This is a simple authorization solution for Ruby on Rails to restrict what a given user is allowed to access in the application. This is completely decoupled from any role based implementation allowing you to define user roles the way you want. All permissions are stored in a single location for convenience.
Setting this for every action can be tedious, therefore a before filter is also provided to automatically authorize all actions in a RESTful style resource controller.
If the user authorization fails, a CanCan::AccessDenied exception will be raised. You can catch this and modify its behavior in the ApplicationController.
As shown above, the Ability class is where all user permissions are defined. The user model is passed into the initialize method so you are free to modify the permissions based on the user's attributes. This way CanCan is completely decoupled with how you choose to handle roles.
The "can" method accepts two arguments, the first one is the action you're setting the permission for, the second one is the class of object you're setting it on.
can :update, Article
You can pass an array for either of these parameters to match any one.
can [:update, :destroy], [Article, Comment]
In this case the user has the ability to update or destroy both articles and comments.
If the block returns true then the user has that :update ability for that article, otherwise he will be denied access. It's possible for the passed in model to be nil if one isn't specified, so be sure to take that into consideration.
You can pass :all to reference every type of object. In this case the object type will be passed into the block as well (just in case object is nil).
can :read, :all do |object_class, object|
object_class != Order
end
Here the user has permission to read all objects except orders.
You can also pass :manage as the action which will match any action. In this case the action is passed to the block.
can :manage, Comment do |action, comment|
action != :destroy
end
Finally, you can use the "alias_action" method to alias one or more actions into one.
alias_action :update, :destroy, :to => :modify
can :modify, Comment
The following aliases are added by default for conveniently mapping common controller actions.
alias_action :index, :show, :to => :read
alias_action :new, :to => :create
alias_action :edit, :to => :update
== Checking Abilities
Use the "can?" method in the controller or view to check the user's permission for a given action and object.
You can have fine grained control over abilities by coming up with new actions. For example, if only pro users are allowed to upload a picture for their product, you could add the following restrictions.
Perhaps a non-coder needs the ability to modify the user abilities, or you want to change them without having to re-deploy the application. In that case it may be best to store the permission logic in a separate model, let's call it Permission. It is easy to use the database records when defining abilities.
For example, let's assume that each user has_many :permissions, and each permission has "action", "object_type" and "object_id" columns. The last of which is optional.
The actual details will depend largely on your application requirements, but hopefully you can see how it's possible to define permissions in the database and use them with CanCan.
CanCan was inspired by declarative_authorization[http://github.com/stffn/declarative_authorization/] and aegis[http://github.com/makandra/aegis]. Many thanks to the authors and contributors.