gtt / reverse-search-acl
Provides a way for Symfony's ACL infrastructure to find object identities that are accessible (with specified permission like VIEW, EDIT, etc) by specified security identity
Requires
- php: >=5.5
- doctrine/dbal: ~2.2
- symfony/security-acl: ^2.3|^3.0
Requires (Dev)
- phpunit/phpunit: ~4.0
This package is auto-updated.
Last update: 2024-11-08 00:18:01 UTC
README
This library extends base Symfony's MutableAclProvider with ability to find accessible object identities for specified security identity. You can also specify permission Ace was granted for target security identity with.
This library provides convenient way create admin interfaces for ACL-based systems where you need to show assigned domain objects and permissions for fetched for requested single user in the system
Requirements
Library requires Symfony's security-acl package and doctrine/dbal component to interact with acl database
How it works?
As was said above the library contains extended acl provider - ReverseSearchAclProvider. Basically there is nothing more inside. The main goal of this provider being is to do reverse action against PermissionGrantingStrategy does when it checks whether specified SecurityIdentity has access (the type of access is restricted by permission: VIEW, EDIT, etc) to specified ObjectIdentity or not. Due to performance reasons (which were actually kept in mind during Symfony's ACL system designing) ReverseSearchAclProvider solves this task by constructing and executing PDO statement similar to the other ones in AclProvider.
Installation
Library can by installed with composer quite easy:
composer require gtt/reverse-search-acl
Usage
In order to create instance of ReverseSearchAclProvider you need to specify the same constructor parameters that are required for MutableAclProvider and prepend this list with the instance of PermissionMapInterface (since ReverseSearchAclProvider needs to translate specified permission to masks):
use Gtt\Acl\Dbal\ReverseSearchAclProvider; use Symfony\Component\Security\Acl\Domain\UserSecurityIdentity; use Symfony\Component\Security\Acl\Permission\BasicPermissionMap; use Symfony\Component\Security\Acl\Permission\BasicPermissionMap; use Doctrine\DBAL\DriverManager; $provider = new ReverseSearchAclProvider( new BasicPermissionMap() DriverManager::getConnection(['driver' => 'pdo_sqlite','memory' => true], new PermissionGrantingStrategy(), [] // list of base acl provider options );
Now you are ready to find which domain objects (or classes itself or class/object fields) can see (permission VIEW) some user or role:
$sid = UserSecurityIdentity::fromAccount(new User('jimmy', 'jimmypass')); // you can also analyse roles // $sid = new RoleSecurityIdentity('ROLE_ADMIN'); $allowed = $provider->findAllowedEntries($sid, "VIEW")
The returned result will be an array with the following structure
[ // the key is FQCN of the class of the object that can be accessed by specified Security Identity instance (SID) '\F\Q\C\N' => [ // if this flag is presented class ace was inserted for current SID 'class_access' => true, // list of class field's granted to current SID 'class_field_access' => ['field1', 'field2', 'field3'], // id of the domain objects accessible by current SID 'object_access' => ['id1', 'id2', 'id3', 'id4'], // list of domain object fields (grouped by object id) granted to current SID 'object_field_access' => [ 'id2' => ['field1', 'field2'], 'id5' => ['field3'] ] ] ]
You can also restrict the search by specifying class and/or field of the allowed object identities to fetch:
$allowed = $provider->findObjectIdentities( $sid, "VIEW", ['class' => \My\Domain\Object\Class] );
Restrictions
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Note that library reverse work of PermissionGrantingStrategy. Use it with the other ones only if you know exactly what are you doing.
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If you use the both object and class aces (or object field and class field aces) you should note the PermissionGrantingStrategy during access decisions consequentially checks object-level and then class-level ACE's to grant or deny access. Object and class access information returned by provider separately so to be sure that current SID has (or doesn't have) access to current object you should take in account the both class and object access info (ie object_access/class_access or object_field_access/class_field_access).
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Be careful if you are using PermissionMapInterface instances that are really take in account specified object (second parameter in PermissionMapInterface::getMasks method) during retrieving masks process (there are no such PermissionMapInterface implementations in Symfony for now, but anyway).