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Programming language: Elixir
License: MIT License
Tags: Authorization    
Latest version: v2.4.0

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README

Bodyguard Hex Version docs

Bodyguard protects the context boundaries of your application. ๐Ÿ’ช

Version 2 was built from the ground-up to integrate nicely with Phoenix contexts. Authorization callbacks are implemented directly on contexts, so permissions can be checked from controllers, views, sockets, tests, and even other contexts.

The Bodyguard.Policy behaviour is implemented with a single required callback. Additionally, the Bodyguard.Schema behaviour provides a convention for limiting query results per-user.

This is an all-new API, so refer to the 1.x branch for the earlier readme.

Quick Example

Define authorization rules directly in the context module:

# lib/my_app/blog/blog.ex
defmodule MyApp.Blog do
  @behaviour Bodyguard.Policy

  # Admins can update anything
  def authorize(:update_post, %{role: :admin} = _user, _post), do: :ok

  # Users can update their owned posts
  def authorize(:update_post, %{id: user_id} = _user, %{user_id: user_id} = _post), do: :ok

  # Otherwise, denied
  def authorize(:update_post, _user, _post), do: :error
end

# lib/my_app_web/controllers/post_controller.ex
defmodule MyAppWeb.PostController do
  use MyAppWeb, :controller

  def update(conn, %{"id" => id, "post" => post_params}) do
    user = conn.assigns.current_user
    post = MyApp.Blog.get_post!(id)

    with :ok <- Bodyguard.permit(MyApp.Blog, :update_post, user, post),
      {:ok, post} <- MyApp.Blog.update_post(post, post_params)
    do
      redirect(conn, to: post_path(conn, :show, post))
    end
  end
end

Policies

To implement a policy, add @behaviour Bodyguard.Policy to a context, then define authorize(action, user, params) callbacks, which must return:

  • :ok or true to permit an action
  • :error, {:error, reason}, or false to deny an action

Don't use these callbacks directly - instead, go through Bodyguard.permit/4. This will convert any keyword-list params into a map, and will coerce the callback result into a strict :ok or {:error, reason} result. The default failure reason is :unauthorized unless specified otherwise in the callback.

Also provided are Bodyguard.permit?/4 (returns a boolean) and Bodyguard.permit!/5 (raises Bodyguard.NotAuthorizedError on failure).

# lib/my_app/blog/blog.ex
defmodule MyApp.Blog do
  @behaviour Bodyguard.Policy
  alias __MODULE__

  # Admin users can do anything
  def authorize(_, %Blog.User{role: :admin}, _), do: true

  # Regular users can create posts
  def authorize(:create_post, _, _), do: true

  # Regular users can modify their own posts
  def authorize(action, %Blog.User{id: user_id}, %Blog.Post{user_id: user_id})
    when action in [:update_post, :delete_post], do: true

  # Catch-all: deny everything else
  def authorize(_, _, _), do: false
end

If you prefer more structure, define a dedicated policy module outside of the context, and use defdelegate:

# lib/my_app/blog/blog.ex
defmodule MyApp.Blog do
  defdelegate authorize(action, user, params), to: MyApp.Blog.Policy
end

# lib/my_app/blog/policy.ex
defmodule MyApp.Blog.Policy do
  @behaviour Bodyguard.Policy

  def authorize(action, user, params), do: # ...
end

Controllers

Phoenix 1.3 introduces the action_fallback controller macro. This is the recommended way to deal with authorization failures. The fallback controller will handle {:error, reason} authorization failures.

Typically, authorization failure results in {:error, :unauthorized}. If you wish to deny access without leaking the existence of a particular resource, consider returning {:error, :not_found} instead, and handle it separately in the fallback controller.

See the section "Overriding action/2 for custom arguments" in the Phoenix.Controller docs for a clean way to pass in the user to each action.

# lib/my_app_web/controllers/fallback_controller.ex
defmodule MyAppWeb.FallbackController do
  use MyAppWeb, :controller

  def call(conn, {:error, :unauthorized}) do
    conn
    |> put_status(:forbidden)
    |> put_view(MyAppWeb.ErrorView)
    |> render(:"403")
  end
end

Where Should I Perform Checks?

Bodyguard doesn't make any assumptions about where authorization checks are performed. You can do it before calling into the context, or within the context itself. There is a good discussion of the tradeoffs here.

Plugs

  • Bodyguard.Plug.Authorize โ€“ perform authorization in the middle of a pipeline

This plug's config utilizes callback functions called getters, which are 1-arity functions that accept the conn and return the appropriate value.

# lib/my_app_web/controllers/post_controller.ex
defmodule MyAppWeb.PostController do
  use MyAppWeb, :controller

  # Fetch the post and put into conn assigns
  plug :get_post when action in [:show]

  # Do the check
  plug Bodyguard.Plug.Authorize,
    policy: MyApp.Blog.Policy,
    action: {Phoenix.Controller, :action_name},
    user: {MyApp.Authentication, :current_user},
    params: {__MODULE__, :extract_post}

  def show(conn, _) do
    # Already assigned and authorized
    render(conn, "show.html")
  end

  defp get_post(conn, _) do
    assign(conn, :post, MyApp.Posts.get_post!(conn.params["id"]))
  end

  # Helper for the Authorize plug
  def extract_post(conn), do: conn.assigns.posts
end

See the docs for more information about configuring application-wide defaults for the plug.

Schema Scopes

Bodyguard also provides the Bodyguard.Schema behaviour to query which items a user can access. Implement it directly on schema modules.

# lib/my_app/blog/post.ex
defmodule MyApp.Blog.Post do
  import Ecto.Query, only: [from: 2]
  @behaviour Bodyguard.Schema

  def scope(query, %MyApp.Blog.User{id: user_id}, _) do
    from ms in query, where: ms.user_id == ^user_id
  end
end

To leverage scopes, the Bodyguard.scope/4 helper function (not the callback!) can infer the type of a query and automatically defer to the appropriate callback.

# lib/my_app/blog/blog.ex
defmodule MyApp.Blog do
  def list_user_posts(user) do
    MyApp.Blog.Post
    |> Bodyguard.scope(user) # <-- defers to MyApp.Blog.Post.scope/3
    |> where(draft: false)
    |> Repo.all
  end
end

Configuration

Here is the default library config.

config :bodyguard,
  default_error: :unauthorized # The second element of the {:error, reason} tuple returned on auth failure

Testing

Testing is pretty straightforward โ€“ use the Bodyguard top-level API.

assert :ok == Bodyguard.permit(MyApp.Blog, :successful_action, user)
assert {:error, :unauthorized} == Bodyguard.permit(MyApp.Blog, :failing_action, user)

assert Bodyguard.permit?(MyApp.Blog, :successful_action, user)
refute Bodyguard.permit?(MyApp.Blog, :failing_action, user)

error = assert_raise Bodyguard.NotAuthorizedError, fun ->
  Bodyguard.permit(MyApp.Blog, :failing_action, user)
end
assert %{status: 403, message: "not authorized"} = error

Installation

  1. Add bodyguard to your list of dependencies:
# mix.exs
def deps do
  [{:bodyguard, "~> 2.4"}]
end
  1. Create an error view for handling 403 Forbidden.
# lib/my_app_web/views/error_view.ex
defmodule MyAppWeb.ErrorView do
  use MyAppWeb, :view

  def render("403.html", _assigns) do
    "Forbidden"
  end
end
  1. Wire up a fallback controller to render this error view on {:error, :unauthorized}.

  2. Add @behaviour Bodyguard.Policy to contexts that require authorization, and implement authorize/3 callbacks.

  3. (Optional) Add @behaviour Bodyguard.Schema on schemas available for user-scoping, and implement scope/3 callbacks.

  4. (Optional) Edit my_app_web.ex and add import Bodyguard to controllers, views, channels, etc.

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License

MIT License, Copyright (c) 2017 Rockwell Schrock

Acknowledgements

Thanks to Ben Cates for helping maintain and mature this library.


*Note that all licence references and agreements mentioned in the bodyguard README section above are relevant to that project's source code only.