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Data Layer Access Control

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Background

- Data layer access in Synapse requires one or more approval steps.  
- In Synapse granting data access is synonymous with providing the URL to the stored data.
    (This URL may have an embedded access token.)
- Currently (i.e. as of Jan. 2012), the backend has a representation of EULAs and of Agreements (i.e. that a particular user agrees to a EULA)
- The work flow logic for creating the agreement is embedded in the Web client, so other clients would have to maintain duplicate logic.
- There is no provision in our permissions scheme for an "IRB role" which can grant or revoke 'download permission' to a user.

- If the approval process changes, a user who has already been approved needs to go through the approval process again.

- Currently we've identified three tiers of access restriction/approval:

Tier 1: User agrees to a generic EULA that applies to all data layers available through Synapse.

Tier 2: (Tier 1) + User agrees to a second EULA specific to certain data layers.

Tier 3:  (Tier 1) + (Tier 2) + User access must be requested/approved through an institutional review board (IRB).

Design

Security Model

- In the entity schema we allow a field to have a (some?) permission(s) which a user need to have before the field can be accessed.

- We add a 'Location' permission to the location field of the Layer entity.  To control download ability on a Layer, we control whether a user has the "Location' permission on the Layer.

Workflow Model

Design Assumptions

Things the client should not 'know'

- what requirements need to be met to access a Layer's location (e.g. you need to sign a EULA)

- what requirements have/have not been met by a User (e.g. whether a EULA has been signed)

Things the client SHOULD 'know'

- how to determine, from an entity's schema and from the repository authorization services, that a permission is needed to access a certain field of a certain entity.  (The alternative is to add a service to do this.)

- how to fulfill a requirement (e.g. if a EULA needs to be signed, knows how to retrieve and display the EULA, get it signed, and submit the appropriate request to the repo service)

Design Approach

The permissions-requirements service

- Add a new service 'permissionRequirements'. E.g. GET /permissionRequirements/101, where '101' is an entity ID, would return a response of the form

{

    Location:[ {type:EULA, params:{uri:/eula/987}, msg:status-msg}, {type:EULA, params:{uri:/eula/654}, msg:status-msg}, {type:ACT, params:{uri:/act/321}, msg:status-msg}]
}

The response lists the unmet requirements for each permission associated with the object, in the form <permission>:<requirement-list>.

(Optionally, just one of multiple unmet requirements could be returned, allowing the server to control the order in which requirements are considered by the client.)

There are three parts to a requirement:
type: from an ENUM, e.g. 'EULA', 'ACT'.
params: a map of parameters used by the given 'type'. The client needs to know what to do for each enum, and how to use its parameters. This will be documented in the developers' API.
msg: An optional status message, suitable for display to the user.
If a requirement has no type or params but has a message, then there is nothing for the user to do and the message helps explain why, e.g. {msg:"ACT approval pending"}

(Optionally, we could include this in the body of a 401 response.)

Permission Requirements Manager

The repository service will have a Permission Requirements Manager, which computes the response to the /permissionRequirements request from a given user for a given entity.  E.g. if a Layer required EULA 987 to be signed for a user to access it, and EULA 987 is not yet signed by the user, then the Permission Requirements Manager adds this requirement to the response to the /permissionsRequirements request.  The unmet requirements are stored *implicitly* in the state of the repository services, and the PRM determines the 'requirements gap' on the fly.

Object Model for Permission Requirements

An entity may have Requirement child entities.  These entities contain the details of what is required to obtain specific permissions on the object (e.g. <Location,EULA,/eula/987>).  The PRM refers to these objects to make its assessment.

Additional Services

- permissionRequest service:  Once the requirements are fulfilled, this allows a user to request that a permission granted for them (or should this be rolled into the permissionRequirements?)

- requirements CRUD services: allows the owner of an object to craft requirements for an object (or should this be rolled into the current permissions manager?)

Tier 1 Approval Process

Here the user signs the Tier 1 agreement upon account creation and is added to a "Tier 1 group".  The group has the Download role for all Tier 1 data layers.

"WF" refers to an envisioned workflow system which knows the approval workflows and can tell each participant what its next step is.

Below we see an alternative for synchronous user interaction.

Tier 2 Approval Process

This approval requires two hurdles, the Tier 1 agreement plus a new agreement which may be specific to the requested layer.  Upon approval Synapse adds the User to the Access Control List for the Layer.

The following variation has the properties that (1) interaction between Synapse and the User is synchronous, (2) there is no representation of the required workflow in the client, (3) there is no representation of the workflow *state* in the back end:

How do you set up an approval process?
    POST /accessRequirements
    POST /approvalProcess

How do you revoke approval?
    1) remove the <User, Role> from the layer's ACL (or the <Group, Role> if all the users were added to a group)
    2) delete the approvalProcess and accessRequirements objects

Tier 3 Approval Process

Here we have the added complexity of an external ACT.  An "ACT daemon" is added to send approval requests to the ACTand to listen for replies.  The interaction with the user is asynchronous:  While waiting for approval the user may do other things (though not access the requested layer).  Finally she receives an email saying the request was approved.

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