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Supply Chain Attack on Axios Pulls Malicious Dependency from npm
A supply chain attack on Axios introduced a malicious dependency, plain-crypto-js@4.2.1, published minutes earlier and absent from the project’s GitHub releases.
ABAC (Attribute Based Access Control) is a node.js package for providing a Connect/Express middleware that can be used to enable ABAC with various options.
$ npm install abac
Access control logic is defined using policies.
var express = require('express'),
abac = require('abac');
abac.set_policy('in-memory', 'invite a friend', true);
abac.set_policy('in-memory', 'use secret feature', function(req) {
if (req.user.role == 'employee') { return true; }
return false;
});
Use abac.can(backend, action, options), where backend is the name (i.e. 'in-memory') of the BackEnd used, action is the name of the action, and options are the optional parameters. If a policy is not defined, access control is denied by default.
If the request can perform the action (Permit), the next() callback is called. If the request cannot perform the action (Deny) or if the policy is undefined (Not Applicable), the middleware calls res.send(405) to return a HTTP 405 Method. If an error occurs (Indeterminate), the middleware signals an error by passing it as the first argument to next.
var express = require('express'),
abac = require('abac');
app.post('/users/invite/', abac.can('in-memory', 'invite a friend'), function(req, res, next){
res.json({msg: 'You sent an invite b/c you could!'});
});
Pass yes() and no() callback functions in the options parameter. yes() gets fired if the request can perform the action (Permit). no() gets fired if the request cannot perform the action (Deny) or if an error has occurred (Indeterminate) or if the policy is not defined (Not Applicable).
var express = require('express'),
abac = require('abac');
app.get('/', function(req, res, next){
abac.can('in-memory', 'use secret feature', {
yes: function() {
// You're in!
},
no: function(err, info) {
// Sorry!
}
})(req, res);
});
Use abac.serialize(callback) to serialize all policies into a permissions Javascript object. The callback function has 2 arguments: (err, permissions).
In the permissions Javascript object, the key is a policy's action and the value is the policy's rules evaluated as a boolean.
This is useful for appling the same core logic to presentation and server-side access control decisions.
function get('/session/', function(req, res, next) {
abac.serialize(function(err, permissions) {
if (err) { next(err); }
else {
res.send(200, permissions);
}
})(req, res);
});
$ npm install
$ make test
Thank you to jaredhanson's passport authentication middleware, which served as an excellent reference for designing a pluggable middleware interface.
FAQs
Attribute based access control for Node.js.
We found that abac demonstrated a not healthy version release cadence and project activity because the last version was released a year ago. It has 1 open source maintainer collaborating on the project.
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