| Commit message (Collapse) | Author | Age | Files | Lines |
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Rationale:
- Removes a bunch of code!
- We don't have many cases where an actor is not bound to one of our hosts
- A notable exception is the admin shell, but if we ever attempt to lock those
sessions down, there is a load of other work that also has to be done. And
it's not clear if we would need a global authz provider for that anyway.
- Removes an extra edge case from the necessary mental model for operators
- Sessions that aren't bound to a host generally are anonymous or have an
alternative auth model (such as by IP addres).
- With the encapsulation now provided by util.roles, ad-hoc "detached roles"
can still be created anyway by code that needs them.
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There is no reasonable fallback for set_jid_role() because users may have
multiple roles, so that's an error.
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Except, should we have a global authz provider at all?
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Non-table but truthy values would trigger "attempt to index a foo value"
on the next line otherwise
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Roles and permissions will always happen in the context of a host.
Prevents error upon indexing since `hosts["*"] == nil`
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This also updates the module to the new role API, and improves support for
scope/role selection (currently treated as the same thing, which they almost
are).
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This commit was too awkward to split (hg record didn't like it), so:
- Switch to the new util.roles lib to provide a consistent representation of
a role object.
- Change API method from get_role_info() to get_role_by_name() (touches
sessionmanager and usermanager)
- Change get_roles() to get_user_roles(), take a username instead of a JID
This is more consistent with all other usermanager API methods.
- Support configuration of custom roles and permissions via the config file
(to be documented).
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This is useful for a number of things. For example, listing users that need to
rotate their passwords after some event. It also provides a safer way for code
to determine that a user password has changed without needing to set a handler
for the password change event (which is a more fragile approach).
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Ensures it applies to the context as string case
Somehow this fixes everything
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`get_user_role()` did not exist anywhere else.
MattJ said `get_user_default_role()` was indented
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We began moving away from simple "is this user an admin?" permission checks
before 0.12, with the introduction of mod_authz_internal and the ability to
dynamically change the roles of individual users.
The approach in 0.12 still had various limitations however, and apart from
the introduction of roles other than "admin" and the ability to pull that info
from storage, not much actually changed.
This new framework shakes things up a lot, though aims to maintain the same
functionality and behaviour on the surface for a default Prosody
configuration. That is, if you don't take advantage of any of the new
features, you shouldn't notice any change.
The biggest change visible to developers is that usermanager.is_admin() (and
the auth provider is_admin() method) have been removed. Gone. Completely.
Permission checks should now be performed using a new module API method:
module:may(action_name, context)
This method accepts an action name, followed by either a JID (string) or
(preferably) a table containing 'origin'/'session' and 'stanza' fields (e.g.
the standard object passed to most events). It will return true if the action
should be permitted, or false/nil otherwise.
Modules should no longer perform permission checks based on the role name.
E.g. a lot of code previously checked if the user's role was prosody:admin
before permitting some action. Since many roles might now exist with similar
permissions, and the permissions of prosody:admin may be redefined
dynamically, it is no longer suitable to use this method for permission
checks. Use module:may().
If you start an action name with ':' (recommended) then the current module's
name will automatically be used as a prefix.
To define a new permission, use the new module API:
module:default_permission(role_name, action_name)
module:default_permissions(role_name, { action_name[, action_name...] })
This grants the specified role permission to execute the named action(s) by
default. This may be overridden via other mechanisms external to your module.
The built-in roles that developers should use are:
- prosody:user (normal user)
- prosody:admin (host admin)
- prosody:operator (global admin)
The new prosody:operator role is intended for server-wide actions (such as
shutting down Prosody).
Finally, all usage of is_admin() in modules has been fixed by this commit.
Some of these changes were trickier than others, but no change is expected to
break existing deployments.
EXCEPT: mod_auth_ldap no longer supports the ldap_admin_filter option. It's
very possible nobody is using this, but if someone is then we can later update
it to pull roles from LDAP somehow.
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The 'scope' term derives from OAuth, and represents a bundle of permissions.
We're now setting on the term 'role' for a bundle of permissions.
This change does not affect any public modules I'm aware of.
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Gotta have the DOAP references!
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Sometimes you only care about a single attribute, but the child tag
itself may be optional, leading to needing `tag and tag.attr.foo` or
`stanza:find("tag@foo")`.
The `:find()` method is fairly complex, so avoiding it for this kind of
simpler use case is a win.
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Deprecated even before Prosody even started, obsolete for over a decade.
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Integers were required before, now any number should work.
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No idea why the locals were declared on a line by itself. Perhaps line
length considerations? But saving 6 characters in width by adding a
whole line with 47 characters seems excessive.
This is still within the 150 character limit set by .luacheckrc
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Because why not? Who even has this module enabled?
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The "when" column is an INTEGER which will probably be unhappy about
storing higher precision timestamps, so we keep the older behavior for
now.
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Changes sub-second part of example timestamp to .5 in order to avoid
floating point issues.
Some clients use timestamps when ordering messages which can lead to
messages having the same timestamp ending up in the wrong order.
It would be better to preserve the order messages are sent in, which is
the order they were stored in.
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Lua since 5.3 raises a fuss when time functions are handed a number with
a fractional part and the underlying C functions are all based on
integer seconds without support for more precision.
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The expected value goes first.
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Naming things ... Thing or thing_t?
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The PR has been merged and there's no reason not to have nested records
and other definitions.
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