NAME¶
Catalyst::Plugin::Authorization::ACL - ACL support for Catalyst applications.
SYNOPSIS¶
use Catalyst qw/
Authentication
Authorization::Roles
Authorization::ACL
/;
__PACKAGE__->setup;
__PACKAGE__->deny_access_unless(
"/foo/bar",
[qw/nice_role/],
);
__PACKAGE__->allow_access_if(
"/foo/bar/gorch",
sub { return $boolean },
);
DESCRIPTION¶
This module provides Access Control List style path protection, with arbitrary
rules for Catalyst applications. It operates only on the Catalyst private
namespace, at least at the moment.
The two hierarchies of actions and controllers in Catalyst are:
- Private Namespace
- Every action has its own private path. This path reflects
the Perl namespaces the actions were born in, and the namespaces of their
controllers.
- External Namespace
- Some actions are also directly accessible from the outside,
via a URL.
The private and external paths will be the same, if you are using Local
actions. Alternatively you can use "Path", "Regex", or
"Global" to specify a different external path for your
action.
The ACL module currently only knows to exploit the private namespace. In the
future extensions may be made to support external namespaces as well.
Various types of rules are supported, see the list under "RULES".
When a path is visited, rules are tested one after the other, with the most
exact rule fitting the path first, and continuing up the path. Testing
continues until a rule explcitly allows or denies access.
METHODS¶
allow_access_if¶
Arguments: $path, $rule
Check the rule condition and allow access to the actions under $path if the rule
returns true.
This is normally useful to allow acces only to a specific part of a tree whose
parent has a "deny_access_unless" clause attached to it.
If the rule test returns false access is not denied or allowed. Instead the next
rule in the chain will be checked - in this sense the combinatory behavior of
these rules is like logical
OR.
allow_access_if_any¶
Arguments: $path, \@roles
Same as above for any role in the list.
deny_access_unless¶
Arguments: $path, $rule
Check the rule condition and disallow access if the rule returns false.
This is normally useful to restrict access to any portion of the application
unless a certain condition can be met.
If the rule test returns true access is not allowed or denied. Instead the next
rule in the chain will be checked - in this sense the combinatory behavior of
these rules is like logical
AND.
deny_access_unless_any¶
Arguments: $path, \@roles
Same as above for any role in the list.
allow_access¶
deny_access¶
Arguments: $path
Unconditionally allow or deny access to a path.
acl_add_rule¶
Arguments: $path, $rule, [ $filter ]
Manually add a rule to all the actions under $path using the more flexible (but
more verbose) method:
__PACKAGE__->acl_add_rule(
"/foo",
sub { ... }, # see FLEXIBLE RULES below
sub {
my $action = shift;
# return a true value if you want to apply the rule to this action
# called for all the actions under "/foo"
}
};
In this case the rule must be a sub reference (or method name) to be invoked on
$c.
The default filter will skip all actions starting with an underscore, namely
"_DISPATCH", "_AUTO", etc (but not "auto",
"begin", et al).
acl_access_denied¶
Arguments: $c, $class, $action, $err
acl_access_allowed¶
Arguments: $c, $class, $action
The default event handlers for access denied or allowed conditions. See below on
handling access violations.
acl_allow_root_internals¶
Adds rules that permit access to the root controller (YourApp.pm)
"auto", "begin" and "end" unconditionally.
EXTENDED METHODS¶
execute¶
The hook for rule evaluation
setup_actions¶
RULE EVALUATION¶
When a rule is attached to an action the "distance" from the path it
was specified in is recorded. The closer the path is to the rule, the earlier
it will be checked.
Any rule can either explicitly deny or explicitly allow access to a particular
action. If a rule does not explicitly allow or permit access, the next rule is
checked, until the list of rules is finished. If no rule has determined a
policy, access to the path will be permitted.
PATHS¶
To apply a rule to an action or group of actions you must supply a path.
This path is what you should see dumped at the begining of the Catalyst server's
debug output.
For example, for the "foo" action defined at the root level of your
application, specify "/foo". Under the "Moose" controller
(e.g. "MyApp::C::Moose", the action "bar" will be
"/moose/bar").
The "distance" a path has from an action that is contained in it is
the the difference in the number of slashes between the path of the action,
and the path to which the rule was applied.
RULES¶
Easy Rules¶
There are several kinds of rules you can create without using the complex
interface described in "FLEXIBLE RULES".
The easy rules are all predicate list oriented. "allow_access_if" will
explicitly allow access if the predicate is true, and
"deny_access_unless" will explicitly disallow if the predicate is
false.
- Role Lists
-
__PACAKGE__->deny_access_unless_any( "/foo/bar", [qw/admin moose_trainer/] );
When the role is evaluated the Catalyst::Plugin::Authorization::Roles will
be used to check whether the currently logged in user has the specified
roles.
If "allow_access_if_any" is used, the presence of any of
the roles in the list will immediately permit access, and if
"deny_access_unless_any" is used, the lack of all of the
roles will immediately deny access.
Similarly, if "allow_access_if" is used, the presence of
all the roles will immediately permit access, and if
"deny_access_unless" is used, the lack of any of the
roles will immediately deny access.
When specifying a role list without the
Catalyst::Plugin::Authorization::Roles plugin loaded the ACL engine will
throw an error.
- Predicate Code Reference / Method Name
- The code reference or method is invoked with the context
and the action objects. The boolean return value will determine the
behavior of the rule.
__PACKAGE__->allow_access_if( "/gorch", sub { ... } );
__PACKAGE__->deny_access_unless( "/moose", "method_name" );
When specifying a method name the rule engine ensures that it can be invoked
using "can" in UNIVERSAL.
- Constant
- You can use "undef", 0 and '' to use as a
constant false predicate, or 1 to use as a constant true predicate.
Flexible Rules¶
These rules are the most annoying to write but provide the most flexibility.
All access control is performed using exceptions -
$Catalyst::Plugin::Authorization::ACL::Engine::DENIED, and
$Catalyst::Plugin::Authorization::ACL::Engine::ALLOWED (these can be imported
from the engine module).
If no rule decides to explicitly allow or deny access, access will be permitted.
Here is a rule that will always break out of rule processing by either
explicitly allowing or denying access based on how much mojo the current user
has:
__PACKAGE__->acl_add_rule(
"/foo",
sub {
my ( $c, $action ) = @_;
if ( $c->user->mojo > 50 ) {
die $ALLOWED;
} else {
die $DENIED;
}
}
);
HANDLING DENIAL¶
There are two plugin methods that can be called when a rule makes a decision
about an action:
- acl_access_allowed
- A no-op
- acl_access_denied
- Looks for a private action named "access_denied"
from the denied action's controller and outwards (much like
"auto"), and if none is found throws an access denied
exception.
- forcibly_allow_access
- Within an "access_denied" action this will
immediately cause the blocked action to be executed anyway.
This means that you have several alternatives:
Provide an "access_denied" action¶
package MyApp::Controller::Foo;
sub access_denied : Private {
my ( $self, $c, $action ) = @_;
...
$c->forcibly_allow_access
if $you->mean_it eq "really";
}
If you call "forcibly_allow_access" then the blocked action will be
immediately unblocked. Otherwise the execution of the action will cease, and
return to it's caller or end.
Cleanup in "end"¶
sub end : Private {
my ( $self, $c ) = @_;
if ( $c->error and $c->error->[-1] eq "access denied" ) {
$c->error(0); # clear the error
# access denied
} else {
# normal end
}
}
Override the plugin event handler methods¶
package MyApp;
sub acl_access_allowed {
my ( $c, $class, $action ) = @_;
...
}
sub acl_access_denied {
my ( $c, $class, $action, $err ) = @_;
...
}
$class is the controller class the $action object was going to be executed in,
and $err is the exception cought during rule evaluation, if any (access is
denied if a rule raises an exception).
SEE ALSO¶
Catalyst::Plugin::Authentication, Catalyst::Plugin::Authorization::Roles,
<
http://catalyst.perl.org/calendar/2005/24>
AUTHOR¶
Yuval Kogman <nothingmuch@woobling.org>
CONTRIBUTORS¶
castaway: Jess Robinson
caelum: Rafael Kitover <rkitover@cpan.org>
COPYRIGHT & LICENSE¶
Copyright (c) 2008,2009 the aforementioned authors.
This library is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify it under
the same terms as Perl itself.