that you have python-bcrypt installed, and uses that library to do its thing.
- There is a difference between single quotes, double quotes, and lowercase/ capitals. This is a quirk of psql, so make sure you get those right.
And... done.
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