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PostSharp.Samples.Authorization

This example demonstrates how to enforce a non-trivial security model with aspect-oriented programming.

The PostSharp.Samples.Authorization.Framework defines the skeleton of an abstract security model. The key concept is represented the IPermission interface, with typical values Permission.Read or Permission.Write, for instance. Permissions are things that the current ISubject need to be granted to be allowed to read or write a field or execute a method. However

The ApplyDefaultPermissionsAttribute aspect automatically requires the Permission.Read or Permission.Write on public fields and properties.

You can use the RequiresPermissionAttribute aspect on fields, properties and methods to require a specific permission.

The abstract security framework does not specify how to determine whether the current ISubject has a given IPermission. This job is delegated to the ISecurityPolicy interface, which can have different implementations.

The PostSharp.Samples.Authorization.RoleBased namespace provides an example implementation of the role-based security model:

  • Each business object has a list of assignments of users to roles (for instance Mikki is Sales Manager in the business unit).
  • Each business object has a parent and inherits user-role assignments from its parent (for instance an Invoice inherits the role assignments from its parent business unit).
  • For each class of business objects, there is a list of assignments of roles to permissions (for instance, Sale Managers have the Write permission on invoices).

The RoleBasedSecurityPolicy class implements the ISecurityPolicy interface for the role-based model.

Limitations

  • THIS EXAMPLE IS NOT SUFFICIENTLY TESTED FOR PRODUCTION USE. This is only a proof of concept.
  • Performance is really poor because even evaluating a property causes the evaluation of complex policies and allocations of memory on the heap. A better implementation should cache permissions.