isomorphic, "magical" access control integrated with objection.js
This plugin automatically takes away a lot of the manual wiring that you'd need to do if you were to implement your access control on a request/route level, including:
- checking the user against the resource and the ACL
- filtering request body according to the action and the user's access
- figuring out which resource to check the user's grants against automatically(!)
- even filtering the result from a query according to a user's read access!
Not sure why you would need this? Read below for examples or see here to learn just how complex access control can be and how you can manage said complexity with this plugin!
TL;DR:
Before:
class Post extends Model {}
app.put('/posts/:id', (req, res, next) => {
// Need to handle random edge cases like the user not being signed in
if (!req.user) next(new Error('must be signed in'))
// Need to first fetch the post to know "can this user edit this post?"
Post.query()
.findById(req.params.id)
.then(post => {
if (req.user.id !== post.authorId || req.user.role !== 'editor')
return next(new Error("Cannot edit someone else's post!"))
// Prevent certain fields from being set after creation
const postBody = omit(req.body, ['id', 'views', 'authorId'])
// Prevent certain fields from being *changed*
if (
post.visibility === 'public' &&
get(postBody, 'visibility') !== post.visibility &&
req.user.role !== 'admin'
)
return next(
new Error('Cannot take down a post without admin privileges!')
)
req.user
.$relatedQuery('posts')
.updateAndFetchById(post.id, postBody)
.then(post => {
// filter the resulting post based on user's access before sending it over
if (req.user.role !== 'admin') post = omit(post, ['superSecretField'])
res.send(post)
})
.catch(err => next(err))
})
.catch(err => next(err))
})
// And you need to repeat ALL of this validation on the frontend as well...
After:
// Use the plugin...
class Post extends require('objection-authorize')(acl, library, opts)(Model) {}
app.put('/posts/:id', (req, res, next) => {
// ...and the ACL is automagically hooked in for ALL queries!
Post.query()
.updateAndFetchById(req.params.id, req.body)
.authorize(req.user)
.fetchResourceContextFromDB()
.diffInputFromResource()
.then(post => {
res.send(post.authorizeRead(req.user))
})
.catch(err => next(err))
})
// AND you can re-use the ACL on the frontend as well *without* any changes!
🏠 Homepage
Enjoy objection-authorize? Check out my other objection plugins: objection-hashid and objection-tablename!
To install the plugin itself:
yarn add objection-authorize # or
npm i objection-authorize --save
For now, only @casl/ability
is supported as the authorization library, but this plugin is written in an implementation-agnostic way so that any AuthZ/ACL library could be implemented as long as the library of choice supports synchronous authorization checks.
Starting from the 1.0 release, all changes will be documented at the releases page.
A quick note, I use the following terms interchangeably:
resource
anditem(s)
(both refer to model instance(s) that the query is fetching/modifying)body
andinput
andinputItem(s)
(all of them refer to thereq.body
/ctx.body
that you pass to the query to modify said model instances; e.g.Model.query().findById(id).update(inputItems)
)
Plugging in objection-authorize
to work with your existing authorization setup is as easy as follows:
const acl = ... // see below for defining acl
const { Model } = require('objection')
const authorize = require('objection-authorize')(acl, library[, opts])
class Post extends authorize(Model) {
// That's it! This is just a regular objection.js model class
}
(Again, for now the only supported library
value is casl
)
You can pass an optional options object as the third parameter during initialization. The default values are as follows:
const opts = {
defaultRole: 'anonymous',
unauthenticatedErrorCode: 401,
unauthorizedErrorCode: 403,
castDiffToModelClass: true,
ignoreFields: [],
casl: {
useInputItemAsResourceForRelation: false
}
}
For explanations on what each option does, see below:
defaultRole
When the user object is empty, a "default" user object will be created with the defaultRole
(e.g. { role: opts.defaultRole }
).
unauthenticatedErrorCode
Error code thrown when an unauthenticated user is not allowed to access a resource.
unauthorizedErrorCode
Error code thrown when an authenticated user is not allowed to access a resource.
castDiffToModelClass
When you use .diffInputFromResource()
, the resource and the inputItem are compared and a diff (an object containing the changes) is fed to your access control checker.
Since the diff is produced as a plain object, we need to cast it to the appropriate model class again so that you can access that model's methods and model-specific fields.
However, in some cases (such as when you're doing some bespoke field/value remapping in Model.$parseJson()
), casting the object to the model class isn't "safe" to do, and the resulting model instance might contain different values from the raw diff object.
If you want to disable it, just set opts.castDiffToModelClass
to false and the raw diff object will be fed to the access control functions.
ignoreFields
When you automatically modify/include some fields (e.g. automatic timestamps) in your Objection models, as objection-authorize is typically the "last" hook to run before execution, the policies will check for those fields as well.
These allow you to ignore those fields in authorization decisions. Note that you can specify the fields in dot notation as well (e.g. timestamp.updatedAt
).
casl.useInputItemAsResourceForRelation
Normally, the item
is used as "resource" since that's what the user is acting on.
However, for relation queries (e.g. add Book
to a Library
), the user is really acting on the Book
, not the Library
. For cases like this, you can set this option to true
in order to use the inputItem
(Book
) as "resource" instead of item
(Library
) ONLY during relation queries.
After initialization, the following "magic" methods are available for use:
QueryBuilder.authorize(user[, resource[, opts]])
This is the bread and butter of this library. You can chain .authorize()
to any Objection Model query (i.e. Model.query().authorize()
) to authorize that specific ORM call/HTTP request.
First, an explanation of the parameters:
The user
should be an object representation of the user; typically, you can just plug in req.user
(express) or ctx.user
(koa) directly, even if the user is not signed in (aka req.user === undefined
)!
The resource
object is an optional parameter, and for most queries, you won't need to manually specify the resource.
The opts
can be used to override any of the default options that you passed during initialization of this plugin (i.e. you don't have to pass the whole options object in; only the parts you want to override for this specific query).
So, what are we actually checking here with this function?
When you chain .authorize()
to the ORM query, the query is (typically) doing one of four things: create, read, update, or delete (CRUD) - which is the action they're trying to take. These correspond to the HTTP verbs: GET/POST/PUT/PATCH/DELETE (if you're not familiar with how this is the case, please read up on REST API design).
In addition, the query already provides the following contexts: the resource/item(s) that the user is acting on (e.g. read a user's email, or create a post), the body/inputItem(s) that the user is supplying. This is typically the req.body
that you pass to the .insert()/.update()/.delete()
query methods, aka how you want to change the resource.
So, given this information, we can just rely on the ACL (see below for how to define it) to check whether the user
is allowed to take the specified action
on resource/items
with the given body/inputItems
! Specifically, the authorization check involves the following functionalities:
- Check if the user is allowed to apply the specified
action
on theitems
, and if not, throw anhttpError
with the appropriate HTTP error code - If there's
inputItems
, check if the user is allowed to modify/add the specific fields ininputItems
. If a user tries to set/modify a property they're not allowed to, error is thrown again.
That's it!
The nuances of this plugin comes with how it's able to drastically simplify said ACL calls & context fetching. For example, while figuring out the inputItems
might be simple, how does the plugin know which items
the action
applies to?
The plugin looks at the following places to fetch the appropriate resource(s)
:
- If the
resource
parameter is specified in the.authorize()
call, it takes precedence and is set as the only item(s) that we check against. - If the
resource
parameter is not specified, then it looks at the model instance (if you're calling.$query()
or.$relatedQuery()
) - If you call
.fetchContextFromDB()
, then the plugin executes a pre-emptive SQL SELECT call to fetch the rows that the query would affect.
And once the plugin figures out items
and inputItems
, it simply iterates along both arrays and checks the ACL whether the user can take action
on items[i]
with input inputItems[j]
.
That's it.
TIP: the .authorize()
call can happen anywhere within the query chain!
QueryBuilder.action(action)
Rather than using the "default" actions (create/read/update/delete), you can override the action per query.
This is useful when you have custom actions in your ACL (such as promote
) for a specific endpoint/query. Just chain a .action(customAction)
somewhere in the query (in this case, the customAction
would be "promote"
).
QueryBuilder.inputItem(inputItem)
For methods that don't support passing inputItem(s)
(e.g. .delete()
) but you still want to set the input item/resource, you can call this method to manually override the value of the resource used by the ACL.
QueryBuilder.fetchResourceContextFromDB()
Sometimes, you need to know the values of the resource(s) you're trying to access before you can make an authorization decision. So instead of loading the model instance(s) yourself and running .$query()
on them, you can chain .fetchResourceContextFromDB()
to your query and automatically populate the inputs
/resources that would've been affected by the query.
e.g.
await Person.query()
.authorize(user)
.where('lastName', 'george')
.update({ lastName: 'George' }) // input item
.fetchResourceContextFromDB() // Loads all people that would be affected by the update,
// and runs authorization check on *all* of those individuals against the input item.
QueryBuilder.diffInputFromResource()
This method is particularly useful for UPDATE requests, where the client is sending the entire object (rather than just the changes, like PATCH). Obviously, if you put the whole object through the AuthZ check, it will trip up (for example, the client may include the object's id as part of an UPDATE request, and you don't want the ACL to think that the client is trying to change the id)!
Therefore, call this method anywhere along the query chain, and the plugin will automatically diff the input object(s) with whatever the resource is! The beauty of this method is that it also works for nested fields, so even if your table includes a JSON field, only the exact diff - all the way down to the nested subfields - will be passed along to the ACL.
e.g.
Model.query()
.authorize(user, { id: 1, foo: { bar: 'baz', a: 0 } })
.updateById(id, { id: 1, foo: { bar: 'baz', b: 0 } })
.diffInputFromResource() // the diff will be { foo: { b: 0 } }
NOTE: the plugin is ONLY able to detect changes to an existing field's value or an addition of a new field, NOT the deletion of an existing field (see above how the implicit deletion of foo.a
is not included in the diff).
Therefore, care must be taken during UPDATE queries where fields (especially nested fields) may be added/removed dynamically. Having JSON subfields doesn't mean you throw out schema Mongo-style; so if you need to monitor for deletion of a field (rather than mutation or addition), I would recommend assigning all of the possible fields' value with null
, rather than leaving it out entirely, so that deletions would show up as mutations.
e.g. in the above case, if you wanted to check whether field foo.a
was deleted or not:
resource = { id: 1, foo: { bar: 'baz', a: 0, b: null } }
input = { id: 1, foo: { bar: 'baz', a: null, b: 0 } }
modelInstance.authorizeRead(user, [action = 'read'[, opts]])
Prior to objection-authorize v4, the plugin "automatically" filtered any resulting model instances against a user's read access, but it didn't work consistently and I found it to be too hacky, so from v4 and on, you will need to manually call the .authorizeRead()
on your model instance to filter it according to the user's read access (which can be overridden with the action
parameter).
This call is synchronous and will return the filtered model instance directly. Note that the result is a plain object, not an instance of the model class anymore, since this call is meant to be for "finalizing" the model instance for returning to the user as a raw JSON.
The ACL is what actually checks the validity of a request, and objection-authorize
passes all of the necessary context in the form of function parameters (thus, you should wrap your ACL in the following function format):
function acl(user, resource, action, body, opts) {
// your ACL definition goes here
}
NOTE: while user
is cast into plain object form (simply due to the fact that req.user
could be empty, and we would need to create a "fake" user with a default role), resource
and body
(aka item
and inputItem
) are cast into their respective Models - this is to maintain consistency with the internal Objection.js static hooks' behaviour.
For example, in a query:
await Person.relatedQuery('pets')
.for([1, 2])
.insert([{ name: 'doggo' }, { name: 'catto' }])
.authorize(user)
.fetchContextFromDB()
The resource
is an instance of model Person
, and the body
is an instance of model Pet
. How do I know what class to wrap it in? Magic! ;)
For casl
, because it doesn't allow dynamically checking against any resource or action, we have to wrap it with a function, and that function takes in (user, resource, action, body, opts)
and returns an instance of ability.
This is essentially the same as the defineAbilitiesFor(user)
method described in the casl docs, but obviously with a lot more context.
So you might define your ability like this (and it doesn't matter if you use AbilityBuilder
or Ability
):
const { AbilityBuilder } = require('@casl/ability')
function acl(user, resource, action, body, opts) {
return AbilityBuilder.define((allow, forbid) => {
if (user.isAdmin()) {
allow('manage', 'all')
} else {
allow('read', 'all')
}
})
}
TIP: If you want to cut down on the time it takes to check access, one thing you might want to do is to use the resource
parameter to ONLY define rules relevant to that resource:
function acl(user, resource, action, body, opts) {
return AbilityBuilder.define((allow, forbid) => {
switch (resource.constructor.name) {
case 'User':
allow('read', 'User')
forbid('read', 'User', ['email'])
break
case 'Post':
allow('create', 'Post')
forbid('read', 'Post', { private: true })
}
})
}
For both libraries, note that the resource name IS the corresponding model's name. So if you have a model class Post
, you should be referring to that resource as Post
and not post
in your ACL definition.
The resources that are passed to this plugin in the backend are typically going to be wrapped in their respective model classes: e.g. req.user
typically will be an instance of the User
class, and the resource will always be wrapped with its respective class.
So if you want to share your ACL between frontend and the backend, as the frontend doesn't have access to Objection models, any transformation you have on your models should be symmetric.
For example, if you have user.id
and post.creatorId
and you hash ID's when you export it to JSON, you want to make sure if user.id = post.creatorId = 1
, the transformed values are also the same (user.id = post.creatorId = XYZ
, for example).
This also means that you shouldn't rely on virtuals and asymmetrically-transformed fields on your ACL (if you want to use your ACL on the frontend, that is). For an example of symmetric transformation out in the wild, see https://github.com/JaneJeon/objection-hashid.
With objection-authorize v4, I added experimental relation support, so on your ACL wrapper (the function that takes in 5 parameters - I really should just wrap them in an object but that would break compatibility), now there is an optional, 6th parameter called relation
:
function acl(user, resource, action, body, opts, relation) {
// your ACL definition goes here
}
And that relation
property is simply a string representation of the relation between item
and inputItem
that you specified in the resource model's relationMappings
. So you can use that relation
key to detect relations and do fancy things with it.
In reality, most of the relation support is well-tested and already proven to be working, as the hardest part was to wrap the inputItem
in the appropriate related class (rather than using the same class for both the item
and inputItem
); it's just that I can't test the relation
string itself due to some... Objection finnickyness.
npm test
👤 Jane Jeon
- Github: @JaneJeon
Contributions, issues and feature requests are welcome!
Feel free to check issues page.
Give a ⭐️ if this project helped you!
Copyright © 2022 Jane Jeon.
This project is LGPL licensed.
TL;DR: you are free to import and use this library "as-is" in your code, without needing to make your code source-available or to license it under the same license as this library; however, if you do change this library and you distribute it (directly or as part of your code consuming this library), please do contribute back any improvements for this library and this library alone.