{/doc/acs-core-docs/ {ACS Core Documentation}} {OpenACS Permissions Tediously Explained} OpenACS Permissions Tediously Explained

OpenACS Permissions Tediously Explained

by Vadim Nasardinov. Modified and converted to Docbook XML by Roberto Mello

The code has been modified since this document was written so it is now out of date. See this forum thread.

Permissions Overview

Who (grantee_id) can do what (privilege) on which object (object_id).

The general permission system has a flexible (and relatively complex) data model in OpenACS. Developers who have not had the time to learn the internals of the data model may end up writing seemingly correct code that crashes their system in weird ways. This writeup is the result of my running into such a piece of code and trying to understand exactly what went wrong. It is geared towards developers who understand the general permission system to the extent that is described in the Groups, Context, Permissions documentation, but who have not had the opportunity to take a long, careful look at the system internals.

In OpenACS, most of the interesting tables are expected to extend (subtype) the acs_objects table, i.e. they are expected to have an integer primary key column that references the object_id column of acs_objects.

create table acs_objects (
      object_id             integer
          not null
          constraint acs_objects_pk primary key,
      object_type
          not null
          constraint acs_objects_object_type_fk references acs_object_types (object_type),
      context_id
          constraint acs_objects_context_id_fk references acs_objects(object_id),
      security_inherit_p          char(1) default 't'
          not null,
      constraint acs_objects_sec_inherit_p_ck
          check (security_inherit_p in ('t', 'f')),
      creation_user         integer,
      creation_date         date default sysdate not null,
      creation_ip           varchar2(50),
      last_modified         date default sysdate not null,
      modifying_user        integer,
      modifying_ip          varchar2(50),
      constraint acs_objects_context_object_un
          unique (context_id, object_id) disable
);
    

This means that items that want to use the features of the OpenACS object system needs to have an entry in the acs_objects. This allows developers to define relationships between any two entities A and B by defining a relationship between their corresponding entries in the acs_objects table. One of the applications of this powerful capability is the general permission system.

At the heart of the permission system are two tables: acs_privileges and acs_permissions.

  create table acs_privileges (
      privilege           varchar2(100) not null
          constraint acs_privileges_pk primary key,
      pretty_name         varchar2(100),
      pretty_plural       varchar2(100)
  );
    
  create table acs_permissions (
      object_id
          not null
          constraint acs_permissions_on_what_id_fk references acs_objects (object_id),
      grantee_id
          not null
          constraint acs_permissions_grantee_id_fk references parties (party_id),
      privilege
          not null
          constraint acs_permissions_priv_fk references acs_privileges (privilege),
      constraint acs_permissions_pk
          primary key (object_id, grantee_id, privilege)
  );
    

The acs_privileges table stores named privileges like read, write, delete, create, and admin. The acs_permissions table stores assertions of the form:

Who (grantee_id) can do what (privilege) on which object (object_id).

The micromanaging approach to system security would be to require application developers to store permission information explicitly about every object, i.e. if the system has 100,000 and 1,000 users who have the read privilege on all objects, then we would need to store 100,000,000 entries of the form:

object_idgrantee_idprivilege
object_id_1user_id_1'read'
object_id_1user_id_2'read'
...
object_id_1user_id_n'read'
object_id_2user_id_1'read'
object_id_2user_id_2'read'
...
object_id_2user_id_n'read'
...
...
object_id_muser_id_1'read'
object_id_muser_id_2'read'
...
object_id_muser_id_n'read'

Although quite feasible, this approach fails to take advantage of the fact that objects in the system are commonly organized hierarchically, and permissions usually follow the hierarchical structure, so that if user X has the read privilege on object A, she typically also has the read privilege on all objects attached under A.

The general permission system takes advantage of the hierarchical organization of objects to unburden developers of the necessity to explicitly maintain security information for every single object. There are three kinds of hierarchies involved. These are discussed in the following sections.

Context Hierarchy

Suppose objects A, B, ..., and F form the following hierarchy.

Table 11.2. Context Hierarchy Example

A

object_id=10

B

object_id=20

C

object_id=30

D

object_id=40

E

object_id=50

F

object_id=60


This can be represented in the acs_objects table by the following entries:

Table 11.3. acs_objects example data

object_idcontext_id
2010
3010
4020
5020
6030

The first entry tells us that object 20 is the descendant of object 10, and the third entry shows that object 40 is the descendant of object 20. By running a CONNECT BY query, we can compute that object 40 is the second-generation descendant of object 10. With this in mind, if we want to record the fact that user Joe has the read privilege on objects A, ..., F, we only need to record one entry in the acs_permissions table.

objectgranteeprivilege
AJoeread

The fact that Joe can also read B, C, ..., and F can be derived by ascertaining that these objects are children of A by traversing the context hierarchy. As it turns out, hierarchical queries are expensive. As Rafael Schloming put it so aptly, Oracle can't deal with hierarchies for shit.

One way to solve this problem is to cache a flattened view of the context tree like so:

objectancestorn_generations
AA0
BB0
BA1
CC0
CA1
DD0
DB1
DA2
EE0
EB1
EA2
FF0
FC1
FA2

Note that the number of entries in the flattened view grows exponentially with respect to the depth of the context tree. For instance, if you have a fully populated binary tree with a depth of n, then the number of entries in its flattened view is

1 + 2*2 + 3*4 + 4*8 + 5*16 + ... + (n+1)*2n = n*2n+1 + 1

Despite its potentially great storage costs, maintaining a flattened representation of the context tree is exactly what OpenACS does. The flattened context tree is stored in the acs_object_context_index table.

  create table acs_object_context_index (
      object_id
          not null
          constraint acs_obj_context_idx_obj_id_fk references acs_objects (object_id),
      ancestor_id
          not null
          constraint acs_obj_context_idx_anc_id_fk references acs_objects (object_id),
      n_generations         integer
          not null
          constraint acs_obj_context_idx_n_gen_ck check (n_generations >= 0),
      constraint acs_object_context_index_pk
          primary key (object_id, ancestor_id)
  ) organization index;
    

A few things to note about this table are these. Number one, it is an index-organized table, which means it is substantially optimized for access by primary key. Number two, as the above computations suggest, the size of the table grows polynomially with respect to the average number of descendants that an object has, and exponentially with respect to the depth of the context tree.

The acs_object_context_index is kept in sync with the acs_objects table by triggers like this:

create or replace trigger acs_objects_context_id_in_tr
after insert on acs_objects
for each row
begin
    insert into acs_object_context_index
     (object_id, ancestor_id, n_generations)
    values
     (:new.object_id, :new.object_id, 0);

    if :new.context_id is not null and :new.security_inherit_p = 't' then
      insert into acs_object_context_index
       (object_id, ancestor_id,
        n_generations)
      select
       :new.object_id as object_id, ancestor_id,
       n_generations + 1 as n_generations
      from acs_object_context_index
      where object_id = :new.context_id;
    elsif :new.object_id != 0 then
      -- 0 is the id of the security context root object
      insert into acs_object_context_index
       (object_id, ancestor_id, n_generations)
      values
       (:new.object_id, 0, 1);
    end if;
end;

One final note about acs_objects. By setting an object's security_inherit_p column to 'f', you can stop permissions from cascading down the context tree. In the following example, Joe does not have the read permissions on C and F.


A
object_id=10
readable by Joe
      


B
object_id=20
readable by Joe
              


C
object_id=30
security_inherit_p = 'f'
not readable by Joe
      


D
object_id=40
      


E
object_id=50
      


F
object_id=60
security_inherit_p = 'f'
not readable by Joe
      

Privilege Hierarchy

Privileges are also organized hierarchically. In addition to the five main system privileges defined in the ACS Kernel data model, application developers may define their own. Note, however, that this is no longer recommended practice.

By defining parent-child relationship between privileges, the OpenACS data model makes it easier for developers to manage permissions. Instead of granting a user explicit read, write, delete, and create privileges on an object, it is sufficient to grant the user the admin privilege to which the first four privileges are tied. Privileges are structured as follows.

admin
createdeletereadwrite

Note that admin privileges are greater than read, write, create and delete privileges combined. Issuing someone read, write, create and delete privileges will not result in the person getting admin privileges.

The parent-child relationship between privileges is represented in the acs_privilege_hierarchy table:

  create table acs_privilege_hierarchy (
      privilege
          not null
          constraint acs_priv_hier_priv_fk references acs_privileges (privilege),
      child_privilege
          not null
          constraint acs_priv_hier_child_priv_fk references acs_privileges (privilege),
      constraint acs_privilege_hierarchy_pk
          primary key (privilege, child_privilege)
  );
    

As in the case of the context hierarchy, it is convenient to have a flattened representation of this hierarchal structure. This is accomplished by defining the following view.

  create or replace view acs_privilege_descendant_map
  as
  select
    p1.privilege,
    p2.privilege as descendant
  from
    acs_privileges p1,
    acs_privileges p2
  where
    p2.privilege in 
      (select
         child_privilege
       from
         acs_privilege_hierarchy
       start with
         privilege = p1.privilege
       connect by
         prior child_privilege = privilege
      )
    or p2.privilege = p1.privilege;
    

As the number of different privileges in the system is expected to be reasonably small, there is no pressing need to cache the flattened ansector-descendant view of the privilege hierarchy in a specially maintained table like it is done in the case of the context hierarchy.

Party Hierarchy

Now for the third hierarchy playing a prominent role in the permission system. The party data model is set up as follows.

  create table parties (
      party_id
          not null
          constraint parties_party_id_fk references acs_objects (object_id)
          constraint parties_pk primary key,
      email               varchar2(100)
          constraint parties_email_un unique,
      url                 varchar2(200)
  );
    
  create table persons (
      person_id
          not null
          constraint persons_person_id_fk references parties (party_id)
          constraint persons_pk primary key,
      first_names          varchar2(100)
          not null,
      last_name            varchar2(100)
          not null
  );
    
  create table users (
      user_id
          not null
          constraint users_user_id_fk references persons (person_id)
          constraint users_pk primary key,
      password        char(40),
      -- other attributes
  );
    
 
  create table groups (
      group_id
          not null
          constraint groups_group_id_fk references parties (party_id)
          constraint groups_pk primary key,
      group_name           varchar2(100) not null
  );
    

Recall that the grantee_id column of the acs_permissions table references parties.party_id. This means that you can grant a privilege on an object to a party, person, user, or group. Groups represent aggregations of parties. The most common scenario that you are likely to encounter is a group that is a collection of users, although you could also have collections of persons, groups, parties, or any mix thereof.

Given that the most common use of groups is to partition users, how do you build groups? One way is to grant membership explicitly. If you have a group named Pranksters, you can assign membership to Pete, Poly, and Penelope. The fact that these users are members of the Pranksters group will be recorded in the membership_rels and acs_rels tables:

  create table acs_rels (
      rel_id
          not null
          constraint acs_rels_rel_id_fk references acs_objects (object_id)
          constraint acs_rels_pk primary key,
      rel_type
          not null
          constraint acs_rels_rel_type_fk references acs_rel_types (rel_type),
      object_id_one
          not null
          constraint acs_object_rels_one_fk references acs_objects (object_id),
      object_id_two
          not null
          constraint acs_object_rels_two_fk references acs_objects (object_id),
      constraint acs_object_rels_un
          unique (rel_type, object_id_one, object_id_two)
  );
    
  create table membership_rels (
      rel_id
          constraint membership_rel_rel_id_fk references acs_rels (rel_id)
          constraint membership_rel_rel_id_pk primary key,
      -- null means waiting for admin approval
      member_state         varchar2(20)
          constraint membership_rel_mem_ck
           check (member_state in ('approved', 'banned', 'rejected', 'deleted'))
  );
    

The acs_rels table entries would look like so:

rel_typeobject_oneobject_two
membership_relPrankstersPete
membership_relPrankstersPoly
membership_relPrankstersPenelope

Read acs_rels: right-side is a subset of left-side, i.e. object2 is a part of object1.

Another way of building up groups is by adding subgroups. Suppose we define Merry Pranksters and Sad Pranksters as subgroups of Pranksters. We say that the Pranksters group is composed of groups Merry Pranksters and Sad Pranksters. This information is stored in the acs_rels and composition_rels tables.

create table composition_rels (
    rel_id
        constraint composition_rels_rel_id_fk references acs_rels (rel_id)
        constraint composition_rels_rel_id_pk primary key
);
    

The relevant entries in the acs_rels look like so.

rel_typeobject_oneobject_two
composition_relPrankstersMerry Pranksters
composition_relPrankstersSad Pranksters

The composition relationship means that if I add Matt, Mel, and Mary to the Merry Pranksters, they should also automatically become members of the Pranksters group. The situation we are facing in trying to determine whether or not a user is member of a group is similar to the one discussed above in the case of the context hierarchy. Groups can form hierarchies with respect to the composition relationship. The composition relationship is transitive. If G1 is a subgroup of G2, and G2 is a subgroup of G3, then G1 is a subgroup of G3; that is, any member of G1 is also a member of G3.

Traversing the group composition hierarchy requires running hierarchical queries, which are expensive in Oracle. As we saw in the Context Hierarchy section, one way of reducing the performance hit incurred by hierarchical queries is to cache query results in a table maintained by triggers. The OpenACS data model defines two such tables:

 create table group_component_index (
          group_id        not null
                          constraint group_comp_index_group_id_fk
                          references groups (group_id),
          component_id    not null
                          constraint group_comp_index_comp_id_fk
                          references groups (group_id),
          rel_id          not null
                          constraint group_comp_index_rel_id_fk
                          references composition_rels (rel_id),
          container_id    not null
                          constraint group_comp_index_cont_id_ck
                          references groups (group_id),
          constraint group_component_index_ck
          check (group_id != component_id),
          constraint group_component_index_pk
          primary key (group_id, component_id, rel_id)
  ) organization index;
    
  create table group_member_index (
      group_id
          not null
          constraint group_member_index_grp_id_fk references groups (group_id),
      member_id
          not null
          constraint group_member_index_mem_id_fk references parties (party_id),
      rel_id
          not null
          constraint group_member_index_rel_id_fk references membership_rels (rel_id),
      container_id
          not null
          constraint group_member_index_cont_id_fk references groups (group_id),
      constraint group_member_index_pk
          primary key (member_id, group_id, rel_id)
  ) organization index;
    

The group_component_index table stores a flattened representation of the group composition hierarchy that is maintained in sync with the acs_rels and composition_rels tables through triggers.

additional comments

As far as the group_member_index table goes, I am not sure I understand its purpose. It maintains group-member relationships that are resolved with respect to group composition. Note that information stored in group_member_index can be trivially derived by joining membership_rels, acs_rels, and group_component_index. Here is a view that does it. (This view is not part of the OpenACS Kernel data model.)

create or replace view group_member_view
as
select
  gci.group_id, r.object_id_two as member_id
from
  (
   select
     group_id, group_id as component_id
   from
     groups
   union
   select
     group_id, component_id
   from
     group_component_index
  ) gci,
  membership_rels mr,
  acs_rels r
where
  mr.rel_id = r.rel_id
  and r.object_id_one = gci.component_id;
    

A heuristic way to verify that group_member_view is essentially identical to group_member_index is to compute the symmetric difference between the two:

select
  group_id, member_id
from
  (
   select group_id, member_id from group_member_view
   minus
   select group_id, member_id from group_member_index
  )
union
select
  group_id, member_id
from
  (
   select group_id, member_id from group_member_index
   minus
   select group_id, member_id from group_member_view
  )
    

The query returns no rows. The important point is, if we have a flattened view of the composition hierarchy -- like one provided by the group_component_index table -- membership relationship resolution can be computed trivially with no hierarchical queries involved. There is no need to keep the view in a denormalized table, unless doing so results in substantial performance gains.

Putting It All Together

Security information is queried by calling the acs_permission.permission_p function in OpenACS. This is accessible from Tcl via the permission::permission_p procedure.

  
  create or replace package body acs_permission
  as
    -- some stuff removed for the sake of brevity
  
    function permission_p (
      object_id  acs_objects.object_id%TYPE,
      party_id   parties.party_id%TYPE,
      privilege  acs_privileges.privilege%TYPE
    ) return char
    as
      exists_p char(1);
    begin
      -- XXX This must be fixed: -1 shouldn't be hardcoded (it is the public)
      select decode(count(*),0,'f','t') into exists_p
        from acs_object_party_privilege_map
       where object_id = permission_p.object_id
         and party_id in (permission_p.party_id, -1)
         and privilege = permission_p.privilege;
      return exists_p;
    end;

  end acs_permission;
    

problem avoidance

The function queries acs_object_party_privilege_map, which is a humongous view that joins three flattened hierarchies: the context tree, the privilege hierarchy, the party composition (and membership) hierarchy. It contains an extremely large number of rows. About the only kind of query you can run against it is the one performed by the acs_permission.permission_p function. Anything other than that would take forever to finish or would ultimately result in a query error.

For example, do not try to do things like

select count(*)
  from acs_object_party_privilege_map;
    

To give another example of things to avoid, I have seen code like this:

  declare
      cursor cur is
        select
           object_id, party_id
        from
           acs_object_party_privilege_map
        where
           privilege = 'foo_create';
  begin
      -- revoke all 'foo_create' permissions
      for rec in cur
      loop
          acs_permission.revoke_permission (
              object_id  => rec.object_id,
              grantee_id => rec.party_id,
              privilege  => 'foo_create'
          );
      end loop;

      acs_privilege.remove_child('admin','foo_create');
      acs_privilege.drop_privilege('foo');

  end;
  /
    

The acs_permission.revoke_permission function merely runs a delete statement like so:

  
  delete from
     acs_permissions
  where
     object_id = revoke_permission.object_id
     and grantee_id = revoke_permission.grantee_id
     and privilege = revoke_permission.privilege;
    

Note that in the above example, acs_permissions had only one entry that needed to be deleted:

object_idgrantee_idprivilege
default_contextregistered_usersfoo_create

The above script would never get around to deleting this entry because it had to loop through a gazillion rows in the humongous acs_object_party_privilege_map view.

Appendix: Various View Definitions

create or replace view acs_object_party_privilege_map
as
select
  ogpm.object_id,
  gmm.member_id as party_id,
  ogpm.privilege
from
  acs_object_grantee_priv_map ogpm,
  group_member_map gmm
where
  ogpm.grantee_id = gmm.group_id
union
select
  object_id,
  grantee_id as party_id,
  privilege
from
  acs_object_grantee_priv_map;
    
create or replace view acs_object_grantee_priv_map
as
select
  a.object_id,
  a.grantee_id,
  m.descendant as privilege
from
  acs_permission_all a,
  acs_privilege_descendant_map m
where
  a.privilege = m.privilege;
    
 
create or replace view acs_permissions_all
as
select
  op.object_id,
  p.grantee_id,
  p.privilege
from
  acs_object_paths op,
  acs_permissions p
where
  op.ancestor_id = p.object_id;
    
create or replace view acs_object_paths
as
select
  object_id,
  ancestor_id,
  n_generations
from
  acs_object_context_index;
    
 

create or replace view group_member_map
as
select
  group_id,
  member_id,
  rel_id,
  container_id
from
  group_member_index;