[[TOC]] [wiki:DeveloperGuidelinesS3Framework] | S3AAA = S3 Authentication, Authorization and Accounting = '''Authentication''' is the act of establishing or confirming someone's identity.[[BR]] '''Authorization''' is the concept of allowing access to resources only to those permitted to use them.[[BR]] '''Accounting''' refers to the tracking of user actions - an audit trail. == Overview == AAA functions for S3 are implemented in the {{{modules/s3/s3aaa.py}}} module. This module extends the web2py Auth class as AuthS3 (Authentication), and defines additional classes for role management, access control and audit. ||'''Component'''||'''Location'''||'''Function'''|| ||AuthS3||modules/s3/s3aaa.py||Authentication, Login|| ||S3Permission||modules/s3/s3aaa.py||Authorization of Access, ACLs|| ||S3Audit||modules/s3/s3aaa.py||Data access logging, audit trail|| ||S3RoleManager||modules/s3/s3aaa.py||RESTful method to manage roles and ACLs|| ||Admin controllers||controllers/admin.py||User Management, role management|| == Authentication == The AuthS3 class extends web2py's Auth class, which is documented here: * http://www.web2py.com/book/default/chapter/08#Authentication NB Whilst the Authentication functions of the Auth class are only slightly modified, the Authorisation & Audit functions are not used at all, so ignore those when working with Sahana. - ''more coming...'' === Current user === - ''coming soon...'' === Interactive Login === - ''coming soon...'' === HTTP Basic Authentication === It is possible to access privileged resources by providing the username/password within each request, rather than the usual method of having the login stored within the session. * http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Basic_access_authentication This is done by using the {{{login_bare()}}} method of AuthS3. - ''more coming...'' == Roles == Roles are defined in the {{{auth_group}}} table, which is defined by the {{{AuthS3}}} module (in {{{modules/s3/s3aaa.py}}}).[[BR]] Each role has an ID, a unique name and an optional description. Access permissions are granted to roles, while a user gets permissions by assigning roles to them. Role assignment is stored in the {{{auth_membership}}} table, which is defined by the {{{AuthS3}}} class (in {{{modules/s3/s3aaa.py}}}). At the start of every request, the IDs of all roles of the currently logged-in user are stored as list in {{{session.s3.roles}}} (in {{{models/00_utils.py}}}). In cases where the user logs in during the request (e.g. by HTTP Basic Auth), a refresh of this list is also triggered by the {{{login_bare()}}} method of {{{AuthS3}}}. Roles can be managed in the {{{S3RoleManager}}} graphical interface (Administration menu => User Management => Roles). The following roles are pre-defined in S3 and cannot be changed: ||'''ID'''||'''Name'''||'''Description'''|| ||1||Administrator||system administrator|| ||2||Authenticated||all authenticated users|| ||3||Anonymous||unauthenticated users|| ||4||Editor||data editor|| The first registered user gets the '''Administrator''' role assigned.[[BR]] Users with the Administrator role always have all permissions, and may access all pages in Eden. The Administrator may also manage Users, Roles and ACLs. Users with the '''Editor''' role may access all data with all methods, except they can not manage Users, Roles or ACLs. Every authenticated user gets automatically the '''Authenticated''' role assigned. This role assignment cannot be revoked. == Simple Authorization == Simple authorization means, that - anonymous users have read-only permission - authenticated users have full access - the Administrator may additionally access the user management This is the fallback model wherever there are no ACLs defined. == ACLs == Access Control Lists (ACLs) are bit arrays with each bit representing a permission to access data with a particular method: ||'''Bit'''||'''Value'''||'''Permission'''|| ||auth.permission.CREATE||0x01||may create new records|| ||auth.permission.READ||0x02||may read or list records|| ||auth.permission.UPDATE||0x04||may update existing records|| ||auth.permission.DELETE||0x08||may delete records|| ACLs are combinations of these bits (by bitwise OR), e.g. an ACL with the value 0x06 defines permissions to read and update records, while no permission to add or to delete any records. ACLs are stored per role and request destination in the {{{s3_permission}}} table, which is defined by the {{{S3Permission}}} class (in {{{modules/s3/s3aaa.py}}}). ACLs can be managed by the {{{S3RoleManager}}} graphical interface (Administration menu => User Management => Roles). For every destination (controller/function/table) two ACLs can be defined to apply depending on whether a user owns the record or not: - one ACL for users owning a record (Owner ACL = {{{oacl}}}) - one ACL for any other user not owning the record (User ACL = {{{uacl}}}). If a user owns a record, then the most permissive of the User ACL and the Owner ACL gets applied, otherwise only the User ACL applies. === Record Ownership === Tables can implement a record ownership by adding two meta fields: ||'''Field name'''||'''Type'''||'''Description'''|| ||owned_by_user||integer (reference auth_user)||ID of the user who owns this record[[BR]](defaults to the ID of the user who created the record)|| ||owned_by_role||integer (reference auth_group)||ID of the group (role) who own the record|| These meta fields are contained in {{{s3_ownerstamp()}}} and also in {{{s3_meta_fields()}}}. A user is considered the ''owner'' of a record if they are either the individual owner of the record (user ID == {{{owned_by_user}}}), '''or''' they are a member of the owner role ({{{owned_by_role}}} in user roles). If a record has '''no owner''', i.e. if both {{{owned_by_user}}} and {{{owned_by_role}}} are '''None''', then all authenticated users are considered the owner of this record. In tables which do not define either of these meta-fields, ownership rules are not applied ({{{uacl}}} only). ''NOTE: you can have both an individual record owner and an owner role for the same record at the same time, where the individual owner doesn't need to have the owner role.'' ==== Session-Ownership ==== For anonymous users we can make the session own the records, so that a user can edit records they've just created, or read their cached feature queries. When using the framework, this happens automatically. For manual DAL calls, this can be set using: {{{ auth.s3_make_session_owner(table, record_id) }}} (This has no effect if the owned_by_user field is set) ==== Ownership vs. Access Permission ==== NOTE: '''Ownership''' for a record and '''access permissions''' on this record are independent from each other! The fact alone that a user owns a record doesn't give him any permissions on that record. He still needs to have a role assigned for which an ACL definition exists which gives him permissions on that table. But that also means that the role which determines the user's ownership of a record, and the role which determines the user's effective access permissions for that record, do not have to be the same (in fact, the ownership-determining role doesn't need to have any permissions on the table at all): the effective permissions would still be applied as per the most permissive role the user is assigned to. Example: Have these things: 1. A role ''OrgX Staff'', which is routinely assigned to staff members of organisation ''X'' 2. A role ''Boss'', which is assigned to all organisation admins (independent of the organisation!) 3. A role ''Clerk'', which is assigned to all helpdesk officers (independent of the organisation!) 4. A record ''Y'' in the table ''aaa_bbbbb'', which has its {{{owned_by_role}}} field set to ''OrgX Staff'' 5. An ACL for the ''aaa_bbbbb'' table, which sets {{{(uacl=CREATE, oacl=ALL)}}} for the ''Boss'' role 6. An ACL for the ''aaa_bbbbb'' table, which sets {{{(uacl=NONE, oacl=READ)}}} for the ''Clerk'' role With this configuration, a user who has the ''OrgX Staff'' role, would own record ''Y''. However, the fact that he owns the record doesn't give him any permission to access it. (Note that there is intentionally no ACL defined on ''aaa_bbbbb'' for role ''OrgX Staff''!) If the user would have both, the ''OrgX Staff'' and the ''Boss'' roles, then he would own the record ''Y'' (as per {{{owned_by_role}}}) and also be permitted to {{{read}}}, {{{update}}} and {{{delete}}} this record (as per ACL for ''Boss''), and additionally, he could add new records to ''aaa_bbbbb''. If instead the user would have the ''OrgX Staff'' and the ''Clerk'' roles, then he would also own the record ''Y'' (as per {{{owned_by_role}}}), but just be permitted to {{{read}}} that record (as per ACL for ''Clerk''). If the user would only be ''Boss'', then he could only create new records in ''aaa_bbbbb'', but could not access record ''Y'' (since that would require ownership of that record). If the user would only be ''Clerk'', then he could not see record ''Y'' at all. And he could not either create new records in ''aaa_bbbbb''. === Restrictions === ACLs can be defined for controllers, and for particular functions inside controllers (Controller ACLs).[[BR]] ACLs can additionally be defined for individual database tables (Table ACLs). ==== System-wide Policy ==== The system-wide permission model is configured as {{{security.policy}}} in deployment settings {{{models/000_config.py}}}. This defaults to simple authorization (security.policy = 1). To configure the system-wide policy to use ACLs, set {{{security.policy}}} to: {{{ deployment_settings.security.policy = 3 # Apply Controller ACLs }}} or: {{{ deployment_settings.security.policy = 4 # Apply both Controller and Function ACLs }}} or: {{{ deployment_settings.security.policy = 5 # Apply Controller, Function and Table ACLs }}} ==== Controller Restriction ==== To use controller ACLs, it must be specified for which controllers ACLs are to be used. This can be done by setting the respective controller to {{{restricted=True}}} in {{{deployment_settings.modules}}} ({{{models/000_config.py}}}): {{{ dvi = Storage( name_nice = T("Disaster Victim Identification"), description = T("Disaster Victim Identification"), restricted = True, # Apply controller ACLs for the dvi module module_type = 10, ), }}} If {{{restricted}}} is {{{False}}} or undefined for a controller, then simple authorization is used for controller access. ''NB: We could assume that if there is no ACL defined for a controller then this controller is unrestricted. However, this would require a second DB lookup per run to check whether the controller is restricted at all in case no specific ACL for the current user is found, and in order to keep this efficient, we introduced this deployment setting (which is also less confusing behavior).'' The Controller ACL can be defined for all functions in a controller, and additionally for particular functions inside a controller, where the function-specific ACLs override the general controller ACL. That means, you can define a general ACL for the {{{pr}}} controller, and a different one for the {{{pr/person}}} function. The Controller ACLs are applied to ''all'' resources when accessed through this controller/function. If the Controller ACL does not give any permission for the current user (ACL value==auth.permissions.NONE==0x00), then the request is rejected as "Unauthorized". Controllers do not have to implement this check - this is done at a central place (in {{{00_utils.py}}}). ==== Table Restriction ==== Once the user has passed that controller permission check (must have at least {{{read}}} permission), and tries to access to a particular table, then the controller checks for table-specific ACLs. This check is to be implemented by the particular controller using {{{s3_has_permission()}}} and {{{s3_accessible_query}}} (except controllers using S3CRUD only, which already contains it). If there is no ACL defined for this table at all (i.e. for none of the users), then the table is considered unrestricted and only the controller ACLs apply. If there exist ACLs for this table, but not for the current user, access is '''denied''' for the current user. If there are specific ACLs defined for this table and the current user, then the most ''restrictive'' of the controller and table ACLs apply (i.e. you cannot allow on the table level what you forbid at the controller level, and vice versa). '''Note:''' ''For consistency reasons, creating or deleting component records in a resource requires additional permission to update the main record, even though the main record is not changed by this operation, e.g. to add an address to a person record, you must also be permitted to update the person record.'' == Implementation of Access Control == Permission checking is always a two-step process: 1. Check permission to access the controller/function 2. Check permission to access the database table The first step is done at a central point, in {{{00_utils.py}}} before the models are loaded. If the ACLs, as defined for the current user, do not specify any permission for the target controller/function, then the request gets rejected before any models are loaded or the controller is entered. The second step has to be implemented in the respective controller functions. This can be done in two ways: - the controller uses s3_rest_controller() with S3CRUD, or, - the controller uses auth.s3_has_permission() and/or auth.s3_accessible_query() to check permissions before exposing any data to the user === Checking Permissions === To check permissions to access a table (or a particular record) with a certain method, use the {{{auth.s3_has_permission()}}} method: {{{ authorised = auth.s3_has_permission("read", db.my_table) if authorised: # User may read in the db.my_table }}} {{{ authorised = auth.s3_has_permission("read", db.my_table, record_id=x) if authorised: # User may read record x in db.my_table }}} The access method can be one of these strings: - "create": create new records in this table - "read": read in this table (or this particular record, if specified) - "update": update existing records in this table (or this particular record, if specified) - "delete": delete records from this table (or this particular record, if specified) === Query for Accessible Records === You can build a query for all records in a table which are accessible for the current user with a certain method, by using {{{auth.s3_accessible_query}}}: {{{ # Define your query: query = ... # Get accessible-query (e.g., all readable record in db.my_table): accessible = auth.s3.accessible_query("read", db.my_table) # Combine both parts: query = accessible & query # Perform the query rows = db(query).select(...) }}} === Handling Insufficient Permissions === In case the user has insufficient permissions to access a table/record with the requested method, a well-defined response action must take place depending on the request format: - in '''HTML''' format: - already authenticated users should be informed about the insufficient permissions, and redirected to a (unrestricted) landing page - unauthenticated users should be requested to login, and forwarded to a login page - in '''all other''' formats: - authenticated clients must receive an HTTP 403 (Forbidden) error code to cancel the request properly - unauthenticated clients must receive an HTTP 401 (Authorization Required) error in order to trigger an authentication attempt - the client must not be redirected in either of the cases (important!) All this is covered by the {{{auth.permission.fail()}}} method: {{{ authorised = auth.shn_has_permission("delete", db.my_table) if not authorised: auth.permission.fail() }}} You can alter the destinations for redirection by setting: - {{{auth.permission.homepage}}} for redirection when the user is logged-in, but has insufficient privileges (defaults to {{{default/index}}}). - {{{auth.permission.loginpage}}} for redirection when the user is not logged-in (defaults to {{{default/user/login}}}). Example: redirect to {{{my/index}}} rather than to {{{default/index}}} in case of insufficient privileges of an authenticated user: {{{ authorised = auth.shn_has_permission("delete", db.my_table) if not authorised: auth.permission.homepage = URL(c="my", f="index") auth.permission.fail() }}} == Data Access Tracking (Audit) == - ''coming soon'' == Module Authorization == For the HMS Module it can be found here http://eden.sahanafoundation.org/wiki/HMS%20Module%20Authorization%20Access ---- [wiki:DeveloperGuidelinesS3Framework]