/fastify-acl

ACL-like authorization for Fastify apps

Primary LanguageJavaScriptMIT LicenseMIT

@yikesable/fastify-acl

ACL-like authorization for fastify apps.

npm version npm downloads Module type: ESM Types in JS js-semistandard-style Follow @voxpelli@mastodon.social

With @yikesable/fastify-acl you can secure routes with roles, like admin, superuser, or user:write. Then you just tell the plugin how to determine which roles a user has, and you're set. You can also:

  • Specify any/all functionality (allow if user has any of these roles, allow if users has all of these roles, for example)
  • Specify a hierarchy of roles ("admins" are clearly "users" too, so let them through without explicitly letting "admins" through, for example)

Usage

NOTE: If you're not familiar with scoping in fastify this plugin isn't going to make much sense to you. I'd highly recommend making sure that you're solid with this concept before proceeding.

You can use @yikesable/fastify-acl in a few ways, ways that depend on how you want to structure your application and leverage fastify's scoping.

Example

import createFastify from 'fastify'
import { fastifyAcl } from '../plugin.js'

const hierarchyAclPlugin = aclFactory({
  actualRoles: (_req) => 'admin',
  hierarchy: ['user', 'admin', 'superuser'],
})


fastify.register(async (fastifyScope, opts) => {
  fastifyScope.register(hierarchyAclPlugin, {
    allowedRoles: ['user']
  })

  // 200, because 'admin' > 'user' in hierarchy
  fastifyScope.get('/user', (_request, reply) => reply.send('/user'))
})

fastify.register(async (fastifyScope, opts) => {
  fastifyScope.register(hierarchyAclPlugin, {
    allowedRoles: ['admin']
  })

  // 200
  fastifyScope.get('/admin', (_request, reply) => reply.send('/admin'))
})

fastify.register(async (fastifyScope, opts, next) {
  fastifyScope.register(hierarchyAclPlugin, {
    allowedRoles: ['superuser']
  })

  // 403, because 'superuser' > 'admin' in hierarchy
  fastifyScope.get('/superuser', (_request, reply) => reply.send('/superuser'))
})

fastify.listen({ port: 8080 }, (err) => {
  if (err) {
    fastify.log.error(err)
    process.exit(1)
  }
})

API

@yikesable/fastify-acl exports a factory function; a function that makes the plugin that you'll use.

import { fastifyAcl } from '@yikesable/fastify-acl';

options

options is a simple object with the following properties:

Property Default Type Notes
actualRoles - [async] function Since @yikesable/fastify-acl is all about comparing what roles a user actually has to what a route allows then this property is pretty important. Should be a sync or async function that's given the Fastify request and which returns a string, an array of string:s or undefined.
allowedRoles [] string[], string ^ that whole thing. Except this property tells @yikesable/fastify-acl which roles are allowed for a route or routes. (scoping!!!)
all false boolean If true, will pass if actualRoles contains ALL of the roles in allowedRoles, else error return a HTTP httpErrorCode.
hierarchy undefined Array An Array that specifies the privilege hierarchy of roles in order of ascending privilege. For instance, suppose we have hierarchy: ['user', 'admin', 'superuser'], allowedRoles : ['admin'], and actualRoles: ['superuser'] configured for a route. A user with the superuser role will be able to access that route because the superuser role is of higher privilege than the user and admin roles, as specified in the hierarchy.
httpErrorCode 403 number The error code to use when the authorization fails.
pathExempt undefined Array An Array that specifies the path patterns that should be exempt from enforcement; ['/login', '/callback**'] for example. Uses the NPM module url-pattern internally for URL pattern matching.

fastifyAcl(options): FastifyAclPlugin

This will create a plugin for @yikesable/fastify-acl. It can be used with fastify.register() just like any other plugin.

const fastifyAclPlugin = fastifyAcl({
  actualRoles: request => request.user?.role
});

fastify.register(fastifyAclPlugin, {
  allowedRoles: 'admin'
})

See also