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πŸ”A Rails engine providing essential industry of Role-based access control.

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RoleCore

RoleCore is a Rails engine which could provide essential industry of Role-based access control.

Demo

The dummy app shows a simple multiple roles with CanCanCan integration including a management UI.

RoleCore dummy preview

Clone the repository.

$ git clone https://github.com/rails-engine/role_core.git

Change directory

$ cd role_core

Run bundler

$ bundle install

Preparing database

$ bin/rails db:migrate

Start the Rails server

$ bin/rails s

Open your browser, and visit http://localhost:3000

What's does the RoleCore do

The role model

The essence of RBAC is the role, despite your application, there are many possibilities: single-role, multi-roles, extendable-role and the role may associate to different kinds of resources (e.g: users and groups)

RoleCore provides an essential definition of Role, you have to add association to adapt to your application, for example:

  • single-role: adding one-to-many association between Role and User
  • multi-roles: adding many-to-many association between Role and User
  • extendable-role: adding a self-association to Role
  • polymorphic-asscociated-role: consider using polymorphic association technique

Although it's not out-of-box, but it will give you fully flexibility to suit your needs.

Permissions definition

RoleCore provides a DSL (which inspired by Redmine) that allows you define permissions for your application.

Empowered by virtual model technique, these permissions your defined can be persisted through serialization, and can be used with OO-style, for example: role.permissions.project.create?

There also support permission groups, and groups support nesting.

You don't need to any migration when you changing definitions.

I18n is supported too.

In fact, the essence of permissions is Hash, keys are permissions, and values are booleans. so computing of permissions with many roles, can be understood as computing of Hashes.

Management UI

Building a management UI is difficult, but virtual model technique will translates permissions to a virtual model's (a class that conforms to ActiveModel) attributes, and groups will translates to nested virtual models, that means you can use all Rails view helpers including the mighty form builder, and can benefit to Strong Parameter.

The dummy app shows that rendering a permission list only about 20 lines.

If your application is API-only, you can simply dumping the role's permissions to JSON, and can still be benefit to StrongParameter.

Checking permission

RoleCore DOES NOT handle the authentication or authorization directly, you have to integrate with CanCanCan, Pundit or other solutions by yourself.

RoleCore can be working with CanCanCan, Pundit easily and happily.

Installation

Add this line to your Gemfile:

gem "role_core"

if your Rails < 7 or met visit_Psych_Nodes_Alias': Unknown alias: redis (Psych::BadAlias), add this line:

gem "psych", "~> 3.3"

Then execute:

$ bundle

Copy migrations

$ bin/rails role_core:install:migrations

Then do migrate

$ bin/rails db:migrate

Run config generator

$ bin/rails g role_core:config

Run model generator

$ bin/rails g role_core:model

Getting start

Define permissions

Permissions are defined in config/initializers/role_core.rb, checking it to know how to define permissions.

(If you want to define permissions in runtime, check Dynamic Permissions)

In addition, there also includes a directive about how to integrate with CanCanCan.

I18n

Check config/locales/role_core.en.yml

Hook application

In order to obtain maximum customizability, you need to hooking up role(s) to your user model by yourself.

User who has single role

Create one-to-many relationship between Role and User

Generate one-to-many migration, adding role_id to User model

$ bin/rails g migration AddRoleToUsers role:references

Then do migrate

$ bin/rails db:migrate

Declare a User belongs to a Role association

class User < ApplicationRecord
  belongs_to :role

  # ...
end

Declare a Role has many Users association

class Role < RoleCore::Role
  has_many :users
end
Checking permission

Permissions you've defined will translate to a virtual model (a Class which implemented ActiveModel interface), permission would be an attribute, group would be a nested virtual model (like ActiveRecord's has_one association).

So you can simply check permission like:

user.role.permissions.read_public?
user.role.permissions.project.read? # `project` is a `group`

For better usage, you may delegate the permissions from Role model to User:

class User < ApplicationRecord
  belongs_to :role

  delegate :permissions, to: :role

  # ...
end

Then you can

user.permissions.read_public?
user.permissions.project.read?

Keep in mind: fetching role will made a SQL query, you may need eager loading to avoid N+1 problem in some cases.

User who has multiple roles

Create many-to-many relationship between Role and User

Generate a many-to-many intervening model

$ bin/rails g model RoleAssignment user:references role:references

Then do migrate

$ bin/rails db:migrate

Declare a User has many Roles through RoleAssignments association

class User < ApplicationRecord
  has_many :role_assignments, dependent: :destroy
  has_many :roles, through: :role_assignments

  # ...
end

Declare a Role has many Users through RoleAssignments association

class Role < RoleCore::Role
  has_many :role_assignments, dependent: :destroy
  has_many :users, through: :role_assignments
end
Check permission

Permissions you've defined will translate to a virtual model (a Class which implemented ActiveModel interface), permission would be an attribute, group would be a nested virtual model (like ActiveRecord's has_one association).

So you can simply check permission like:

user.roles.any? { |role| role.permissions.read_public? }
user.roles.any? { |role| role.permissions.project.read? } # `project` is a `group`

For better usage, you could declare a can? helper method:

class User < ApplicationRecord
  has_many :role_assignments, dependent: :destroy
  has_many :roles, through: :role_assignments

  def can?(&block)
    roles.map(&:permissions).any?(&block)
  end

  # ...
end

Then you can

user.can? { |permissions| permissions.read_public? }
user.can? { |permissions| permissions.project.read? }

Keep in mind: fetching roles will made a SQL query, you may need eager loading to avoid N+1 problem in some cases.

Integrate with Pundit

Just call permissions' method (see checking permission above) in Pundit's policy.

e.g:

class PostPolicy
  attr_reader :user, :post

  def initialize(user, post)
    @user = user
    @post = post
  end

  def update?
    user.permissions.post.update?
  end

  def update_my_own?
    return true if user.permissions.post.update?
    return unless user.permissions.post.update_my_own?
    post.author == user
  end
end

Integrate with CanCanCan

Open config/initializers/role_core.rb, uncomment CanCanCan integration codes and follows samples to define permissions for CanCanCan

Open your User model:

  • For a user who has single role:

    Add a delegate to User model:

      delegate :computed_permissions, to: :role
  • For a user who has multiple roles:

    Add a computed_permissions public method to User model:

    def computed_permissions
      roles.map(&:computed_permissions).reduce(RoleCore::ComputedPermissions.new, &:concat)
    end

Open app/models/ability.rb, add user.computed_permissions.call(self, user) to initialize method.

class Ability
  include CanCan::Ability

  def initialize(user)
    # Apply RoleCole managing permissions
    user.computed_permissions.call(self, user)

    # You still can add other permissions
    can :read_public, :all
  end
end

You can check dummy app for better understanding.

Management UI

See RolesController in dummy app and relates view for details.

Hacking

RoleCore is a Rails engine, and following the official best practice, so you can extend RoleCore by the article suggests.

Integrate to existing role model

For some reason, you want to use RoleCore's ability and keeping use your own role model, e.g: integrate with rolify.

You can archive this goal by:

  • Modify the migration file which RoleCore generated, changing the role table name
  • Add include RoleCore::Concerns::Models::Role to your role model

Note: If you want another column name or there's no name in your role model, you need to lookup RoleCore::Concerns::Models::Role source code, copy and modify to fit your needs

Dynamic permissions

By design, RoleCore is for static permissions, but dynamic permissions is easy to support.

See example in dummy app and relates view for details.

Contributing

Bug report or pull request are welcome.

Make a pull request

  1. Fork it
  2. Create your feature branch (git checkout -b my-new-feature)
  3. Commit your changes (git commit -am 'Add some feature')
  4. Push to the branch (git push origin my-new-feature)
  5. Create new Pull Request

Please write unit test with your code if necessary.

License

The gem is available as open source under the terms of the MIT License.

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