""" Provides a set of pluggable permission policies. """ from __future__ import unicode_literals from django.http import Http404 from rest_framework.compat import get_model_name SAFE_METHODS = ['GET', 'HEAD', 'OPTIONS'] class BasePermission(object): """ A base class from which all permission classes should inherit. """ def has_permission(self, request, view): """ Return `True` if permission is granted, `False` otherwise. """ return True def has_object_permission(self, request, view, obj): """ Return `True` if permission is granted, `False` otherwise. """ return True class AllowAny(BasePermission): """ Allow any access. This isn't strictly required, since you could use an empty permission_classes list, but it's useful because it makes the intention more explicit. """ def has_permission(self, request, view): return True class IsAuthenticated(BasePermission): """ Allows access only to authenticated users. """ def has_permission(self, request, view): return request.user and request.user.is_authenticated() class IsAdminUser(BasePermission): """ Allows access only to admin users. """ def has_permission(self, request, view): return request.user and request.user.is_staff class IsAuthenticatedOrReadOnly(BasePermission): """ The request is authenticated as a user, or is a read-only request. """ def has_permission(self, request, view): return ( request.method in SAFE_METHODS or request.user and request.user.is_authenticated() ) class DjangoModelPermissions(BasePermission): """ The request is authenticated using `django.contrib.auth` permissions. See: https://docs.djangoproject.com/en/dev/topics/auth/#permissions It ensures that the user is authenticated, and has the appropriate `add`/`change`/`delete` permissions on the model. This permission can only be applied against view classes that provide a `.model` or `.queryset` attribute. """ # Map methods into required permission codes. # Override this if you need to also provide 'view' permissions, # or if you want to provide custom permission codes. perms_map = { 'GET': [], 'OPTIONS': [], 'HEAD': [], 'POST': ['%(app_label)s.add_%(model_name)s'], 'PUT': ['%(app_label)s.change_%(model_name)s'], 'PATCH': ['%(app_label)s.change_%(model_name)s'], 'DELETE': ['%(app_label)s.delete_%(model_name)s'], } authenticated_users_only = True def get_required_permissions(self, method, model_cls): """ Given a model and an HTTP method, return the list of permission codes that the user is required to have. """ kwargs = { 'app_label': model_cls._meta.app_label, 'model_name': get_model_name(model_cls) } return [perm % kwargs for perm in self.perms_map[method]] def has_permission(self, request, view): # Note that `.model` attribute on views is deprecated, although we # enforce the deprecation on the view `get_serializer_class()` and # `get_queryset()` methods, rather than here. model_cls = getattr(view, 'model', None) queryset = getattr(view, 'queryset', None) if model_cls is None and queryset is not None: model_cls = queryset.model # Workaround to ensure DjangoModelPermissions are not applied # to the root view when using DefaultRouter. if model_cls is None and getattr(view, '_ignore_model_permissions', False): return True assert model_cls, ('Cannot apply DjangoModelPermissions on a view that' ' does not have `.model` or `.queryset` property.') perms = self.get_required_permissions(request.method, model_cls) return ( request.user and (request.user.is_authenticated() or not self.authenticated_users_only) and request.user.has_perms(perms) ) class DjangoModelPermissionsOrAnonReadOnly(DjangoModelPermissions): """ Similar to DjangoModelPermissions, except that anonymous users are allowed read-only access. """ authenticated_users_only = False class DjangoObjectPermissions(DjangoModelPermissions): """ The request is authenticated using Django's object-level permissions. It requires an object-permissions-enabled backend, such as Django Guardian. It ensures that the user is authenticated, and has the appropriate `add`/`change`/`delete` permissions on the object using .has_perms. This permission can only be applied against view classes that provide a `.model` or `.queryset` attribute. """ perms_map = { 'GET': [], 'OPTIONS': [], 'HEAD': [], 'POST': ['%(app_label)s.add_%(model_name)s'], 'PUT': ['%(app_label)s.change_%(model_name)s'], 'PATCH': ['%(app_label)s.change_%(model_name)s'], 'DELETE': ['%(app_label)s.delete_%(model_name)s'], } def get_required_object_permissions(self, method, model_cls): kwargs = { 'app_label': model_cls._meta.app_label, 'model_name': get_model_name(model_cls) } return [perm % kwargs for perm in self.perms_map[method]] def has_object_permission(self, request, view, obj): model_cls = getattr(view, 'model', None) queryset = getattr(view, 'queryset', None) if model_cls is None and queryset is not None: model_cls = queryset.model perms = self.get_required_object_permissions(request.method, model_cls) user = request.user if not user.has_perms(perms, obj): # If the user does not have permissions we need to determine if # they have read permissions to see 403, or not, and simply see # a 404 response. if request.method in ('GET', 'OPTIONS', 'HEAD'): # Read permissions already checked and failed, no need # to make another lookup. raise Http404 read_perms = self.get_required_object_permissions('GET', model_cls) if not user.has_perms(read_perms, obj): raise Http404 # Has read permissions. return False return True