declarative_authorization 0.3.2.3
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- data/CHANGELOG +83 -0
- data/MIT-LICENSE +20 -0
- data/README.rdoc +510 -0
- data/Rakefile +43 -0
- data/app/controllers/authorization_rules_controller.rb +259 -0
- data/app/controllers/authorization_usages_controller.rb +23 -0
- data/app/helpers/authorization_rules_helper.rb +187 -0
- data/app/views/authorization_rules/_change.erb +58 -0
- data/app/views/authorization_rules/_show_graph.erb +37 -0
- data/app/views/authorization_rules/_suggestions.erb +48 -0
- data/app/views/authorization_rules/change.html.erb +152 -0
- data/app/views/authorization_rules/graph.dot.erb +68 -0
- data/app/views/authorization_rules/graph.html.erb +40 -0
- data/app/views/authorization_rules/index.html.erb +17 -0
- data/app/views/authorization_usages/index.html.erb +36 -0
- data/authorization_rules.dist.rb +20 -0
- data/config/routes.rb +7 -0
- data/garlic_example.rb +20 -0
- data/init.rb +5 -0
- data/lib/declarative_authorization.rb +15 -0
- data/lib/declarative_authorization/authorization.rb +634 -0
- data/lib/declarative_authorization/development_support/analyzer.rb +252 -0
- data/lib/declarative_authorization/development_support/change_analyzer.rb +253 -0
- data/lib/declarative_authorization/development_support/change_supporter.rb +620 -0
- data/lib/declarative_authorization/development_support/development_support.rb +243 -0
- data/lib/declarative_authorization/helper.rb +60 -0
- data/lib/declarative_authorization/in_controller.rb +597 -0
- data/lib/declarative_authorization/in_model.rb +159 -0
- data/lib/declarative_authorization/maintenance.rb +182 -0
- data/lib/declarative_authorization/obligation_scope.rb +308 -0
- data/lib/declarative_authorization/rails_legacy.rb +14 -0
- data/lib/declarative_authorization/reader.rb +441 -0
- data/test/authorization_test.rb +827 -0
- data/test/controller_filter_resource_access_test.rb +394 -0
- data/test/controller_test.rb +386 -0
- data/test/dsl_reader_test.rb +157 -0
- data/test/helper_test.rb +171 -0
- data/test/maintenance_test.rb +46 -0
- data/test/model_test.rb +1308 -0
- data/test/schema.sql +54 -0
- data/test/test_helper.rb +118 -0
- metadata +105 -0
data/CHANGELOG
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* Change Support: Suggestion grouping, sort by affected users [sb]
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* Changed context derived from objects to #class.name.tableize to fix STI [sb]
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* Simplified controller authorization with filter_resource_access [sb]
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* Allow passing explicit context in addition to object in permitted_to? [Olly Lylo, sb]
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* Change Supporter: suggest changes to authorization rules [sb]
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* Added permitted_to!/? in model [Eike Carls]
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* New test helper: should_(not_)_be_allowed_to(privilege, object_or_context) [sb]
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** RELEASE 0.3 (April 20, 2009) **
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* New option :join_by for has_permission_on to allow AND'ing of statements in one has_permission_on block [sb]
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* Allow using_access_control to be called directly on ActiveRecord::Base, globally enabling model security [sb]
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* New operator: intersects_with, comparing two Enumerables in if_attribute [sb]
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* Improved if_permitted_to syntax: if the attribute is left out, permissions are checked on for the current object [sb]
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* Added #has_role_with_hierarchy? method to retrieve explicit and calculated roles [jeremyf]
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* Added a simple rules analyzer to help improve authorization rules [sb]
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* Gemified plugin. Needed to restructure the lib path contents [sb]
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* Added handling of Authorization::AuthorizationInController::ClassMethods.filter_access_to parameters that are of the form [:show, :update] instead of just :show, :update. [jeremyf]
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* Added authorization usage helper for checking filter_access_to usage in controllers [sb]
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* Added a authorization rules browser. See README for more information [sb]
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* Added Model.using_access_control? to check if a model has model security activated [sb]
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* Changed Authorization::ObligationScope#map_table_alias_for [Brian Langenfeld]
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* Fixed to prevent bad aliases from being produced.
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* Changed Authorization::Attribute#validate? [Brian Langenfeld]
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* Encountering a nil value when evaluating an attribute now raises a NilAttributeValueError, instead of an AuthorizationError. We leave it to the caller to decide what to do about it.
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* Changed Authorization::Engine#permit! [Brian Langenfeld]
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* We now convert incoming privileges to symbols (e.g. 'read' is made equivalent to :read). This ensures the privileges will match those defined in the authorization rules file.
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* The method now properly infers context when checking against an association (e.g. user.posts). We do this by leveraging ActiveRecord builder method 'new' to instantiate a proper object we can work with.
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* When testing rules for positive results (via Authorization::Attribute#validate?), we now rescue NilAttributeValueError exceptions, simply causing the rule to return a negative result (instead of barfing).
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* Changed Authorization::ObligationScope#rebuild_join_options! [Brian Langenfeld]
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* If we're dealing with multiple obligations we have to check (i.e. ones that result in OR'd conditions), we now use :include instead of :joins for our generated scope. This does seem like a kludge, but until ActiveRecord scopes support unions (for checking obligations individually and consolidating the results), we don't have much choice. Something to revisit later, for sure.
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** RELEASE 0.2 (February 2, 2009) **
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* added negative operators: is_not, not_in, does_not_contain [sb]
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* changed user.roles to user.role_symbols to reduce interferance with associations [sb]
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* Ruby 1.9 and Rails 2.3 compatibility [sb]
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* if_permitted_to for has_permission_on blocks for DRYer auth rules [sb]
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* ObligationScope rewrite of query rewriting [Brian Langenfeld]
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* changed exception hierarchy to begin at StandardError [sb]
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* :is_in operator [sb]
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* added has_role? helper [sb]
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* made plugin thread-safe [sb]
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* added maintenance and test helpers [sb]
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* changed default permission denied response to 403 Forbidden [sb]
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* descriptions for titles and roles [sb]
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* fixed for PostgreSQL [Mark Mansour]
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* improved DSL syntax: allow for array of contexts in has_permission_on [sb]
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** RELEASE 0.1 (August 22, 2008) **
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data/MIT-LICENSE
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Copyright (c) 2008 [name of plugin creator]
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Permission is hereby granted, free of charge, to any person obtaining
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a copy of this software and associated documentation files (the
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"Software"), to deal in the Software without restriction, including
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without limitation the rights to use, copy, modify, merge, publish,
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distribute, sublicense, and/or sell copies of the Software, and to
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permit persons to whom the Software is furnished to do so, subject to
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the following conditions:
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The above copyright notice and this permission notice shall be
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included in all copies or substantial portions of the Software.
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THE SOFTWARE IS PROVIDED "AS IS", WITHOUT WARRANTY OF ANY KIND,
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EXPRESS OR IMPLIED, INCLUDING BUT NOT LIMITED TO THE WARRANTIES OF
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MERCHANTABILITY, FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE AND
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NONINFRINGEMENT. IN NO EVENT SHALL THE AUTHORS OR COPYRIGHT HOLDERS BE
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LIABLE FOR ANY CLAIM, DAMAGES OR OTHER LIABILITY, WHETHER IN AN ACTION
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OF CONTRACT, TORT OR OTHERWISE, ARISING FROM, OUT OF OR IN CONNECTION
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WITH THE SOFTWARE OR THE USE OR OTHER DEALINGS IN THE SOFTWARE.
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data/README.rdoc
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= Declarative Authorization
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The declarative authorization plugin offers an authorization mechanism inspired
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by _RBAC_. The most notable distinction to existing authorization plugins is the
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declarative authorization approach. That is, authorization rules are not
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programmatically in between business logic but in an authorization configuration.
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Currently, Rails authorization plugins only provide for programmatic
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authorization rules. That is, the developer needs to specify which roles are
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allowed to access a specific controller action or a part of a view, which is
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not DRY. With a growing application code base and functions, as it happens
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especially in agile development processes, it may be decided to introduce new
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roles. Then, at several places of the source code the new group needs to be
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added, possibly leading to omissions and thus hard to test errors. Another
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aspect are changing authorization requirements in development or
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even after taking the application into production. Then, privileges of
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certain roles need to be easily adjusted when the original assumptions
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concerning access control prove unrealistic. In these situations, a
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declarative approach as offered by this plugin increases the development
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and maintenance efficiency.
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Plugin features
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* Authorization at controller action level
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* Authorization helpers for Views
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* Authorization at model level
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* Authorize CRUD (Create, Read, Update, Delete) activities
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* Query rewriting to automatically only fetch authorized records
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* DSL for specifying Authorization rules in an authorization configuration
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Requirements
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* An authentication mechanism
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* User object in Controller#current_user
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* (For model security) Setting Authorization.current_user
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* User objects need to respond to a method :role_symbols that returns an
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array of role symbols
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See below for installation instructions.
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= Authorization Data Model
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----- App domain ----|-------- Authorization conf ---------|------- App domain ------
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includes includes
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.--. .---.
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| v | v
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.------. can_play .------. has_permission .------------. requires .----------.
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| User |----------->| Role |----------------->| Permission |<-----------| Activity |
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'------' * * '------' * * '------------' 1 * '----------'
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.-------+------.
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1 / | 1 \ *
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.-----------. .---------. .-----------.
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| Privilege | | Context | | Attribute |
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'-----------' '---------' '-----------'
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In the application domain, each *User* may be assigned to *Roles* that should
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define the users' job in the application, such as _Administrator_. On the
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right-hand side of this diagram, application developers specify which *Permissions*
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are necessary for users to perform activities, such as calling a controller action,
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viewing parts of a View or acting on records in the database. Note that
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Permissions consist of an *Privilege* that is to be performed, such as _read_,
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and a *Context* in that the Operation takes place, such as _companies_.
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In the authorization configuration, Permissions are assigned to Roles and Role
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and Permission hierarchies are defined. *Attributes* may be employed to allow
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authorization according to dynamic information about the context and the
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current user, e.g. "only allow access on employees that belong to the
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current user's branch."
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= Examples
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A fully functional example application can be found at
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http://github.com/stffn/decl_auth_demo_app
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Details on the demonstrated methods can be found in the API docs, either
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generated yourself or at http://www.tzi.org/~sbartsch/declarative_authorization
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== Controller
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If authentication is in place, there are two ways to enable user-specific
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access control on controller actions. For resource controllers, which more
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or less follow the CRUD pattern, +filter_resource_access+ is the simplest
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approach. It sets up instance variables in before filters and calls
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filter_access_to with the appropriate parameters to protect the CRUD methods.
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class EmployeesController < ApplicationController
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filter_resource_access
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...
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end
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See Authorization::AuthorizationInController::ClassMethods for options on
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nested resources and custom member and collection actions.
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If you prefer less magic or your controller has no resemblance with the resource
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controllers, directly calling filter_access_to may be the better option. Examples
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are given in the following. E.g. the privilege index users is required for
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action index. This works as a first default configuration for RESTful
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controllers, with these privileges easily handled in the authorization
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configuration, which will be described below.
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class EmployeesController < ApplicationController
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filter_access_to :all
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def index
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...
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end
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...
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end
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When custom actions are added to such a controller, it helps to define more
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clearly which privileges are the respective requirements. That is when the
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filter_access_to call may become more verbose:
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class EmployeesController < ApplicationController
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filter_access_to :all
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# this one would be included in :all, but :read seems to be
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# a more suitable privilege than :auto_complete_for_user_name
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filter_access_to :auto_complete_for_employee_name, :require => :read
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def auto_complete_for_employee_name
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...
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end
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...
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end
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For some actions it might be necessary to check certain attributes of the
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object the action is to be acting on. Then, the object needs to be loaded
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before the action's access control is evaluated. On the other hand, some actions
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might prefer the authorization to ignore specific attribute checks as the object is
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unknown at checking time, so attribute checks and thus automatic loading of
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objects needs to be enabled explicitly.
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class EmployeesController < ApplicationController
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filter_access_to :update, :attribute_check => true
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def update
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# @employee is already loaded from param[:id] because of :attribute_check
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end
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end
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You can provide the needed object through before_filters. This way, you have
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full control over the object that the conditions are checked against. Just make
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sure, your before_filters occur before any of the filter_access_to calls.
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class EmployeesController < ApplicationController
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before_filter :new_employee_from_params, :only => :create
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before_filter :new_employee, :only => [:index, :new]
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filter_access_to :all, :attribute_check => true
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def create
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@employee.save!
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end
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protected
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def new_employee_from_params
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@employee = Employee.new(params[:employee])
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end
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end
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If the access is denied, a +permission_denied+ method is called on the
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current_controller, if defined, and the issue is logged.
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For further customization of the filters and object loading, have a look at
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the complete API documentation of filter_access_to in
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Authorization::AuthorizationInController::ClassMethods.
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== Views
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In views, a simple permitted_to? helper makes showing blocks according to the
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current user's privileges easy:
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<% permitted_to? :create, :employees do %>
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<%= link_to 'New', new_employee_path %>
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<% end %>
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Only giving a symbol :employees as context prevents any checks of attributes
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as there is no object to check against. For example, in case of nested resources
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a new object may come in handy:
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<% permitted_to? :create, Branch.new(:company => @company) do
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# or @company.branches.new
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# or even @company.branches %>
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<%= link_to 'New', new_company_branch_path(@company) %>
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<% end %>
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Lists are straight-forward:
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<% for employee in @employees %>
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<%= link_to 'Edit', edit_employee_path(employee) if permitted_to? :update, employee %>
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<% end %>
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See also Authorization::AuthorizationHelper.
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== Models
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There are two destinct features for model security built into this plugin:
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authorizing CRUD operations on objects as well as query rewriting to limit
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results according to certain privileges.
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See also Authorization::AuthorizationInModel.
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=== Model security for CRUD opterations
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To activate model security, all it takes is an explicit enabling for each
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model that model security should be enforced on, i.e.
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class Employee < ActiveRecord::Base
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using_access_control
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...
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end
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Thus,
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Employee.create(...)
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fails, if the current user is not allowed to :create :employees according
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to the authorization rules. For the application to find out about what
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happened if an operation is denied, the filters throw
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Authorization::NotAuthorized exceptions.
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As access control on read are costly, with possibly lots of objects being
|
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loaded at a time in one query, checks on read need to be actived explicitly by
|
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adding the :include_read option.
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+
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+
=== Query rewriting using named scopes
|
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+
When retrieving large sets of records from databases, any authorization needs
|
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to be integrated into the query in order to prevent inefficient filtering
|
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+
afterwards and to use LIMIT and OFFSET in SQL statements. To keep authorization
|
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+
rules out of the source code, this plugin offers query rewriting mechanisms
|
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+
through named scopes. Thus,
|
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+
|
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+
Employee.with_permissions_to(:read)
|
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+
|
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+
returns all employee records that the current user is authorized to read. In
|
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addition, just like normal named scopes, query rewriting may be chained with
|
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+
the usual find method:
|
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+
|
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|
+
Employee.with_permissions_to(:read).find(:all, :conditions => ...)
|
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+
|
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+
If the current user is completely missing the permissions, an
|
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+
Authorization::NotAuthorized exception is raised. Through
|
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+
Model.obligation_conditions, application developers may retrieve
|
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+
the conditions for manual rewrites.
|
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+
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+
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+
== Authorization Rules
|
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+
|
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+
Authorization rules are defined in config/authorization_rules.rb. E.g.
|
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+
|
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+
authorization do
|
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+
role :admin do
|
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+
has_permission_on :employees, :to => [:create, :read, :update, :delete]
|
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+
end
|
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+
end
|
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+
|
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+
There is a default role :+guest+ that is used if a request is not associated
|
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+
with any user or with a user without any roles. So, if your application has
|
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+
public pages, :+guest+ can be used to allow access for users that are not
|
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+
logged in. All other roles are application defined and need to be associated
|
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+
with users by the application.
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+
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+
Privileges, such as :create, may be put into hierarchies to simplify
|
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+
maintenance. So the example above has the same meaning as
|
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+
|
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+
authorization do
|
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+
role :admin do
|
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+
has_permission_on :employees, :to => :manage
|
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|
+
end
|
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+
end
|
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+
|
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+
privileges do
|
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+
privilege :manage do
|
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+
includes :create, :read, :update, :delete
|
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+
end
|
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+
end
|
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+
|
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|
+
Privilege hierarchies may be context-specific, e.g. applicable to :employees.
|
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+
|
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+
privileges do
|
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|
+
privilege :manage, :employees, :includes => :increase_salary
|
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|
+
end
|
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|
+
|
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|
+
For more complex use cases, authorizations need to be based on attributes. E.g.
|
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|
+
if a branch admin should manage only employees of his branch (see
|
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+
Authorization::Reader in the API docs for a full list of available operators):
|
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|
+
|
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|
+
authorization do
|
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|
+
role :branch_admin do
|
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|
+
has_permission_on :employees do
|
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|
+
to :manage
|
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|
+
# user refers to the current_user when evaluating
|
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|
+
if_attribute :branch => is {user.branch}
|
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|
+
end
|
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|
+
end
|
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|
+
end
|
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|
+
|
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|
+
To reduce redundancy in has_permission_on blocks, a rule may depend on
|
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|
+
permissions on associated objects:
|
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|
+
|
297
|
+
authorization do
|
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|
+
role :branch_admin do
|
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|
+
has_permission_on :branches, :to => :manage do
|
300
|
+
if_attribute :managers => contains {user}
|
301
|
+
end
|
302
|
+
|
303
|
+
has_permission_on :employees, :to => :manage do
|
304
|
+
if_permitted_to :manage, :branch
|
305
|
+
# instead of
|
306
|
+
#if_attribute :branch => {:managers => contains {user}}
|
307
|
+
end
|
308
|
+
end
|
309
|
+
end
|
310
|
+
|
311
|
+
Lastly, not only privileges may be organized in a hierarchy but roles as well.
|
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|
+
Here, project manager inherit the permissions of employees.
|
313
|
+
|
314
|
+
role :project_manager do
|
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|
+
includes :employee
|
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|
+
end
|
317
|
+
|
318
|
+
See also Authorization::Reader.
|
319
|
+
|
320
|
+
== Testing
|
321
|
+
|
322
|
+
declarative_authorization provides a few helpers to ease the testing with
|
323
|
+
authorization in mind.
|
324
|
+
|
325
|
+
In your test_helper.rb, to enable the helpers add
|
326
|
+
|
327
|
+
require File.expand_path(File.dirname(__FILE__) +
|
328
|
+
"/../vendor/plugins/declarative_authorization/lib/maintenance")
|
329
|
+
|
330
|
+
class Test::Unit::TestCase
|
331
|
+
include Authorization::TestHelper
|
332
|
+
...
|
333
|
+
end
|
334
|
+
|
335
|
+
Now, in unit tests, you may deactivate authorization if needed e.g. for test
|
336
|
+
setup and assume certain identities for tests:
|
337
|
+
|
338
|
+
class EmployeeTest < ActiveSupport::TestCase
|
339
|
+
def test_should_read
|
340
|
+
without_access_control do
|
341
|
+
Employee.create(...)
|
342
|
+
end
|
343
|
+
assert_nothing_raised do
|
344
|
+
with_user(admin) do
|
345
|
+
Employee.find(:first)
|
346
|
+
end
|
347
|
+
end
|
348
|
+
end
|
349
|
+
end
|
350
|
+
|
351
|
+
In functional tests, get, posts, etc. may be tested in the name of certain users:
|
352
|
+
|
353
|
+
get_with admin, :index
|
354
|
+
post_with admin, :update, :employee => {...}
|
355
|
+
|
356
|
+
See Authorization::TestHelper for more information.
|
357
|
+
|
358
|
+
|
359
|
+
= Installation of declarative_authorization
|
360
|
+
|
361
|
+
One of three options to install the plugin:
|
362
|
+
* Install by Gem: Add to your environment.rb in the initializer block:
|
363
|
+
config.gem "declarative_authorization"
|
364
|
+
Note: you need gemcutter support in place, i.e. call
|
365
|
+
gem install gemcutter
|
366
|
+
gem tumble
|
367
|
+
And call from your application's root directory
|
368
|
+
rake gems:install
|
369
|
+
* Alternatively, to install from github, execute in your application's root directory
|
370
|
+
cd vendor/plugins && git clone git://github.com/stffn/declarative_authorization.git
|
371
|
+
* Or, download one of the released versions from Github at
|
372
|
+
http://github.com/stffn/declarative_authorization/downloads
|
373
|
+
|
374
|
+
Then,
|
375
|
+
* provide the requirements as noted below,
|
376
|
+
* create a basic config/authorization_rules.rb--you might want to take the
|
377
|
+
provided example authorization_rules.dist.rb in the plugin root as a starting
|
378
|
+
point,
|
379
|
+
* add +filter_access_to+, +permitted_to+? and model security as needed.
|
380
|
+
|
381
|
+
== Providing the Plugin's Requirements
|
382
|
+
The requirements are
|
383
|
+
* Rails >= 2.1 and Ruby >= 1.8.6, including 1.9
|
384
|
+
* An authentication mechanism
|
385
|
+
* A user object returned by Controller#current_user
|
386
|
+
* An array of role symbols returned by User#role_symbols
|
387
|
+
* (For model security) Setting Authorization.current_user to the request's user
|
388
|
+
|
389
|
+
Of the various ways to provide these requirements, here is one way employing
|
390
|
+
restful_authentication.
|
391
|
+
|
392
|
+
* Install restful_authentication
|
393
|
+
cd vendor/plugins && git clone git://github.com/technoweenie/restful-authentication.git restful_authentication
|
394
|
+
cd ../.. && ruby script/generate authenticated user sessions
|
395
|
+
* Move "include AuthenticatedSystem" to ApplicationController
|
396
|
+
* Add +filter_access_to+ calls as described above.
|
397
|
+
* If you'd like to use model security, add a before_filter that sets the user
|
398
|
+
globally to your ApplicationController. This is thread-safe.
|
399
|
+
before_filter :set_current_user
|
400
|
+
protected
|
401
|
+
def set_current_user
|
402
|
+
Authorization.current_user = current_user
|
403
|
+
end
|
404
|
+
|
405
|
+
* Add roles field to the User model through a :+has_many+ association
|
406
|
+
(this is just one possible approach; you could just as easily use
|
407
|
+
:+has_many+ :+through+ or a serialized roles array):
|
408
|
+
* create a migration for table roles
|
409
|
+
class CreateRoles < ActiveRecord::Migration
|
410
|
+
def self.up
|
411
|
+
create_table "roles" do |t|
|
412
|
+
t.column :title, :string
|
413
|
+
t.references :user
|
414
|
+
end
|
415
|
+
end
|
416
|
+
|
417
|
+
def self.down
|
418
|
+
drop_table "roles"
|
419
|
+
end
|
420
|
+
end
|
421
|
+
|
422
|
+
* create a model Role,
|
423
|
+
class Role < ActiveRecord::Base
|
424
|
+
belongs_to :user
|
425
|
+
end
|
426
|
+
|
427
|
+
* add +has_many+ :+roles+ to the User model and a roles method that returns the roles
|
428
|
+
as an Array of Symbols, e.g.
|
429
|
+
class User < ActiveRecord::Base
|
430
|
+
has_many :roles
|
431
|
+
def role_symbols
|
432
|
+
(roles || []).map {|r| r.title.to_sym}
|
433
|
+
end
|
434
|
+
end
|
435
|
+
|
436
|
+
* add roles to your User objects using e.g.
|
437
|
+
user.roles.create(:title => "admin")
|
438
|
+
|
439
|
+
Note: If you choose to generate an Account model for restful_authentication
|
440
|
+
instead of a User model as described above, you have to customize the
|
441
|
+
examples and create a ApplicationController#current_user method.
|
442
|
+
|
443
|
+
|
444
|
+
== Debugging Authorization
|
445
|
+
|
446
|
+
Currently, the main means of debugging authorization decisions is logging and
|
447
|
+
exceptions. Denied access to actions is logged to +warn+ or +info+, including
|
448
|
+
some hints about what went wrong.
|
449
|
+
|
450
|
+
All bang methods throw exceptions which may be used to retrieve more
|
451
|
+
information about a denied access than a Boolean value.
|
452
|
+
|
453
|
+
|
454
|
+
== Authorization Browser
|
455
|
+
|
456
|
+
If your authorization rules become more complex, you might be glad to use
|
457
|
+
the authorization rules browser that comes with declarative_authorization.
|
458
|
+
It has a syntax-highlighted and a graphical view with filtering of the current
|
459
|
+
authorization rules.
|
460
|
+
|
461
|
+
By default, it will only be available in development mode. To use it, add
|
462
|
+
the following lines to your authorization_rules.rb for the appropriate role:
|
463
|
+
|
464
|
+
has_permission_on :authorization_rules, :to => :read
|
465
|
+
|
466
|
+
Then, point your browser to
|
467
|
+
http://localhost/authorization_rules
|
468
|
+
|
469
|
+
The browser needs Rails 2.3 (for Engine support). The graphical view requires
|
470
|
+
Graphviz (which e.g. can be installed through the graphviz package under Debian
|
471
|
+
and Ubuntu) and has only been tested under Linux.
|
472
|
+
|
473
|
+
|
474
|
+
= Help and Contact
|
475
|
+
|
476
|
+
We have an issue tracker[http://github.com/stffn/declarative_authorization/issues]
|
477
|
+
for bugs and feature requests as well as a
|
478
|
+
Google Group[http://groups.google.com/group/declarative_authorization] for
|
479
|
+
discussions on the usage of the plugin. You are very welcome to contribute.
|
480
|
+
Just fork the git repository and create a new issue, send a pull request or
|
481
|
+
contact me personally.
|
482
|
+
|
483
|
+
Maintained by
|
484
|
+
|
485
|
+
Steffen Bartsch
|
486
|
+
TZI, Universität Bremen, Germany
|
487
|
+
sbartsch at tzi.org
|
488
|
+
|
489
|
+
|
490
|
+
= Contributors
|
491
|
+
|
492
|
+
Thanks to
|
493
|
+
* Eike Carls
|
494
|
+
* Erik Dahlstrand
|
495
|
+
* Jeroen van Dijk
|
496
|
+
* Jeremy Friesen
|
497
|
+
* Brian Langenfeld
|
498
|
+
* Georg Ledermann
|
499
|
+
* Geoff Longman
|
500
|
+
* Olly Lylo
|
501
|
+
* Mark Mansour
|
502
|
+
* Thomas Maurer
|
503
|
+
* Mike Vincent
|
504
|
+
|
505
|
+
|
506
|
+
= Licence
|
507
|
+
|
508
|
+
Copyright (c) 2008 Steffen Bartsch, TZI, Universität Bremen, Germany
|
509
|
+
released under the MIT license
|
510
|
+
|