From cf864337c13b4638c588badf3f589f9e39318c95 Mon Sep 17 00:00:00 2001 From: Trevor Bramwell Date: Mon, 12 Sep 2016 11:06:56 -0700 Subject: Move ODL-AAA-MOON under 'upstream' Directory Change-Id: Ie010fbe3899e151421940908dbe8675aade54e2d Signed-off-by: Trevor Bramwell --- .../aaa/aaa-authn-api/src/main/docs/mapping.rst | 1609 ++++++++++++++++++++ 1 file changed, 1609 insertions(+) create mode 100644 upstream/odl-aaa-moon/aaa/aaa-authn-api/src/main/docs/mapping.rst (limited to 'upstream/odl-aaa-moon/aaa/aaa-authn-api/src/main/docs/mapping.rst') diff --git a/upstream/odl-aaa-moon/aaa/aaa-authn-api/src/main/docs/mapping.rst b/upstream/odl-aaa-moon/aaa/aaa-authn-api/src/main/docs/mapping.rst new file mode 100644 index 00000000..33635502 --- /dev/null +++ b/upstream/odl-aaa-moon/aaa/aaa-authn-api/src/main/docs/mapping.rst @@ -0,0 +1,1609 @@ +Operation Model +=============== + +The assertions from an IdP are stored in an associative array. A +sequence of rules are applied, the first rule which returns success is +considered a match. During the execution of each rule values from the +assertion can be tested and transformed with the results selectively +stored in variables local to the rule. If the rule succeeds an +associative array of mapped values is returned. The mapped values are +taken from the local variables set during the rule execution. The +definition of the rules and mapped results are expressed in JSON +notation. + +A rule is somewhat akin to a function in a programming language. It +starts execution with a set of predefined local variables. It executes +statements which are grouped together in blocks. Execution continues +until an `exit`_ statement returning a success/fail result is +executed or until the last statement is reached which implies +success. The remaining statements in a block may be skipped via a +`continue`_ statement which tests a condition, this is equivalent to +an "if" control flow of logic in a programming language. + +Rule execution continues until a rule returns success. Each rule has a +`mapping`_ associative array bound to it which is a template for the +transformed result. Upon success the `mapping`_ template for the +rule is loaded and the local variables from the successful rule are +used to populate the values in the `mapping`_ template yielding the +final mapped result. + +If no rules returns success authentication fails. + + +Pseudo Code Illustrating Operational Model +------------------------------------------ + +:: + + mapped = null + foreach rule in rules { + result = null + initialize rule.variables with pre-defined values + + foreach block in rule.statement_blocks { + for statement in block.statements { + if statement.verb is exit { + result = exit.status + break + } + elif statement.verb is continue { + break + } + } + if result { + break + } + if result == null { + result = success + } + if result == success { + mapped = rule.mapping(rule.variables) + } + return mapped + + + +Structure Of Rule Definitions +============================= + +Rules are loaded by the rule processor via a JSON document called a +rule definition. A definition has an *optional* set of mapping +templates and a list of rules. Each rule has specifies a mapping +template and has a list of statement blocks. Each statement block has +a list of statements. + +In pseudo-JSON (JSON does not have comments, the ... ellipsis is a +place holder): + +:: + + { + "mappings": { + "template1": "{...}", + "template2": "{...}" + }, + "rules": [ + { # Rule 0. A rule has a mapping or a mapping name + # and a list of statement blocks + + "mapping": {...}, + # -OR- + "mapping_name": "template1", + + "statement_blocks": [ + [ # Block 0 + [statement 0] + [statement 1] + ], + [ # Block 1 + [statement 0] + [statement 1] + ], + + ] + }, + { # Rule 1 ... + } + ] + + } + +Mapping +------- + +A mapping template is used to produce the final associative array of +name/value pairs. The template is a JSON Object. The value in a +name/value pair can be a constant or a variable. If the template value +is a variable the value of the variable is retrieved from the set of +local variables bound to the rule thereby replacing it in the final +result. + +For example given this mapping template and rule variables in JSON: + +template: + +:: + + { + "organization": "BigCorp.com", + "user: "$subject", + "roles": "$roles" + } + +local variables: + +:: + + { + "subject": "Sally", + "roles": ["user", "admin"] + } + +The final mapped results would be: + +:: + + { + "organization": "BigCorp.com", + "user: "Sally", + "roles": ["user", "admin"] + } + + +Each rule must bind a mapping template to the rule. The mapping +template may either be defined directly in the rule via the +``mapping`` key or referenced by name via the ``mapping_name`` key. + +If the ``mapping_name`` is specified the mapping is looked up in a +table of mapping templates bound to the Rule Processor. Using the name +of a mapping template is useful when many rules generate the exact +same template values. + +If both ``mapping`` and ``mapping_name`` are defined the locally bound +``mapping`` takes precedence. + +Syntax +------ + +The logic for a rule consists of a sequence of statements grouped in +blocks. A statement is similar to a function call in a programming +language. + +A statement is a list of values the first of which is a verb which +defines the operation the statement will perform. Think of the +`verbs`_ as function names or operators. Following the verb are +parameters which may be constants or variables. If the statement +assigns a value to a variable left hand side of the assignment (lhs) +is always the first parameter following the verb in the list of +statement values. + +For example this statement in JSON: + +:: + + ["split", "$groups", "$assertion[Groups]", ":"] + +will assign an array to the variable ``$groups``. It looks up the +string named ``Groups`` in the assertion which is a colon (:) +separated list of group names splitting that string on the colon +character. + +Statements **must** be grouped together in blocks. Therefore a rule is +a sequence of blocks and block is a sequence of statements. The +purpose of blocks is allow for crude flow of control logic. For +example this JSON rule has 4 blocks. + +:: + + [ + [ + ["set", $user, ""], + ["set", $roles, []] + ], + [ + ["in", "UserName", "$assertion"], + ["continue", "if_not_success"], + ["set", "$user", "$assertion[UserName"], + ], + [ + ["in", "subject", "$assertion"], + ["continue", "if_not_success"], + ["set", "$user", "$assertion[subject]"], + ], + [ + ["length", "$temp", "$user"], + ["compare", "$temp", ">", 0], + ["exit", "rule_fails", "if_not_success"] + ["append" "$roles", "unprivileged"] + ] + ] + +The rule will succeed if either ``UserName`` or ``subject`` is defined +in the assertion and if so the local variable ``$user`` will be set to +the value found in the assertion and the "unprivileged" role will be +appended to the roles array. + +The first block performs initialization. The second block tests to see +if the assertion has the key ``UserName`` if not execution continues +at the next block otherwise the value of UserName in the assertion is +copied into the variable ``$user``. The third block performs a similar +operation looking for a ``subject`` in the assertion. The fourth block +checks to see if the ``$user`` variable is empty, if it is empty the +rule fails because it didn't find either a ``UserName`` nor a +``subject`` in the assertion. If ``$user`` is not empty the +"unprivileged" role is appended and the rule succeeds. + +Data Types +---------- + +There are 7 supported types which equate to the types available in +JSON. At the time of this writing there are 2 implementations of this +Mapping specification, one in Python and one in Java. This table +illustrates how each data type is represented. The first two columns +are definitions from an abstract specification. The JSON column +enumerates the data type JSON supports. The Mapping column lists the +7 enumeration names used by the Mapping implemenation in each +language. The following columns list the concrete data type used in +that language. + ++-----------+------------+--------------------+---------------------+ +| JSON | Mapping | Python | Java | ++===========+============+====================+=====================+ +| object | MAP | dict | Map | ++-----------+------------+--------------------+---------------------+ +| array | ARRAY | list | List | ++-----------+------------+--------------------+---------------------+ +| string | STRING | unicode (Python 2) | String | +| | +--------------------+ | +| | | str (Python 3) | | ++-----------+------------+--------------------+---------------------+ +| | INTEGER | int | Long | +| number +------------+--------------------+---------------------+ +| | REAL | float | Double | ++-----------+------------+--------------------+---------------------+ +| true | | | | ++-----------+ BOOLEAN | bool | Boolean | +| false | | | | ++-----------+------------+--------------------+---------------------+ +| null | NULL | None | null | ++-----------+------------+--------------------+---------------------+ + + +Rule Debugging and Documentation +-------------------------------- + +If the rule processor reports an error or if you're debugging your +rules by enabling DEBUG log tracing then you must be able to correlate +the reported statement to where it appears in your rule JSON source. A +message will always identify a statement by the rule number, block +number within that rule and the statement number within that +block. However once your rules become moderately complex it will +become increasingly difficult to identify a statement by counting +rules, blocks and statements. + +A better approach is to tag rules and blocks with a name or other +identifying string. You can set the `Reserved Variables`_ +``rule_name`` and ``block_name`` to a string of your choice. These +strings will be reported in all messages along with the rule, block +and statement numbers. + +JSON does not permit comments, as such you cannot include explanatory +comments next to your rules, blocks and statements in the JSON +source. The ``rule_name`` and ``block_name`` can serve a similar +purpose. By putting assignments to these variables as the first +statement in a block you'll both document your rules and be able to +identify specific statements in log messages. + +During rule execution the ``rule_name`` and ``block_name`` are +initialized to the empty string at the beginning of each rule and +block respectively. + +The above example is augmented to include this information. The rule +name is set in the first statement in the first block. + +:: + + [ + [ + ["set", "$rule_name", "Must have UserName or subject"], + ["set", "block_name", "Initialization"], + ["set", $user, ""], + ["set", $roles, []] + ], + [ + ["set", "block_name", "Test for UserName, set $user"], + ["in", "UserName", "$assertion"], + ["continue", "if_not_success"], + ["set", "$user", "$assertion[UserName"], + ], + [ + ["set", "block_name", "Test for subject, set $user"], + ["in", "subject", "$assertion"], + ["continue", "if_not_success"], + ["set", "$user", "$assertion[subject]"], + ], + [ + ["set", "block_name", "If not $user fail, else append unprivileged to roles"], + ["length", "$temp", "$user"], + ["compare", "$temp", ">", 0], + ["exit", "rule_fails", "if_not_success"] + ["append" "$roles", "unprivileged"] + ] + ] + + + + +Variables +--------- + + +Variables always begin with a dollar sign ($) and are followed by an +identifier which is any alpha character followed by zero or more +alphanumeric or underscore characters. The variable may optionally be +delimited with braces ({}) to separate the variable from surrounding +text. Three types of variables are supported: + +* scalar +* array (indexed by zero based integer) +* associative array (indexed by string) + +Both arrays and associative arrays use square brackets ([]) to specify +a member of the array. Examples of variable usage: + +:: + + $name + ${name} + $groups[0] + ${groups[0]} + $properties[key] + ${properties[key]} + +An array or an associative array may be referenced by it's base name +(omitting the indexing brackets). For example the associative array +array named "properties" is referenced using it's base name +``$properties`` but if you want to access a member of the "properties" +associative array named "duration" you would do this ``$properties[duration]`` + +This is not a general purpose language with full expression +syntax. Only one level of variable lookup is supported. Therefore +compound references like this + +:: + + $properties[$groups[2]] + +will not work. + + +Escaping +^^^^^^^^ + +If you need to include a dollar sign in a string (where it is +immediately followed by either an identifier or a brace and identifier) +and do not want to have it be interpreted as representing a variable +you must escape the dollar sign with a backslash, for example +"$amount" is interpreted as the variable ``amount`` but "\\$amount" +is interpreted as the string "$amount" . + + +Reserved Variables +------------------ + +A rule has the following reserved variables: + +assertion + The current assertion values from the federated IdP. It is a + dictionary of key/value pairs. + +regexp_array + The regular expression groups from the last successful regexp match + indexed by number. Group 0 is the entire match. Groups 1..n are + the corresponding parenthesized group counting from the left. For + example regexp_array[1] is the first group. + +regexp_map + The regular expression groups from the last successful regexp match + indexed by group name. + +rule_number + The zero based index of the currently executing rule. + +rule_name + The name of the currently executing rule. If the rule name has not + been set it will be the empty string. + +block_number + The zero based index of the currently executing block within the + currently executing rule. + +block_name + The name of the currently executing block. If the block name has not + been set it will be the empty string. + + +statement_number + The zero based index of the currently executing statement within the + currently executing block. + + +Examples +======== + +Split a fully qualified username into user and realm components +--------------------------------------------------------------- + +It's common for some IdP's to return a fully qualified username +(e.g. principal or subject). The fully qualified username is the +concatenation of the user name, separator and realm name. A common +separator is the @ character. In this example lets say the fully +qualified username is ``bob@example.com`` and you want to return the +user and realm as independent values in your mapped result. The +username appears in the assertion as the value ``Principal``. + +Our strategy will be to use a regular expression identify the user and +realm components and then assign them to local variables which will +then populate the mapped result. + +The mapping in JSON is: + +:: + + { + "user": "$username", + "realm": "$domain" + } + +The assertion in JSON is: + +:: + + { + "Principal": "bob@example.com" + } + +Our rule is: + +:: + + [ + [ + ["in", "Principal", "assertion"], + ["exit", "rule_fails", "if_not_success"], + ["regexp", "$assertion[Principal]", (?P\\w+)@(?P.+)"], + ["set", "$username", "$regexp_map[username]"], + ["set", "$domain", "$regexp_map[domain]"], + ["exit, "rule_succeeds", "always"] + ] + ] + +Rule explanation: + +Block 0: + +0. Test if the assertion contains a Principal value. +1. Abort the rule if the assertion does not contain a Principal + value. +2. Apply a regular expression the the Principal value. Use named + groupings for the username and domain components for clarity. +3. Assign the regexp group username to the $username local variable. +4. Assign the regexp group domain to the $domain local variable. +5. Exit the rule, apply the mapping, return the mapped values. Note, an + explicit `exit`_ is not required if there are no further statements + in the rule, as is the case here. + +The mapped result in JSON is: + +:: + + { + "user": "bob", + "realm": "example.com" + } + +Build a set of roles based on group membership +---------------------------------------------- + +Often one wants to grant roles to a user based on their membership in +certain groups. In this example let's say the assertion contains a +``Groups`` value which is a colon separated list of group names. Our +strategy is to split the ``Groups`` assertion value into an array of +group names. Then we'll test if a specific group is in the groups +array, if it is we'll add a role. Finally if no roles have been mapped +we fail. Users in the group "student" will get the role "unprivileged" +and users in the group "helpdesk" will get the role "admin". + +The mapping in JSON is: + +:: + + { + "roles": "$roles", + } + +The assertion in JSON is: + +:: + + { + "Groups": "student:helpdesk" + } + +Our rule is: + +:: + + [ + [ + ["in", "Groups", "assertion"], + ["exit", "rule_fails", "if_not_success"], + ["set", "$roles", []], + ["split", "$groups", "$assertion[Groups]", ":"], + ], + [ + ["in", "student", "$groups"], + ["continue", "if_not_success"], + ["append", "$roles", "unprivileged"] + ], + [ + ["in", "helpdesk", "$groups"], + ["continue", "if_not_success"], + ["append", "$roles", "admin"] + ], + [ + ["unique", "$roles", "$roles"], + ["length", "$temp", "roles"], + ["compare", $temp", ">", 0], + ["exit", "rule_fails", "if_not_success"] + ] + + ] + +Rule explanation: + +Block 0 + +0. Test if the assertion contains a Groups value. +1. Abort the rule if the assertion does not contain a Groups + value. +2. Initialize the $roles variable to an empty array. +3. Split the colon separated list of group names into an array of + individual group names + +Block 1 + +0. Test if "student" is in the $groups array +1. Exit the block if it's not. +2. Append "unprivileged" to the $roles array + +Block 2 + +0. Test if "helpdesk" is in the $groups array +1. Exit the block if it's not. +2. Append "admin" to the $roles array + +Block 3 + +0. Strip any duplicate roles that might have been appended to the + $roles array to assure each role is unique. +1. Count how many members are in the $roles array, assign the + length to the $temp variable. +2. Test to see if the $roles array had any members. +3. Fail if no roles had been assigned. + +The mapped result in JSON is: + +:: + + { + "roles": ["unprivileged", "admin"] + } + +However, suppose whatever is receiving your mapped results is not +expecting an array of roles. Instead it expects a comma separated list +in a string. To accomplish this add the following statement as the +last one in the final block: + +:: + + ["join", "$roles", "$roles", ","] + +Then the mapped result will be: + +:: + + { + "roles": "unprivileged,admin"] + } + + + + +White list certain users and grant them specific roles +------------------------------------------------------ + +Suppose you have certain users you always want to unconditionally +accept and authorize with specific roles. For example if the user is +"head_of_IT" then assign her the "user" and "admin" roles. Otherwise +keep processing. The list of white listed users is hard-coded into the +rule. + +The mapping in JSON is: + +:: + + { + "user": $user, + "roles": "$roles", + } + +The assertion in JSON is: + +:: + + { + "UserName": "head_of_IT" + } + +Our rule in JSON is: + +:: + + [ + [ + ["in", "UserName", "assertion"], + ["exit", "rule_fails", "if_not_success"], + ["in", "$assertion[UserName]", ["head_of_IT", "head_of_Engineering"]], + ["continue", "if_not_success"], + ["set", "$user", "$assertion[UserName"] + ["set", "$roles", ["user", "admin"]], + ["exit", "rule_succeeds", "always"] + ], + [ + ... + ] + ] + +Rule explanation: + +Block 0 + +0. Test if the assertion contains a UserName value. +1. Abort the rule if the assertion does not contain a UserName + value. +2. Test if the user is in the hardcoded list of white listed users. +3. If the user isn't in the white listed array then exit the block and + continue execution at the next block. +4. Set the $user local variable to $assertion[UserName] +5. Set the $roles local variable to the hardcoded array containing + "user" and "admin" +6. We're done, unconditionally exit and return the mapped result. + +Block 1 + +0. Further processing + +The mapped result in JSON is: + +:: + + { + "user": "head_of_IT", + "roles": ["users", "admin"] + } + + +Black list certain users +------------------------ + +Suppose you have certain users you always want to unconditionally +deny access to by placing them in a black list. In this example the +user "BlackHat" will try to gain access. The black list includes the +users "BlackHat" and "Spook". + +The mapping in JSON is: + +:: + + { + "user": $user, + "roles": "$roles", + } + +The assertion in JSON is: + +:: + + { + "UserName": "BlackHat" + } + +Our rule in JSON is: + +:: + + [ + [ + ["in", "UserName", "assertion"], + ["exit", "rule_fails", "if_not_success"], + ["in", "$assertion[UserName]", ["BlackHat", "Spook"]], + ["exit", "rule_fails", "if_success"] + ], + [ + ... + ] + ] + +Rule explanation: + +Block 0 + +0. Test if the assertion contains a UserName value. +1. Abort the rule if the assertion does not contain a UserName + value. +2. Test if the user is in the hard-coded list of black listed users. +3. If the test succeeds then immediately abort and return failure. + +Block 1 + +0. Further processing + +The mapped result in JSON is: + +:: + + Null + +Format Strings and/or Concatenate Strings +----------------------------------------- + +You can replace variables in a format string using the `interpolate`_ +verb. String concatenation is trivially placing two variables adjacent +to one another in a format string. Suppose you want to form an email +address from the username and domain in an assertion. + +The mapping in JSON is: + +:: + + { + "email": $email, + } + +The assertion in JSON is: + +:: + + { + "UserName": "Bob", + "Domain": "example.com" + } + +Our rule in JSON is: + +:: + + [ + [ + ["interpolate", "$email", "$assertion[UserName]@$assertion[Domain]"], + ] + ] + +Rule explanation: + +Block 0 + +0. Replace the variable $assertion[UserName] with it's value and + replace the variable $assertion[Domain] with it's value. + +The mapped result in JSON is: + +:: + + { + "email": "Bob@example.com", + } + + +Note, sometimes it's necessary to utilize braces to separate variables +from surrounding text by using the brace notation. This can also make +the format string more readable. Using braces to delimit variables the +above would be: + +:: + + [ + [ + ["interpolate", "$email", "${assertion[UserName]}@${assertion[Domain]}"], + ] + ] + + + +Make associative array lookups case insensitive +----------------------------------------------- + +Many systems treat field names as case insensitive. By default +associative array indexing is case sensitive. The solution is to lower +case all the keys in an associative array and then only use lower case +indices. Suppose you want the assertion associative array to be case +insensitive. + +The mapping in JSON is: + +:: + + { + "user": $user, + } + +The assertion in JSON is: + +:: + + { + "UserName": "Bob" + } + +Our rule in JSON is: + +:: + + [ + [ + ["lower", "$assertion", "$assertion"], + ["in", "username", "assertion"], + ["exit", "rule_fails", "if_not_success"], + ["set", "$user", "$assertion[username"] + ] + ] + +Rule explanation: + +Block 0 + +0. Lower case all the keys in the assertion associative array. +1. Test if the assertion contains a username value. +2. Abort the rule if the assertion does not contain a username + value. +3. Assign the username value in the assertion to $user + +The mapped result in JSON is: + +:: + + { + "user": "Bob", + } + + +Verbs +===== + +The following verbs are supported: + +* `set`_ +* `length`_ +* `interpolate`_ +* `append`_ +* `unique`_ +* `regexp`_ +* `regexp_replace`_ +* `split`_ +* `join`_ +* `lower`_ +* `upper`_ +* `compare`_ +* `in`_ +* `not_in`_ +* `exit`_ +* `continue`_ + +Some verbs have a side effects. A verb may set a boolean success/fail +result which may then be tested with a subsequent verb. For example +the ``fail`` verb can be used to indicate the rule fails if a prior +result is either ``success`` or ``not_success``. The ``regexp`` verb +which performs a regular expression search on a string stores the +regular expression sub-matches as a side effect in the variables +``$regexp_array`` and ``$regexp_map``. + + +Verb Definitions +================ + +set +--- + +``set $variable value`` + +$variable + The variable being assigned (i.e. lhs) + +value + The value to assign to the variable (i.e. rhs). The value may be + another variable or a constant. + +**set** assigns a value to a variable, in other words it's an +assignment statement. + +Examples: +^^^^^^^^^ + +Initialize a variable to an empty array. + +:: + + ["set", "$groups", []] + +Initialize a variable to an empty associative array. + +:: + + ["set", "$groups", {}] + +Assign a string. + +:: + + ["set", "$version", "1.2.3"] + +Copy the ``UserName`` value from the assertion to a temporary variable. + +:: + + ["set", "$temp", "$assertion[UserName]"], + + +Get the 2nd item in an array (array indexing is zero based) + +:: + + ["set", "$group", "$groups[1]"] + + +Set the associative array entry "IdP" to "kdc.example.com". + +:: + + ["set", "$metadata[IdP]", "kdc.example.com""] + +-------------------------------------------------------------------------------- + +length +------ + +``length $variable value`` + +$variable + The variable which receives the length value + +value + The value whose length is to be determined. May be one of array, + associative array, or string. + +**length** computes the number of items in the value. How this is done +depends upon the type of value: + +array + The length is the number of items in the array. + +associative array + The length is the number of key/value pairs in the associative + array. + +string + The length is the number of *characters* (not octets) in the + string. + +Examples: +^^^^^^^^^ + +Count how many items are in the ``$groups`` array and assign that +value to the ``$groups_length`` variable. + +:: + + ["length", "$groups_length", "$groups"] + +Count how many key/value pairs are in the ``$assertion`` associative +array and assign that value to the ``$num_assertion_values`` variable. + +:: + + ["length", "$num_assertion_values", "$assertion"] + +Count how many characters are in the assertion's UserName and assign +the value to ``$username_length``. + +:: + + ["length", "$user_name_length", "$assertion[UserName]"] + + +-------------------------------------------------------------------------------- + +interpolate +----------- + +``interpolate $variable string`` + +$variable + This variable is assigned the result of the interpolation. + +string + A string containing references to variables which will be replaced + in the string. + +**interpolate** replaces each occurrence of a variable in a string with +it's value. The result is assigned to $variable. + +Examples: +^^^^^^^^^ + +Form an email address given the username and domain. If the username +is "jane" and the domain is "example.com" then $email will be +"jane@example.com" + +:: + + ["interpolate", "$email", "${username}@${domain}"] + + +-------------------------------------------------------------------------------- + + +append +------ + +``append $variable value`` + +$variable + This variable **must** be an array. It is modified in place by + appending ``value`` to the end of the array. + +value + The value to append to the end of the array. + +**append** adds a value to end of an array. + +Examples: +^^^^^^^^^ + +Append the role "qa_test" to the roles list. + +:: + + ["append", "$roles", "qa_test"] + + +-------------------------------------------------------------------------------- + + +unique +------ + +``unique $variable value`` + +$variable + This variable is assigned the unique values in the ``value`` + array. + +value + An array of values. **must** be an array. + +**unique** builds an array of unique values in ``value`` by stripping +out duplicates and assigns the array of unique values to +``$variable``. The order of items in the ``value`` array are +preserved. + +Examples: +^^^^^^^^^ + +$one_of_a_kind will be assigned ["a", "b"] + +:: + + ["unique", "$one_of_a_kind", ["a", "b", "a"]] + + +-------------------------------------------------------------------------------- + +regexp +------ + +``regexp string pattern`` + +string + The string the regular expression pattern is applied to. + +pattern + The regular expression pattern. + +**regexp** performs a regular expression match against ``string``. The +regular expression pattern syntax is defined by the regular expression +implementation of the language this API is written in. + +Pattern groups are a convenient way to select sub-matches. Pattern +groups may accessed by either group number or group name. After a +successful regular expression match the groups are stored in the +special variables ``$regexp_array`` and +``$regexp_map``. + +``$regexp_array`` is used to access the groups by +numerical index. Groups are numbered by counting the left parenthesis +group delimiter starting at 1. Group 0 is the entire +match. ``$regexp_array`` is valid irregardless of whether you used +named groups or not. + +``$regexp_map`` is used to access the groups by +name. ``$regexp_map`` is only valid if you used named groups in the +pattern. + +Examples: +^^^^^^^^^ + +Many user names are of the form "user@domain", to split the username +from the domain and to be able to work with those values independently +use a regular expression and then assign the results to a variable. In +this example there are two regular expression groups, the first group +is the username and the second group is the domain. In the first +example we use named groups and then access the match information in +the special variable ``$regexp_map`` via the name of the group. + +:: + + ["regexp", "$assertion[UserName]", "(?P\\w+)@(?P.+)"], + ["continue", "if_not_success"], + ["set", "$username", "$regexp_map[username]"], + ["set", "$domain", "$regexp_map[domain]"], + + +This is exactly equivalent but uses numbered groups instead of named +groups. In this instance the group matches are stored in the special +variable ``$regexp_array`` and accessed by numerical index. + +:: + + ["regexp", "$assertion[UserName]", "(\\w+)@(.+)"], + ["continue", "if_not_success"], + ["set", "$username", "$regexp_array[1]"], + ["set", "$domain", "$regexp_array[2]"], + + + +-------------------------------------------------------------------------------- + +regexp_replace +-------------- + +``regexp_replace $variable string pattern replacement`` + +$variable + The variable which receives result of the replacement. + +string + The string to perform the replacement on. + +pattern + The regular expression pattern. + +replacement + The replacement specification. + +**regexp_replace** replaces each occurrence of ``pattern`` in +``$string`` with ``replacement``. See `regexp`_ for details of using +regular expressions. + +Examples: +^^^^^^^^^ + +Convert hyphens in a name to underscores. + +:: + + ["regexp_replace", "$name", "$name", "-", "_"] + + +-------------------------------------------------------------------------------- + +split +----- + +``split $variable string pattern`` + +$variable + This variable is assigned an array containing the split items. + +string + The string to split into separate items. + +pattern + The regular expression pattern used to split the string. + +**split** splits ``string`` into separate pieces and assigns the +result to ``$variable`` as an array of pieces. The split occurs +wherever the regular expression ``pattern`` occurs in ``string``. See +`regexp`_ for details of using regular expressions. + +Examples: +^^^^^^^^^ + +Split a list of groups separated by a colon (:) into an array of +individual group names. If $assertion[Groups] contained the string +"user:admin" then $group_list will set to ["user", "admin"]. + +:: + + ["split", "$group_list", "$assertion[Groups]", ":"] + + + +-------------------------------------------------------------------------------- + +join +---- + +``join $variable array join_string`` + +$variable + This variable is assigned the string result of the join operation. + +array + An array of string items to be joined together with + ``$join_string``. + +join_string + The string inserted between each element in ``array``. + +**join** accepts an array of strings and produces a single string +where each element in the array is separated by ``join_string``. + +Examples: +^^^^^^^^^ + +Convert a list of group names into a single string where each group +name is separated by a colon (:). If the array ``$group_list`` is +["user", "admin"] and the ``join_string`` is ":" then the +``$group_string`` variable will be set to "user:admin". + +:: + + ["join", "$group_string", "$groups", ":"] + + +-------------------------------------------------------------------------------- + +lower +----- + +``lower $variable value`` + +$variable + This variable is assigned the result of the lower operation. + +value + The value to lower case, may be either a string, array, or + associative array. + +**lower** lower cases the input value. The input value may be one of +the following types: + +string + The string is lower cased. + +array + Each member of the array must be a string, the result is an array + with the items replaced by their lower case value. + +associative array + Each key in the associative array is lower cased. The values + associated with the key are **not** modified. + +Examples: +^^^^^^^^^ + +Lookup ``UserName`` in the assertion and set the variable +``$username`` to it's lower case value. + +:: + + ["lower", "$username", "$assertion[UserName]"], + +Set each member of the ``$groups`` array to it's lower case value. If +``$groups`` was ["User", "Admin"] then ``$groups`` will become +["user", "admin"]. + +:: + + ["lower", "$groups", "$groups"], + +To enable case insensitive lookup's in an associative array lower case +each key in the associative array. If ``$assertion`` was {"UserName": +"JoeUser"} then ``$assertion`` will become {"username": "JoeUser"} + +:: + + ["lower", "$assertion", $assertion"] + +-------------------------------------------------------------------------------- + +upper +----- + +``upper $variable value`` + +$variable + This variable is assigned the result of the upper operation. + +value + The value to upper case, may be either a string, array, or + associative array. + +**upper** is exactly analogous to `lower`_ except the values are upper +cased, see `lower`_ for details. + + +-------------------------------------------------------------------------------- + +in +-- + +``in member collection`` + +member + The value whose membership is being tested. + +collection + A collection of members. May be string, array or associative array. + +**in** tests to see if ``member`` is a member of ``collection``. The +membership test depends on the type of collection, the following are +supported: + +array + If any item in the array is equal to ``member`` then the result is + success. + +associative array + If the associative array contains a key equal to ``member`` then + the result is success. + +string + If the string contains a sub-string equal to ``member`` then the + result is success. + +Examples: +^^^^^^^^^ + +Test to see if the assertion contains a UserName value. + +:: + + ["in", "UserName", "$assertion"] + ["continue", "if_not_success"] + +Test to see if a group is one of "user" or "admin". + +:: + + ["in", "$group", ["user", "admin"]] + ["continue", "if_not_success"] + +Test to see if the sub-string "BigCorp" is in +the assertion's ``Provider`` value. + +:: + + ["in", "BigCorp", "$assertion[Provider]"] + ["continue", "if_not_success"] + + +-------------------------------------------------------------------------------- + +not_in +------ + +``in member collection`` + +member + The value whose membership is being tested. + +collection + A collection of members. May be string, array or associative array. + +**not_in** is exactly analogous to `in`_ except the sense of the test +is reversed. See `in`_ for details. + +-------------------------------------------------------------------------------- + +compare +------- + +``compare left operator right`` + +left + The left hand value of the binary operator. + +operator + The binary operator used for comparing left to right. + +right + The right hand value of the binary operator. + + +**compare** compares the left value to the right value according the +operator and sets success if the comparison evaluates to True. The +following relational operators are supported. + ++----------+-----------------------+ +| Operator | Description | ++==========+=======================+ +| == | equal | ++----------+-----------------------+ +| != | not equal | ++----------+-----------------------+ +| < | less than | ++----------+-----------------------+ +| <= | less than or equal | ++----------+-----------------------+ +| > | greater than | ++----------+-----------------------+ +| >= | greater than or equal | ++----------+-----------------------+ + + +The left and right hand sides of the comparison operator *must* be +the same type, no type conversions are performed. Not all combinations +of operator and type are supported. The table below illustrates the +supported combinations. Essentially you can test for equality or +inequality on any type. But only strings and numbers support the +magnitude relational operators. + + ++----------+--------+---------+------+---------+-----+------+------+ +| Operator | STRING | INTEGER | REAL | BOOLEAN | MAP | LIST | NULL | ++==========+========+=========+======+=========+=====+======+======+ +| == | X | X | X | X | X | X | X | ++----------+--------+---------+------+---------+-----+------+------+ +| != | X | X | X | X | X | X | X | ++----------+--------+---------+------+---------+-----+------+------+ +| < | X | X | X | | | | | ++----------+--------+---------+------+---------+-----+------+------+ +| <= | X | X | X | | | | | ++----------+--------+---------+------+---------+-----+------+------+ +| > | X | X | X | | | | | ++----------+--------+---------+------+---------+-----+------+------+ +| >= | X | X | X | | | | | ++----------+--------+---------+------+---------+-----+------+------+ + + +Examples: +^^^^^^^^^ + +Test to see if the ``$groups`` array has at least 2 members + +:: + + ["length", "$group_length", "$groups"], + ["compare", "$group_length", ">=", 2] + + +-------------------------------------------------------------------------------- + +exit +---- + +``exit status criteria`` + +status + The result for the rule. + +criteria + The criteria upon which will cause the rule will be immediately + exited with a failed status. + +**exit** causes the rule being executed to immediately exit and a rule +result if the specified criteria is met. Statement verbs such as `in`_ +or `compare`_ set the result status which may be tested with the +``success`` and ``not_success`` criteria. + +The exit ``status`` may be one of: + +rule_fails + The rule has failed and no mapping will occur. + +rule_succeeds + The rule succeeded and the mapping will be applied. + +The ``criteria`` may be one of: + +if_success + If current result status is success then exit with ``status``. + +if_not_success + If current result status is not success then exit with ``status``. + +always + Unconditionally exit with ``status``. + +never + Effectively a no-op. Useful for debugging. + +Examples: +^^^^^^^^^ + +The rule requires ``UserName`` to be in the assertion. + +:: + + ["in", "UserName", "$assertion"] + ["exit", "rule_fails", "if_not_success"] + +-------------------------------------------------------------------------------- + + +continue +-------- + +``continue criteria`` + +criteria + The criteria which causes the remainder of the *block* to be + skipped. + +**continue** is used to control execution for statement blocks. It +mirrors in a crude way the `if` expression in a procedural +language. ``continue`` does *not* affect the success or failure of a +rule, rather it controls whether subsequent statements in a block are +executed or not. Control continues at the next statement block. + +Statement verbs such as `in`_ or `compare`_ set the result status +which may be tested with the ``success`` and ``not_success`` criteria. + +The criteria may be one of: + +if_success + If current result status is success then exit the statement + block and continue execution at the next statement block. + +if_not_success + If current result status is not success then exit the statement + block and continue execution at the next statement block. + +always + Immediately exit the statement block and continue execution at the + next statement block. + +never + Effectively a no-op. Useful for debugging. Execution continues at + the next statement. + +Examples: +^^^^^^^^^ + +The following pseudo code: + +:: + + roles = []; + if ("Groups" in assertion) { + groups = assertion["Groups"].split(":"); + if ("qa_test" in groups) { + roles.append("tester"); + } + } + +could be implemented this way: + +:: + + [ + ["set", "$roles", []], + ["in", "Groups", "$assertion"], + ["continue", "if_not_success"], + ["split" "$groups", $assertion[Groups]", ":"], + ["in", "qa_test", "$groups"], + ["continue", "if_not_success"], + ["append", "$roles", "tester"] + ] -- cgit 1.2.3-korg