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RBAC

Role definition

[role_definition] is the definition for the RBAC role inheritance relations. Casbin supports multiple instances of RBAC systems, e.g., users can have roles and their inheritance relations, and resources can have roles and their inheritance relations too. These two RBAC systems won't interfere.

This section is optional. If you don't use RBAC roles in the model, then omit this section.

[role_definition]
g = _, _
g2 = _, _

The above role definition shows that g is a RBAC system, and g2 is another RBAC system. _, _ means there are two parties inside an inheritance relation. As a common case, you usually use g alone if you only need roles on users. You can also use g and g2 when you need roles (or groups) on both users and resources. Please see the rbac_model.conf and rbac_model_with_resource_roles.conf for examples.

Casbin stores the actual user-role mapping (or resource-role mapping if you are using roles on resources) in the policy, for example:

p, data2_admin, data2, read
g, alice, data2_admin

It means alice inherits/is a member of role data2_admin. alice here can be a user, a resource or a role. Casbin only recognizes it as a string.

Then in a matcher, you should check the role as below:

[matchers]
m = g(r.sub, p.sub) && r.obj == p.obj && r.act == p.act

It means sub in the request should have the role sub in the policy.

note
  1. Casbin only stores the user-role mapping.
  2. Casbin doesn't verify whether a user is a valid user, or role is a valid role. That should be taken care of by authentication.
  3. Do not use the same name for a user and a role inside a RBAC system, because Casbin recognizes users and roles as strings, and there's no way for Casbin to know whether you are specifying user alice or role alice. You can simply solve it by using role_alice.
  4. If A has role B, B has role C, then A has role C. This transitivity is infinite for now.
Token name convention

Conventionally subject token name in policy definition is sub and placed in the beginning. Now Golang Casbin supports customized token name & place. If the subject token name is sub, the subject token can be placed at an arbitrary place and no extra action needs. If the subject token name is not sub , e.SetFieldIndex() for constant.SubjectIndex should be called after the enforcer is initialized regardless of its position.

# `subject` here for sub
[policy_definition]
p = obj, act, subject
e.SetFieldIndex("p", constant.SubjectIndex, 2) // index start from 0
ok, err := e.DeleteUser("alice") // without SetFieldIndex, it will raise an error

Role hierarchy

Casbin's RBAC supports RBAC1's role hierarchy feature, meaning if alice has role1, role1 has role2, then alice will also have role2 and inherit its permissions.

Here is a concept called hierarchy level. So the hierarchy level for this example is 2. For the built-in role manager in Casbin, you can specify the max hierarchy level. The default value is 10. It means an end user like alice can only inherit 10 levels of roles.

// NewRoleManager is the constructor for creating an instance of the
// default RoleManager implementation.
func NewRoleManager(maxHierarchyLevel int) rbac.RoleManager {
rm := RoleManager{}
rm.allRoles = &sync.Map{}
rm.maxHierarchyLevel = maxHierarchyLevel
rm.hasPattern = false

return &rm
}

How to distinguish role from user?

Casbin doesn't distinguish role from user in its RBAC. They are all treated as strings. If you only use single-level RBAC (a role will never be a member of another role). You can use e.GetAllSubjects() to get all users and e.GetAllRoles() to get all roles. They just list all u and all r respectively in all g, u, r rules.

But if you are using multi-level RBAC (with role hierarchy), and your application doesn't record whether a name (string) is a user or a role, or you have user and role with same name. You can add a prefix to role like role::admin before passing it to Casbin. So you will know if it's a role by checking this prefix.

How to query implicit roles or permissions?

When a user inherits a role or permission via RBAC hierarchy instead of directly assigning them in a policy rule, we call such type of assignment as implicit. To query such implicit relations, you need to use these 2 APIs: GetImplicitRolesForUser() and GetImplicitPermissionsForUser() instead of GetRolesForUser() and GetPermissionsForUser(). For more details, please see this GitHub issue.

Use pattern matching in RBAC

See RBAC with Pattern

Role manager

See Role Managers section for details.