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Resolver-generating allow/deny Schema Directives

Wouldn't it be sweet if we could setup our role-based security in GraphQL type and field definitions?

Yes, it would be very sweet.

Work In Progress

So far this is going swimmingly. Appologies to anyone who wants to try this out. Currently the way I'm developing this is by a using a modified the fork of the cult-of-coders:apollo package among others and its all a bit fresh. I'll update this as I go so give it a star and/or a watch to stay up to date.

Install

meteor add mattblackdev:roles-schema-directives

Sample

Where you define your types:

type Post {
  content: String
  history: [Post] @allow(roles: ["admin"])
}

type Mutation {
  addPost(content: String): ID @deny(groups: ['banned'])
}

In the background, the schema directives analyze our types and wrap the resolvers with the popular alanning:roles package. The wrapped resolver will check userIsInRole() with the roles and groups arguments provided to the directive.

Usage

This is currently designed to work with the cultofcoders:apollo package, and you can add the directives to the initilization like this:

import { initialize } from 'meteor/cultofcoders:apollo'
import { directives as rolesDirectives } from 'meteor/mattblackdev:roles-schema-directives'

Meteor.startup(() => {
  initialize({
    GRAPHQL_SCHEMA_DIRECTIVES: {
      ...rolesDirectives,
    },
  })
})

Here's an example schema:

type Thing @deny(group: 'usersWithThingAllergies') {
  _id: ID!
  name: String!
  secret: String @allow(roles: ["admin"])
}

input ThingInput {
  name: String
  secret: String @allow(roles: ["admin"])
}

type Query {
  things: [Thing] @deny(roles: ["user"], group: 'banned')
}

type Mutation @deny(roles: ['noobs']) {
  addThing(input: ThingInput): Thing
  updateThing(id: ID!, input: ThingInput): Thing
}

Notice the locations of the directives:

  1. On a field inside a Type
  2. On a field inside an InputType
  3. On a field inside the Query Type
  4. On a Type

Each of these locations do different things.

On a field inside a Type

Anytime this field makes its way into a query, if the permission fails, only that particular field will be null and an error added to the errors array in the response. This works even for mutations that return the field.

On a field inside an InputType

For any Mutation that has this InputType as one of its args, its resolver will be wrapped with a permissions check. The wrapper will first check if the protected field is being passed and do the necessary permissions checking.

On a field inside the Query Type

In this case, if the permissions fail the entire query will return null with an error.

On a Type

This is getting redundant. You get the idea, right?

About

Generates role-based authorization resolvers from allow/deny directives in your graphql schema

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