This page describes an older version of the product. The latest stable version is 16.4.

Authorities and Privileges


Authority refers to a grouping of privileges. A Privilege (permission) is a granted right to perform an operation/action on a resource. For example, a user may have a read privileges to access data.

public interface Authority {

    /**
     * @return a representation of the granted authority
     */
    String getAuthority();
}

Space Authority

The Space Authority consists of privileges for operation on space (stored) data. The operations are divided into five groups of interest.

Write Write and Update operations
Create Write only (no Updates) operations
Read Read, Count and Notify operations
Take Take and Clear operations
Alter Register type descriptor, Clean and Drop-Class operations
Execute Execute tasks

When you grant a privilege you are allowing the user to perform the operation on the space. If you wish to restrict the operation to certain classes, a ‘Class-Filter’ may be defined.

Restricting of privileges

A ‘Class-Filter’ allows or denies operations on certain classes based on their fully qualified name, package name, or wild-card manipulation. For example, you may define a user with Read privileges for Class com.gigaspaces.office.Employee, Write privileges for Package com.gigaspaces.vacations.\* and Take privileges for a match of com.gigaspaces.sickdays*. You may also define a user which is denied of reading com.gigaspaces.salary.*.

Class-Filter matching using Hierarchy

When performing a matching operation (e.g. space read), a template is supplied. Matches can be returned also from subclasses of this template. Take for example, the following hierarchy:

  • Shape
    • Circle
    • Rectangle
      • Square
    • Triangle

When we read using a Shape template, a Shape, Circle, Rectangle, Triangle and even Square are part of the result set. But if we read using a Rectangle template, only it and its subclass Square are part of a result set.

This should be considered when you allow a Class-Filter for matching operations (Read, Take, Alter).

But, when you deny a Class more caution should be taken. If you deny a Rectangle Class from being read it means you can’t perform read with this class. But it does not mean you cannot perform read with Square. Moreover, it does not mean that Rectangle won’t be returned in the result set when performing read with Shape. If your packages are flexible you can deny using wildcard matching or package matching. Otherwise you need to deny all classes in the hierarchy.

Example

The UserDetails.getAuthorities() method lists the granted authorities of a user. An Authority represents a grouping of privileges. For example, a SpaceAuthority consists of write, read, execute privileges. Each of these can be specifically assigned to a user. These authorities are populated upon a user’s authentication process.

Here is a simple user with read + write privileges construction:

UserDetails user = new User("John Smith", "password", 
                        new SpaceAuthority(SpacePrivilege.READ), 
                        new SpaceAuthority(SpacePrivilege.WRITE));

The SecurityManager interface provides an extension to a user defined DirectoryManager. This allows you to connect to any storage to manage users and roles. This method is not mandatory, and implementors can throw DirectoryAccessDeniedException if management should be done via external user management tools.

See Users and Roles section for more details.

interface SecurityManager {
    ...
    DirectoryManager createDirectoryManager(UserDetails userDetails) throws AuthenticationException, 
                                                                               AccessDeniedException;
...
}

Role Authority

The RoleAuthrority represents a logical name for a role. This provides an authorities-to-role grouping. The RoleDetails defines the authorities belonging to a specific role.

For example, lets define a guest role with read privileges assigned to an anonymous user:

RoleDetails role = new Role("guest", new SpaceAuthority(SpacePrivilege.READ));
UserDetails user = new User("anonymous", new RoleAuthority("guest"));

And define a contributor, with read and write privileges:

RoleDetails role = new Role("contributor", new SpaceAuthority(SpacePrivilege.READ), new SpaceAuthority(SpacePrivilege.WRITE));
UserDetails user = new User("gigaspacer", new RoleAuthority("contributor"));

This separation between users and roles allows to store the RoleDetails independent to the UserDetails.

System Authority

The System Authority consists of two privileges and defines the distinction between a user who is allowed to define roles and a user which is only allowed to assign user’s to predefined roles. In general, one can have both management capabilities, but in some organizations this separation may be required.

Manage Roles Define roles (a set of privileges assigned to a logical role name)
Manage Users Assign users to pre-defined roles, or assign user-specific privileges