authtrail
Pundit
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authtrail | Pundit | |
---|---|---|
3 | 25 | |
519 | 8,170 | |
- | 0.7% | |
6.2 | 6.9 | |
2 months ago | about 1 month ago | |
Ruby | Ruby | |
MIT License | MIT License |
Stars - the number of stars that a project has on GitHub. Growth - month over month growth in stars.
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For example, an activity of 9.0 indicates that a project is amongst the top 10% of the most actively developed projects that we are tracking.
authtrail
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Rails Authentication for Compliance
Storing successful and unsuccessful login attempts can help to detect suspicious attempts. If you are using Devise, you can use the authtrail gem for that.
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Advanced Usages of Devise for Rails
You'll need to track user logins, then use that information in the notification emails you send your users. But first, you'll need a way of tracking user logins. This can be accomplished using a nifty gem called Authtrail, which also pairs well with Devise.
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Rails application boilerplate for fast MVP development
authrail to track login attempts
Pundit
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A guide to Auth & Access Control in web apps 🔐
https://github.com/varvet/pundit Popular open-source Ruby library focused around the notion of policies, giving you the freedom to implement your own approach based on that.
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Pundit VS Action Policy - a user suggested alternative
2 projects | 2 Jul 2023
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Launch HN: Infield (YC W20) – Safer, faster dependency upgrades
Can you expand a little? Here's some technical background on what we're doing:
We have our own database of every version of every rubygems package alongside its runtime dependencies (like you see at https://rubygems.org/gems/pundit).
Then we parse your Gemfile and Gemfile.lock. We use the Gemfile to figure out gem group and pinned requirements (we run turn your Gemfile into a ruby AST since Gemfiles can be arbitrary ruby code; we use bundler's APIs to parse your Gemfile.lock). This gives us all of the dependencies your rely on.
Then we let you choose one or more package that you want to upgrade and the version you want to target (let's say Rails 7.0.4.3).
Now we have [your dependencies and their current versions], [target rails version], [all of the runtime dependency constraints of these gems]. We run this through a dependency resolution algorithm (pubgrub). If it resolves then you're good to upgrade to that version of Rails without changing anything.
If this fails to resolve, it's because one or more of your current dependencies has a runtime restriction on rails (or another indirect gem being pulled in by the new rails version). This is where the optimization part comes in. The problem becomes "what is the optimal set of versions of all your dependencies that would resolve with the next version of Rails". Currently we solve for this set trying to optimize for the fewest upgrades. As our dataset of breaking changes gets better we'll change that to optimizing for the "lowest effort".
Happy to elaborate.
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Authentication, Roles, and Authorization... oh my.
For authorization, I'm going back and forth with Pundit and CanCanCan
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Protect your GraphQL data with resource_policy
Expressing authorization rules can be a bit challenging with the use of other authorization gems, such as pundit or cancancan. The resource_policy gem provides a more concise and expressive policy definition that uses a simple block-based syntax that makes it easy to understand and write authorization rules for each attribute.
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Default to Deny for More Secure Apps
As an example of how to default to deny, consider a Ruby on Rails app (as we tend to do). The primary way a user interacts with the app is through API endpoints powered by controllers. We use Pundit, a popular authorization library for Rails, to manage user permissions.
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Permissions (access control) in web apps
https://github.com/varvet/pundit Popular open-source Ruby library focused around the notion of policies, giving you the freedom to implement your own approach based on that.
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YAGNI exceptions
PS If you do mobile / web work (or something else with "detached" UI), I find that declarative access control rules are far superior to imperative ones, because they can be serialized and shipped over the wire. For example, backend running cancancan can be easily send the same rules to casl on the frontend, while if you used something like pundit to secure your backend, you either end up re-implementing it in the frontend, or sending ton of "canEdit" flags with every record.
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Best practice for displaying info to different user roles?
You can use a combination of an authorization gem (https://github.com/varvet/pundit) and decorators (https://www.rubyguides.com/2018/04/decorator-pattern-in-ruby/) if you want to extend functionality based on their roles.
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Concerns about authorization when going in production
Use Action Policy or Pundit, and write tests for your policies. Authz is worth testing with near complete coverage.
What are some alternatives?
Sidekiq - Simple, efficient background processing for Ruby
CanCanCan - The authorization Gem for Ruby on Rails.
Ahoy - Simple, powerful, first-party analytics for Rails
rolify - Role management library with resource scoping
Lograge - An attempt to tame Rails' default policy to log everything.
Action Policy - Authorization framework for Ruby/Rails applications
Annotate - Annotate Rails classes with schema and routes info
Devise - Flexible authentication solution for Rails with Warden.
ActiveInteraction - :briefcase: Manage application specific business logic.
Authority
Fasterer - :zap: Don't make your Rubies go fast. Make them go fasterer ™. :zap:
Declarative Authorization - An unmaintained authorization plugin for Rails. Please fork to support current versions of Rails