Aegis - role-based permissions for your user models

Aegis allows you to manage fine-grained, complex permission for user accounts in a central place.

Installation

Add the following to your Initializer.run block in your environment.rb:

config.gem 'aegis', :source => 'http://gemcutter.org'

Then do a

sudo rake gems:install

Alternatively, use

sudo gem sources -a http://gemcutter.org
sudo gem install aegis

Example

First, let’s define some roles:

# app/models/permissions.rb
class Permissions < Aegis::Permissions
  role :guest
  role :registered_user
  role :moderator
  role :administrator, :default_permission => :allow
  permission :edit_post do |user, post|
    allow :registered_user do
      post.creator == user      # a registered_user can only edit his own posts
    end
    allow :moderator
  end
  permission :read_post do |post|
    allow :everyone
    deny :guest do
      post.private?             # guests may not read private posts
    end
  end
end

Now we assign roles to users. For this, the users table needs to have a string column role_name.

# app/models/user.rb
class User
  has_role
end

These permissions may be used in views and controllers:

# app/views/posts/index.html.erb
@posts.each do |post|
  <% if current_user.may_read_post? post %>
    <%= render post %>
    <% if current_user.may_edit_post? post %>
      <%= link_to 'Edit', edit_post_path(post) %>
    <% end %>
  <% end %>
<% end %>
# app/controllers/posts_controller.rb
class PostsController
  # ...
  def update
    @post = Post.find(params[:id])
    current_user.may_edit_post! @post    # raises an Aegis::PermissionError for unauthorized access
    # ...
  end
end

You might want to specifiy a default role:

class Permissions < Aegis::Permissions
  default_role 'role_name'
end

This role will be returned for objects that has nil as their role_name. This greatly reduces noise in your database (i.e. if you have 100 000 users, you don’t have to store ‘role_name’ for each row, just for your non-default roles). default_role takes the same options as role.

To explicitly make sure that a given row won’t have a permission object, set role_name to the empty string (“”).

Details

Roles

To equip a (user) model with any permissions, you simply call has_role within the model:

class User < ActiveRecord::Base
  has_role
end

Aegis assumes that the corresponding database table has a string-valued column called role_name. You may override the name with the :name_accessor => :my_role_column option.

The roles and permissions themselves are defined in a class inheriting from Aegis::Permissions. To define roles you create a model permissions.rb and use the role method:

class Permissions < Aegis::Permissions
  role 'role_name'
end

By default, users belonging to this role are not permitted anything. You may override this with :default_permission => :allow, e.g.

role 'admin', :default_permission => :allow

Permissions

Permissions are specified with the permission method and allow and deny

permission :do_something do
    allow :role_a, :role_b
    deny :role_c
end

Your user model just received two methods called User#may_do_something? and User#may_do_something!. The first one with the ? returns true for users with role_a and role_b, and false for users with role_c. The second one with the ! raises an Aegis::PermissionError for role_c.

Normalization

Aegis will perform some normalization. For example, the permissions edit_something and update_something will be the same, each granting both may_edit_something? and may_update_something?. The following normalizations are active:

  • edit = update

  • show = list = view = read

  • delete = remove = destroy

Complex permissions (with parameters)

allow and deny can also take a block that may return true or false indicating if this really applies. So

permission :pull_april_fools_prank do
  allow :everyone do
    Date.today.month == 4 and Date.today.day == 1
  end
end

will generate a may_pull_april_fools_prank? method that only returns true on April 1.

This becomes more useful if you pass parameters to a may_...? method, which are passed through to the permission block (together with the user object). This way you can define more complex permissions like

permission :edit_post do |current_user, post|
  allow :registered_user do
    post.owner == current_user
  end
  allow :admin
end

which will permit admins and post owners to edit posts.

For your convenience

As a convenience, if you create a permission ending in a plural ‘s’, this automatically includes the singular form. That is, after

permission :read_posts do
  allow :everyone
end

.may_read_post? @post will return true, as well.

If you want to grant create_something, read_something, update_something and destroy_something permissions all at once, just use

permission :crud_something do
  allow :admin
end

If several permission blocks (or several allow and denies) apply to a certain role, the later one always wins. That is

permission :do_something do
  deny :everyone
  allow :admin
end

will work as expected.

Our stance on multiple roles per user

We believe that you should only distinguish roles that have different ways of resolving their permissions. A typical set of roles would be

  • anonymous guest (has access to nothing with some exceptions)

  • signed up user (has access to some things depending on its attributes and associations)

  • administrator (has access to everything)

We don’t do multiple, parametrized roles like “leader for project #2” and “author of post #7”. That would be reinventing associations. Just use a single :user role and let your permission block query regular associations and attributes.

Credits

Henning Koch, Tobias Kraze

link www.makandra.de