Permissions Framework - Introduction ==================================== The Permissions Framework is a component of the Enthought Tool Suite that provides developers with the facility to limit access to parts of an application unless the user is appropriately authorised. In other words it enables and disables different parts of the GUI according to the identity of the user. The framework includes an API to allow it to be integrated with an organisation's existing security infrastructure, for example to look users up in a corporate LDAP directory. The framework is completely configurable. Alternate implementations of all major components can be provided if necessary. The default implementations provide a simple local filesystem user database and allows roles to be defined and assigned to users. The framework **does not** provide any facility for protecting access to data. It is not possible to implement such protection in Python and using the file security provided by a typical operating system. Framework Concepts ------------------ The following are the concepts supported by the framework. - Permission A permission is the basic tool that a developer uses to specify that access to a part of the application should be restricted. If the current user has the permission then access is granted. A permission may be attached to a PyFace action, to an item of a TraitsUI view, or to a GUI toolkit specific widget. When the user is denied access, the corresponding GUI control is disabled or completely hidden. - User Each application has a current user who is either *authorised* or *unauthorised*. In order to become authorised a user must identify themselves and authenticate that identity. An arbitrary piece of data (called a blob) can be associated with an authorised user which (with user manager support) can be stored securely. This might be used, for example, to store sensitive user preferences, or to implement a roaming profile. - User Manager The user manager is responsible for authorising the current user and, therefore, defines how that is done. It also provides information about the user population to the policy manager. It may also, optionally, provide the ability to manage the user population (eg. add or delete users). The user manager must either maintain a persistent record of the user population, or interface with an external user database or directory service. The default user manager uses password based authorisation. The user manager persists its data in a user database. The default user manager provides an API so that different implementations of the user database can be used (for example to store the data in an RDBMS, or to integrate with an existing directory service). A default user database is provided that pickles the data in a local file. - Policy Manager The policy manager is responsible for assigning permissions to users and for determining the permissions assigned to the current user. To do this it must maintain a persistent record of those assignments. The default policy manager supplied with the framework uses roles to make it easier for an administrator to manage the relationships between permissions and users. A role is defined as a named set of permissions, and a user may have one or more roles assigned to them. The policy manager persists its data in a policy database. The default policy manager provides an API so that different implementations of the policy database can be used (for example to store the data in an RDBMS). A default policy database is provided that pickles the data in a local file. - Permissions Manager The permissions manager is a singleton object used to get and set the current policy and user managers. Framework APIs -------------- The APIs provided by the permissions framework can be split into the following groups. - `Application API`_ This part of the API is used by application developers. - `Policy Manager API`_ This is the interface that an alternative policy manager must implement. The need to implement an alternative is expected to be very rare and so the API isn't covered further. See the definition of the IPolicyManager interface for the details. - `Default Policy Manager Data API`_ This part of the API is used by developers to store the policy's persistent data in a more secure location (eg. on a remote server) than that provided by the default implementation. - `User Manager API`_ This is the interface that an alternative user manager must implement. The need to implement an alternative is expected to be very rare and so the API isn't covered further. See the definition of the IUserManager interface for the details. - `Default User Manager Data API`_ This part of the API is used by developers to store the user database in a more secure location (eg. on a remote server) than that provided by the default implementation. The complete API_ documentation is available as endo generated HTML. What Do I Need to Reimplement? ------------------------------ The architecture of the permissions framework comprises several layers, each of which can reimplemented to meet the requirements of a particular environment. Hopefully the following questions and answers will clarify what needs to be reimplemented depending on your environment. Q: Do you want to use roles to group permissions and assign them to users? A: If yes then use the supplied PolicyManager, otherwise provide your own IPolicyManager implementation. Q: Do you want users to be authenticated using a password? A: If yes then use the supplied UserManager, otherwise provide your own IUserManager implementation. Q: Does the IUser interface allow you to store all the user specific information you need? A: If yes then use the supplied UserDatabase, otherwise provide your own IUserDatabase implementation. Q: Do you want to store your user accounts as pickled data in a local file? A: If yes then use the supplied default, otherwise provide UserDatabase with your own IUserStorage implementation. Q: Do you want to store your policy data (ie. roles and role assignments) as pickled data in a local file? A: If yes then use the supplied default, otherwise provide PolicyManager with your own IPolicyStorage implementation. Deploying Alternative Managers ------------------------------ The permissions framework will first try to import the different managers from the ``enthought.permissions.external`` namespace. The default managers are only used if no alternative was found. Therefore, alternative managers should be deployed as an egg containing that namespace. Specifically the framework looks for the following classes: ``PolicyManager`` from ``enthought.permissions.external.policy_manager`` ``PolicyStorage`` from ``enthought.permissions.external.policy_storage`` ``UserDatabase`` from ``enthought.permissions.external.user_database`` ``UserManager`` from ``enthought.permissions.external.user_manager`` ``UserStorage`` from ``enthought.permissions.external.user_storage`` The example server is such a package that provides PolicyStorage and UserStorage implementations that use an XML-RPC based server to provide remote (and consequently more secure) policy and user databases. Using the Default Storage Implementations ----------------------------------------- The default policy and user managers both (again by default) persist their data as pickles in local files called ``ets_perms_policydb`` and ``ets_perms_userdb`` respectively. By default these are stored in the application's home directory (ie. that returned by ``ETSConfig.application_home``). Note that this directory is normally in the user's own directory structure whereas it needs to be available to all users of the application. If the ``ETS_PERMS_DATA_DIR`` environment variable is set then its value is used instead. The directory must be writeable by all users of the application. It should be restated that the default implementations do *not* provide secure access to the permissions and user data. They are useful in a cooperative environment and as working examples. .. _API: api/index.html .. _`Application API`: ApplicationAPI.html .. _`Policy Manager API`: https://svn.enthought.com/enthought/browser/AppTools/trunk/enthought/permissions/i_policy_manager.py .. _`Default Policy Manager Data API`: DefaultPolicyManagerDataAPI.html .. _`User Manager API`: https://svn.enthought.com/enthought/browser/AppTools/trunk/enthought/permissions/i_user_manager.py .. _`Default User Manager Data API`: DefaultUserManagerDataAPI.html