Instead of lengthy blurbs, switch to single-line, machine-readable
standardized (https://spdx.dev) license identifiers. The Linux kernel
switched long ago, so there is strong precedent.
Three cases are handled: AGPL-only, Apache-only, and dual licensed.
For the latter case, I chose (AGPL-3.0-or-later and Apache-2.0),
reasoning that our changes are extensive enough to apply our license.
The changes we applied mechanically with a script, except to
licenses/README.md.
Closes#9937
Enable creating shared_ptr<BaseClass> in nonstatic_class_registry
using BaseClass::ptr_type and use that for
abstract_replication_strategy.
While at it, also clean up compressor with that respect
to define compressor::ptr_type as shared_ptr<compressor>
thus simplifying compressor_registry.
Signed-off-by: Benny Halevy <bhalevy@scylladb.com>
Some subclasses want to maintain state, which constness needlessly precludes.
Tests: unit (dev)
Signed-off-by: Dejan Mircevski <dejan@scylladb.com>
Closes#8721
In the general case roles might come with attributes attached to them
these attributes can originate in mechanisms such as LDAP where in
the undelying directory each entity can have a key:value data structure.
This patch add support for such attributes in the role manager interface,
it also implements the attribute support in the standard role
manager in the form of a table with an attribute map in the distributed system keyspace.
Message-Id: <f53c74a7ac315c4460ff370ea6dbb1597821edc2.1609158013.git.sarna@scylladb.com>
Scylla returns the wrong error code (0000 - server internal error)
in response to trying to do authentication/authorization operations
that involves a non-existing role.
This commit changes those cases to return error code 2200 (invalid
query) which is the correct one and also the one that Cassandra
returns.
Tests:
Unit tests (Dev)
All auth and auth_role dtests
Replace stdx::optional and stdx::string_view with the C++ std
counterparts.
Some instances of boost::variant were also replaced with std::variant,
namely those that called seastar::visit.
Scylla now requires GCC 8 to compile.
Signed-off-by: Duarte Nunes <duarte@scylladb.com>
Message-Id: <20190108111141.5369-1-duarte@scylladb.com>
sprint() recently became more strict, throwing on sprint("%s", 5). Replace
with the more modern format().
Mechanically converted with https://github.com/avikivity/unsprint.
This patch came about because of an important (and obvious, in
hindsight) realization: instances of the authorizer, role manager, and
authenticator are clients for access-control state and not the state
itself. This is reflected directly in Scylla: `auth::service` is
sharded across cores and this is possible because each instance queries
and modifies the same global state.
To give more examples, the value of an instance of `std::vector<int>` is
the structure of the container and its contents. The value of `int
file_descriptor` is an identifier for state maintained elsewhere.
Having watched an excellent talk by Herb Sutter [1] and having read an
informative blog post [2], it's clear that a member function marked
`const` communicates that the observable state of the instance is not
modified.
Thus, the member functions of the role-manager, authenticator, and
authorizer clients should not be marked `const` only if the state of the
client itself is observably changed. By this principle, member functions
which do not change the state of the client, but which mutate the global
state the client is associated with (for example, by creating a role)
are marked `const`.
The `start` (and `stop`) functions of the client have the dual role of
initializing (finalizing) both the local client state and the
external state; they are not marked `const`.
[1] https://herbsutter.com/2013/01/01/video-you-dont-know-const-and-mutable/
[2] http://talesofcpp.fusionfenix.com/post-2/episode-one-to-be-or-not-to-be-const
The fixed dtests which only failed due to differences in wording and
grammar for error messages are:
- altering_nonexistent_user_throws_exception_test
- cant_create_existing_user_test
- dropping_nonexistent_user_throws_exception_test
- users_cant_alter_their_superuser_status_test
The role manager is responsible for creating, removing, querying for,
granting, and revoking roles.
The role manager does not yet run in production, and is not connected to
the rest of the system.
Included in this patch is the definition of the abstract role management
interface, and also the implementation of the standard role manager.
The standard role manager is tested fully in the `role_manager_test`.