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Comment: Migrated to Confluence 5.3

Name

Externalize User Permissions

StatusProposal under development

Withdrawn from consideration

Target Release

Roller Weblogger 4.1

Original Authors

Dave Johnson

...

For ease of installation and management, Roller is able to manage it's own users permissions without relying on any external system other than its RDBMS. We definitely don't want to lose that that easiness, but we do want to make it possible to plug Roller into existing sites and applications that have their own permissions management systems.

This proposal outlines a plan to make it easy to hook Roller up to an external user permissions system. The general approach is to define a User Permissions API, provide a default implementation for Roller, and change UserManager to use that API. Developer could then provide alternative implementations of that API to plug in their own user permissions systems.

3.

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0 Requirements

  • Enable Roller to optionally read/write user-weblog permission information in an external system instead of it's relational database.
  • Define a User Permissions API and make it possible to plugin User Permissions API implementations without having to extend a UserManager implementation.

4.0 Issues

Issues raised and addressed during review process. TBD

5

...

.0 Background and Design

To understand this proposal you need to understand how Roller's existing user management system works. So here's an explanation of Roller's current system, the perceived problems and proposed solutions.

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5.1 Roller manages user-weblog permissions

In addition to roles, which are global across a Roller site, Roller also manages each user's permissions to access weblogs. There is a many-to-many relationship between users and weblogs and it's stored in a database table:

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Code Block
public boolean hasWritePermissions(User user)

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5.1.1 Problem

Permissions cannot be managed by external system because the User to Permissions to Weblog relationship is managed by the ORM, the information must be stored in Roller database tables and cannot be externalized and managed by another system.

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5.1.2 Solution: User Permissions API

First, we remove the dependence on ORM for permissions. Insead calling ORM supported methods on the Weblog and User classes, the Roller front-end will call the Roller UserManager to access permissions information. We'll add these new methods to accommodate that:

New methods in UserManager

Code Block
public Set<WeblogPermission> getWeblogPermissions(Weblog weblog)
public Set<WeblogPermission> getUserPermissions(User user)
public void grantPermissions(String username, WeblogPermission perm)
public void removePermission(String username, WeblogPermission perm)
public int getUserCount(Weblog weblog)
public int getAdminCount(Weblog weblog)

...

For example, this API allows you to grant permissions on specific objects and uses a mask for permissions as we do now in Roller.

User Permissions API

UserPermissions interface methods

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Roller will include a User Permissions API that stores data in the Roller database. Other implementations can be plugged in via DI. You can stop reading here... the rest is TBD

3.0 Requirements

Requirements satisfied by this proposal

4.0 Issues

Issues to be considered

5.0 Design

5.2 Specific changes to Managers, POJOS, Actions and JSPs

TBDList and describe new manager methods, Struts actions, JSP pages, macros, etc.

6.0 Comments

Other can leave commments herePlease comment on the dev mailing list.