Manage permissions with zend-permissions-rbac

2017-04-27 | By: Matthew Weier O'Phinney

In our previous post, we covered authentication of a user via Expressive middleware. In that post, we indicated that we would later discuss authorization, which is the activity of checking if an authenticated user has permissions to perform a specific action, from within the context of a middleware application.

Before we do that, however, we thought we'd introduce zend-permissions-rbac, our lightweight role-based access control (RBAC) implementation.

Installing zend-permissions-rbac

Just as you would any of our components, install zend-permissions-rbac via Composer:

$ composer require zendframework/zend-permissions-rbac

The component has no requirements at this time other than a PHP version of at least 5.5.

Vocabulary

In RBAC systems, we have three primary items to track:

the RBAC system composes zero or more roles.

system composes zero or more roles. a role is granted zero or more permissions.

is granted zero or more permissions. we assert whether or not a role is granted a given permission.

zend-permissions-rbac supports role inheritance, even allowing a role to inherit permissions from multiple other roles. This allows you to create some fairly complex and fine-grained permissions schemes!

Basics

As a basic example, we'll create an RBAC for a content-based website. Let's start with a "guest" role, that only allows "read" permissions.

use Zend\Permissions\Rbac\Rbac; use Zend\Permissions\Rbac\Role; // Create some roles $guest= new Role('guest'); $guest->addPermission('read'); $rbac = new Rbac(); $rbac->addRole($guest);

We can then assert if a given role is granted specific permissions:

$rbac->isGranted('guest', 'read'); // true $rbac->isGranted('guest', 'write'); // false

Unknown roles One thing to note: if the role used with isGranted() does not exist, this method raises an exception, specifically a Zend\Permissions\Rbac\Exception\InvalidArgumentException , indicating the role could not be found. In many situations, this may not be what you want; you may want to handle non-existent roles gracefully. You could do this in a couple ways. First, you can test to see if the role exists before you check the permissions, using hasRole() : if (! $rbac->hasRole($foo)) { // failed, due to missing role } if (! $rbac->isGranted($foo, $permission)) { // failed, due to missing permissions } Alternately, wrap the isGranted() call in a try/catch block: try { if (! $rbac->isGranted($foo, $permission)) { // failed, due to missing permissions } } catch (RbacInvalidArgumentException $e) { if (! strstr($e->getMessage(), 'could be found')) { // failed, due to missing role } // some other error occured throw $e; } Personally, I don't like to use exceptions for application flow, so I recommend the first solution. That said, in most cases, you will be working with a role instance that you've just added to the RBAC.

Role inheritance

Let's say we want to build on the previous example, and create an "editor" role that also incorporates the permissions of the "guest" role, and adds a "write" permission.

You might be inclined to think of the "editor" as inheriting from the "guest" role — in other words, that it is a descendent or child of it. However, in RBAC, inheritance works in the opposite direction: a parent inherits all permissions of its children. As such, we'll create the role as follows:

$editor = new Role('editor'); $editor->addChild($guest); $editor->addPermission('write'); $rbac->addRole($editor); $rbac->isGranted('editor', 'write'); // true $rbac->isGranted('editor', 'read'); // true $rbac->isGranted('guest', 'write'); // false

Another role might be a "reviewer" who can "moderate" content:

$reviewer = new Role('reviewer'); $reviewer->addChild($guest); $reviewer->addPermission('moderate'); $rbac->addRole($reviewer); $rbac->isGranted('reviewer', 'moderate'); // true $rbac->isGranted('reviewer', 'write'); // false; editor only! $rbac->isGranted('reviewer', 'read'); // true $rbac->isGranted('guest', 'moderate'); // false

Let's create another, an "admin" who can do all of the above, but also has permissions for "settings":

$admin= new Role('admin'); $admin->addChild($editor); $admin->addChild($reviewer); $admin->addPermission('settings'); $rbac->addRole($admin); $rbac->isGranted('admin', 'settings'); // true $rbac->isGranted('admin', 'write'); // true $rbac->isGranted('admin', 'moderate'); // true $rbac->isGranted('admin', 'read'); // true $rbac->isGranted('editor', 'settings'); // false $rbac->isGranted('reviewer', 'settings'); // false $rbac->isGranted('guest', 'write'); // false

As you can see, permissions lookups are recursive and collective; the RBAC examines all children and each of their descendants as far down as it needs to determine if a given permission is granted!

Creating your RBAC

When should you create your RBAC, exactly? And should it contain all roles and permissions?

In most cases, you will be validating a single user's permissions. What's interesting about zend-permissions-rbac is that if you know that user's role, the permissions they have been assigned, and any child roles (and their permissions) to which the role belongs, you have everything you need. This means that you can do most lookups on-the-fly.

As such, you will typically do the following:

Create a finite set of well-known roles and their permissions as a global RBAC.

Add roles (and optionally permissions) for the current user.

Validate the current user against the RBAC.

As an example, let's say I have a user Mario who has the role "editor", and also adds the permission "update". If our RBAC is already populated per the above examples, I might do the following:

$mario= new Role('mario'); $mario->addChild($editor); $mario->addPermission('update'); $rbac->addRole($mario); $rbac->isGranted($mario, 'settings'); // false; admin only! $rbac->isGranted($mario, 'update'); // true; mario only! $rbac->isGranted('editor', 'update'); // false; mario only! $rbac->isGranted($mario, 'write'); // true; all editors $rbac->isGranted($mario, 'read'); // true; all guests

Assigning roles to users

When you have some sort of authentication system in place, it will return some sort of identity or user instance generally. You will then need to map this to RBAC roles. But how?

Hopefully, you can store role information wherever you persist your user information. Since roles are essentially stored internally as strings by zend-permissions-rbac, this means that you can store the user role as a discrete datum with your user identity.

Once you have, you have a few options:

Use the role directly from your identity when checking permissions: e.g., $rbac->isGranted($identity->getRole(), 'write')

Create a Zend\Permissions\Rbac\Role instance (or other concrete class) with the role fetched from the identity, and use that for permissions checks: $rbac->isGranted(new Role($identity->getRole()), 'write')

instance (or other concrete class) with the role fetched from the identity, and use that for permissions checks: Update your identity instance to implement Zend\Permissions\Rbac\RoleInterface , and pass it directly to permissions checks: $rbac->isGranted($identity, 'write')

This latter approach provides a nice solution, as it then also allows you to store specific permissions and/or child roles as part of the user data.

The RoleInterface looks like the following:

namespace Zend\Permissions\Rbac; use RecursiveIterator; interface RoleInterface extends RecursiveIterator { /** * Get the name of the role. * * @return string */ public function getName(); /** * Add permission to the role. * * @param $name * @return RoleInterface */ public function addPermission($name); /** * Checks if a permission exists for this role or any child roles. * * @param string $name * @return bool */ public function hasPermission($name); /** * Add a child. * * @param RoleInterface|string $child * @return Role */ public function addChild($child); /** * @param RoleInterface $parent * @return RoleInterface */ public function setParent($parent); /** * @return null|RoleInterface */ public function getParent(); }

The Zend\Permissions\Rbac\AbstractRole contains basic implementations of most methods of the interface, including logic for querying child permissions, so we suggest inheriting from that if you can.

As an example, you could store the permissions as a comma-separated string and the parent role as a string internally when creating your identity instance:

use Zend\Permissions\Rbac\AbstractRole; use Zend\Permissions\Rbac\RoleInterface; use Zend\Permissions\Rbac\Role; class Identity extends AbstractRole { /** * @param string $username * @param string $role * @param array $permissions * @param array $childRoles */ public function __construct( string $username, array $permissions = [], array $childRoles = [] ) { // $name is defined in AbstractRole $this->name = $username; foreach ($this->permissions as $permission) { $this->addPermission($permission); } $childRoles = array_merge(['guest'], $childRoles); foreach ($this->childRoles as $childRole) { $this->addChild($childRole); } } }

Assuming your authentication system uses a database table, and a lookup returns an array-like row with the user information on a successful lookup, you might then seed your identity instance as follows:

$identity = new Identity( $row['username'], explode(',', $row['permissions']), explode(',', $row['roles']) );

This approach allows you to assign pre-determined roles to individual users, while also allowing you to add fine-grained, individual permissions!

Custom assertions

Sometimes a static assertion is not enough.

As an example, we may want to implement a rule that the creator of a content item in our website always has rights to edit the item. How would we implement that with the above system?

zend-permissions-rbac allows you to do so via dynamic assertions. Such assertions are classes that implement Zend\Permissions\Rbac\AssertionInterface , which defines the single method public function assert(Rbac $rbac) .

For the sake of this example, let's assume:

The content item is represented as an object.

The object has a method getCreatorUsername() that will return the same username as we might have in our custom identity from the previous example.

Because we have PHP 7 at our disposal, we'll create the assertion as an anonymous class:

use Zend\Permissions\Rbac\AssertionInterface; use Zend\Permissions\Rbac\Rbac; use Zend\Permissions\Rbac\RoleInterface; $assertion = new class ($identity, $content) implements AssertionInterface { private $content; private $identity; public function __construct(RoleInterface $identity, $content) { $this->identity = $identity; $this->content = $content; } public function assert(Rbac $rbac) { return $this->identity->getName() === $this->content->getCreatorUsername(); } }; $rbac->isGranted($mario, 'edit', $assertion); // returns true if $mario created $content

This opens even more possibilities than inheritance!

Summary

zend-permissions-rbac is quite simple to operate, but that simplicity hides a great amount of flexibility and power; you can create incredibly fine-grained permissions schemes for your applications using this component!

Next week, Enrico will cover using the component within a middleware stack; stay tuned!

Save the date! Want to learn more about Expressive and Zend Framework? What better location than ZendCon 2017! ZendCon will be hosted 23-26 October 2017 in Las Vegas, Nevada, USA. Visit the ZendCon website for more information.

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