© 2019, Onur Yıldırım (@onury).
Many RBAC (Role-Based Access Control) implementations differ, but the basics is widely adopted since it simulates real life role (job) assignments. But while data is getting more and more complex; you need to define policies on resources, subjects or even environments. This is called ABAC (Attribute-Based Access Control).
With the idea of merging the best features of the two (see this NIST paper); this library implements RBAC basics and also focuses on resource and action attributes.
Install | Examples | Roles | Actions | Resources | Permissions | More | F.A.Q. | API Reference |
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- Chainable, friendly API.
e.g.ac.can(role).create(resource)
- Role hierarchical inheritance.
- Define grants at once (e.g. from database result) or one by one.
- Grant/deny permissions by attributes defined by glob notation (with nested object support).
- Ability to filter data (model) instance by allowed attributes.
- Ability to control access on own or any resources.
- Ability to lock underlying grants model.
- No silent errors.
- Fast. (Grants are stored in memory, no database queries.)
- Brutally tested.
- TypeScript support.
In order to build on more solid foundations, this library (v1.5.0+) is completely re-written in TypeScript.
with npm: npm i accesscontrol --save
with yarn: yarn add accesscontrol
const AccessControl = require('accesscontrol');
// or:
// import { AccessControl } from 'accesscontrol';
Define roles and grants one by one.
const ac = new AccessControl();
ac.grant('user') // define new or modify existing role. also takes an array.
.createOwn('video') // equivalent to .createOwn('video', ['*'])
.deleteOwn('video')
.readAny('video')
.grant('admin') // switch to another role without breaking the chain
.extend('user') // inherit role capabilities. also takes an array
.updateAny('video', ['title']) // explicitly defined attributes
.deleteAny('video');
const permission = ac.can('user').createOwn('video');
console.log(permission.granted); // —> true
console.log(permission.attributes); // —> ['*'] (all attributes)
permission = ac.can('admin').updateAny('video');
console.log(permission.granted); // —> true
console.log(permission.attributes); // —> ['title']
Check role permissions for the requested resource and action, if granted; respond with filtered attributes.
const ac = new AccessControl(grants);
// ...
router.get('/videos/:title', function (req, res, next) {
const permission = ac.can(req.user.role).readAny('video');
if (permission.granted) {
Video.find(req.params.title, function (err, data) {
if (err || !data) return res.status(404).end();
// filter data by permission attributes and send.
res.json(permission.filter(data));
});
} else {
// resource is forbidden for this user/role
res.status(403).end();
}
});
You can create/define roles simply by calling .grant(<role>)
or .deny(<role>)
methods on an AccessControl
instance.
- Roles can extend other roles.
// user role inherits viewer role permissions
ac.grant('user').extend('viewer');
// admin role inherits both user and editor role permissions
ac.grant('admin').extend(['user', 'editor']);
// both admin and superadmin roles inherit moderator permissions
ac.grant(['admin', 'superadmin']).extend('moderator');
- Inheritance is done by reference, so you can grant resource permissions before or after extending a role.
// case #1
ac.grant('admin').extend('user') // assuming user role already exists
.grant('user').createOwn('video');
// case #2
ac.grant('user').createOwn('video')
.grant('admin').extend('user');
// below results the same for both cases
const permission = ac.can('admin').createOwn('video');
console.log(permission.granted); // true
Notes on inheritance:
- A role cannot extend itself.
- Cross-inheritance is not allowed.
e.g.ac.grant('user').extend('admin').grant('admin').extend('user')
will throw. - A role cannot (pre)extend a non-existing role. In other words, you should first create the base role. e.g.
ac.grant('baseRole').grant('role').extend('baseRole')
CRUD operations are the actions you can perform on a resource. There are two action-attributes which define the possession of the resource: own and any.
For example, an admin
role can create
, read
, update
or delete
(CRUD) any account
resource. But a user
role might only read
or update
its own account
resource.
Action | Possession | |
---|---|---|
Create Read Update Delete |
Own | The C|R|U|D action is (or not) to be performed on own resource(s) of the current subject. |
Any | The C|R|U|D action is (or not) to be performed on any resource(s); including own. |
ac.grant('role').readOwn('resource');
ac.deny('role').deleteAny('resource');
Note that own requires you to also check for the actual possession. See this for more.
Multiple roles can have access to a specific resource. But depending on the context, you may need to limit the contents of the resource for specific roles.
This is possible by resource attributes. You can use Glob notation to define allowed or denied attributes.
For example, we have a video
resource that has the following attributes: id
, title
and runtime
.
All attributes of any video
resource can be read by an admin
role:
ac.grant('admin').readAny('video', ['*']);
// equivalent to:
// ac.grant('admin').readAny('video');
But the id
attribute should not be read by a user
role.
ac.grant('user').readOwn('video', ['*', '!id']);
// equivalent to:
// ac.grant('user').readOwn('video', ['title', 'runtime']);
You can also use nested objects (attributes).
ac.grant('user').readOwn('account', ['*', '!record.id']);
You can call .can(<role>).<action>(<resource>)
on an AccessControl
instance to check for granted permissions for a specific resource and action.
const permission = ac.can('user').readOwn('account');
permission.granted; // true
permission.attributes; // ['*', '!record.id']
permission.filter(data); // filtered data (without record.id)
See express.js example.
You can pass the grants directly to the AccessControl
constructor.
It accepts either an Object
:
// This is actually how the grants are maintained internally.
let grantsObject = {
admin: {
video: {
'create:any': ['*', '!views'],
'read:any': ['*'],
'update:any': ['*', '!views'],
'delete:any': ['*']
}
},
user: {
video: {
'create:own': ['*', '!rating', '!views'],
'read:own': ['*'],
'update:own': ['*', '!rating', '!views'],
'delete:own': ['*']
}
}
};
const ac = new AccessControl(grantsObject);
... or an Array
(useful when fetched from a database):
// grant list fetched from DB (to be converted to a valid grants object, internally)
let grantList = [
{ role: 'admin', resource: 'video', action: 'create:any', attributes: '*, !views' },
{ role: 'admin', resource: 'video', action: 'read:any', attributes: '*' },
{ role: 'admin', resource: 'video', action: 'update:any', attributes: '*, !views' },
{ role: 'admin', resource: 'video', action: 'delete:any', attributes: '*' },
{ role: 'user', resource: 'video', action: 'create:own', attributes: '*, !rating, !views' },
{ role: 'user', resource: 'video', action: 'read:any', attributes: '*' },
{ role: 'user', resource: 'video', action: 'update:own', attributes: '*, !rating, !views' },
{ role: 'user', resource: 'video', action: 'delete:own', attributes: '*' }
];
const ac = new AccessControl(grantList);
You can set grants any time...
const ac = new AccessControl();
ac.setGrants(grantsObject);
console.log(ac.getGrants());
...unless you lock it:
ac.lock().setGrants({}); // throws after locked
You can read the full API reference with lots of details, features and examples.
And more at the F.A.Q. section.
See CHANGELOG.
Clone original project:
git clone https://github.com/onury/accesscontrol.git
Install dependencies:
npm install
Add tests to relevant file under /test directory and run:
npm run build && npm run cover
Use included tslint.json
and editorconfig
for style and linting.
Travis build should pass, coverage should not degrade.
MIT.