Commit Graph

3 Commits

Author SHA1 Message Date
Avi Kivity
fcb8d040e8 treewide: use Software Package Data Exchange (SPDX) license identifiers
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
2022-01-18 12:15:18 +01:00
Avi Kivity
a55b434a2b treewide: extent copyright statements to present day 2021-06-06 19:18:49 +03:00
Jesse Haber-Kucharsky
5be16247cc auth: Decouple authorization and role management
auth: Decouple authorization and role management

Access control in Scylla consists of three main modules: authentication,
authorization, and role-management.

Each of these modules is intended to be interchangeable with alternative
implementations. The `auth::service` class composes these modules
together to perform all access-control functionality, including caching.

This architecture implies two main properties of the individual
access-control modules:

- Independence of modules. An implementation of authentication should
  have no dependence or knowledge of authorization or role-management,
  for example.

- Simplicity of implementing the interface. Functionality that is common
  to all implementations should not have to be duplicated in each
  implementation. The abstract interface for a module should capture
  only the differences between particular implementations.

Previously, the authorization interface depended on an instance of
`auth::service` for certain operations, since it required aggregation
over all the roles granted to a particular role or required checking if
a given role had superuser.

This change decouples authorization entirely from role-management: the
authorizer now manages only permissions granted directly to a role, and
not those inherited through other roles.

When a query needs to be authorized, `auth::service::get_permissions`
first uses the role manager to check if the role has superuser. Then, it
aggregates calls to `auth::authorizer::authorize` for each role granted
to the role (again, from the role-manager) to determine the sum-total
permission set. This information is cached for future queries.

This structure allows for easier error handling and
management (something I hope to improve in the future for both the
authorizer and authenticator interfaces), easier system testing, easier
implementation of the abstract interfaces, and clearer system
boundaries (so the code is easier to grok).

Some authorizers, like the "TransitionalAuthorizer", grant permissions
to anonymous users. Therefore, we could not unconditionally authorize an
empty permission set in `auth::service` for anonymous users. To account
for this, the interface of the authorizer has changed to accept an
optional name in `authorize`.

One additional notable change to the authorizer is the
`auth::authorizer::list`: previously, the filtering happened at the CQL
query layer and depended on the roles granted to the role in question.
I've changed the function to simply query for all roles and I do the
filtering in `auth::system` in-memory with the STL. This was necessary
to allow the authorizer to be decoupled from role-management. This
function is only called for LIST PERMISSIONS (so performance is not a
concern), and it significantly reduces demand on the implementation.

Finally, we unconditionally create a user in `cql_test_env` since
authorization requires its existence.
2018-02-14 14:15:59 -05:00