[security-dev] IDM Configuration API
Boleslaw Dawidowicz
bdawidow at redhat.com
Tue Nov 6 16:35:11 EST 2012
Also +1. It looks really good.
I assume the strategy to handle operations when two stores are configured is IdentityManager implementation area. I wonder if we should make this part also more flexible in some way. Not really thinking about IdentityStoreRepository kind of design I had in 1.x as it is probably a bit too much. However it should be at least easy to extend DefaultIdentityManager to add some customizations to how specific operations are handled. Or we should have something like GenericIdentityManager for such purpose.
Looking forward to see your ideas around design of event handling part. I think it will be critical to truly pluggable and extendable.
On Nov 6, 2012, at 5:35 PM, Jason Porter <lightguard.jp at gmail.com> wrote:
> +1 at all sounds good to me.
>
>
> On Tue, Nov 6, 2012 at 3:08 AM, Shane Bryzak <sbryzak at redhat.com> wrote:
>> Hey guys,
>>
>> For the past few days I've been wracking my brain trying to come up with
>> a design for the IDM configuration API that doesn't suck, and allows
>> easy configuration in both Java SE and EE environments while maintaining
>> separation between the API and implementation. I think I've come up
>> with something that's quite flexible and extensible, so I'd like to run
>> it past everyone for some feedback.
>>
>> The starting point for configuring the Identity Management API is a
>> concrete class called IdentityConfiguration:
>>
>> public class IdentityConfiguration {
>> private List<IdentityStoreConfiguration> configuredStores = new
>> ArrayList<IdentityStoreConfiguration>();
>> public List<IdentityStoreConfiguration> getConfiguredStores() {
>> return configuredStores;
>> }
>> public void addStoreConfiguration(IdentityStoreConfiguration config) {
>> configuredStores.add(config);
>> }
>> }
>>
>> This class simply provides a holder for one or more
>> IdentityStoreConfiguration(s), an abstract class that provides the
>> basics for configuring an IdentityStore:
>>
>> public abstract class IdentityStoreConfiguration {
>> private final Map<String,String> properties = new
>> HashMap<String,String>();
>> private final Set<Feature> supportedFeatures = new HashSet<Feature>();
>> public Set<Feature> getSupportedFeatures() {
>> return supportedFeatures;
>> }
>> public void addSupportedFeature(Feature feature) {
>> supportedFeatures.add(feature);
>> }
>> public void removeSupportedFeature(Feature feature) {
>> supportedFeatures.remove(feature);
>> }
>> public void setProperty(String name, String value) {
>> properties.put(name, value);
>> }
>> public String getPropertyValue(String name) {
>> return properties.get(name);
>> }
>> }
>>
>> Each IdentityStore implementation (such as JPAIdentityStore,
>> LDAPIdentityStore, etc) should have a corresponding
>> IdentityStoreConfiguration implementation that provides an API for
>> setting specific property values for its IdentityStore. For example,
>> this is the one for JPAIdentityStore which allows a number of entity
>> classes to be set:
>>
>> public class JPAIdentityStoreConfiguration extends
>> IdentityStoreConfiguration {
>> private Class<?> identityClass;
>> private Class<?> membershipClass;
>> private Class<?> credentialClass;
>> private Class<?> attributeClass;
>> public Class<?> getIdentityClass() {
>> return identityClass;
>> }
>> public void setIdentityClass(Class<?> identityClass) {
>> this.identityClass = identityClass;
>> }
>> public Class<?> getCredentialClass() {
>> return credentialClass;
>> }
>> public void setCredentialClass(Class<?> credentialClass) {
>> this.credentialClass = credentialClass;
>> }
>> public Class<?> getMembershipClass() {
>> return membershipClass;
>> }
>> public void setMembershipClass(Class<?> membershipClass) {
>> this.membershipClass = membershipClass;
>> }
>> public Class<?> getAttributeClass() {
>> return attributeClass;
>> }
>> public void setAttributeClass(Class<?> attributeClass) {
>> this.attributeClass = attributeClass;
>> }
>> }
>>
>> The IdentityStore-specific configurations are intended to be part of the
>> API, so they should be placed in the API module within the
>> org.picketlink.idm.config package.
>>
>> After creating an IdentityConfiguration, you can create an
>> IdentityManager and provide the configuration via the bootstrap() method:
>>
>> IdentityConfiguration identityConfig = new IdentityConfiguration();
>> JPAIdentityStoreConfiguration storeConfig = new
>> JPAIdentityStoreConfiguration();
>> // snip storeConfig configuration
>>
>> identityConfig.addStoreConfiguration(storeConfig);
>>
>> IdentityManager identityManager = new DefaultIdentityManager();
>> identityManager.bootstrap(identityConfig, new
>> DefaultIdentityStoreInvocationContextFactory(null));
>>
>> The reason we use bootstrap() instead of performing configuration in the
>> constructor is so the developer has a chance to override the
>> IdentityStoreFactory. This is an SPI interface that defines a couple of
>> methods which are used to control which IdentityStoreConfigurations
>> correspond to which IdentityStore.
>>
>> public interface IdentityStoreFactory {
>> /**
>> * Creates an instance of an IdentityStore using the provided
>> configuration
>> *
>> * @param config
>> * @return
>> */
>> IdentityStore createIdentityStore(IdentityStoreConfiguration config);
>>
>> /**
>> * Maps specific implementations of IdentityStoreConfiguration to a
>> corresponding
>> * IdentityStore implementation.
>> *
>> * @param configClass
>> * @param storeClass
>> */
>> void mapConfiguration(Class<? extends IdentityStoreConfiguration>
>> configClass,
>> Class<? extends IdentityStore> storeClass);
>> }
>>
>> By default, the DefaultIdentityManager will create and use an instance
>> of DefaultIdentityStoreFactory - this factory knows about all the
>> built-in IdentityStore implementations and can create IdentityStore
>> instances based on their corresponding IdentityStoreConfiguration. If a
>> developer wished to provide their own IdentityStore though (or override
>> the behaviour of one of the built-in ones) then we need to provide a
>> hook to allow them to override the default factory with their own. This
>> is provided by the IdentityManager.setIdentityStoreFactory() method - by
>> invoking this method with a new IdentityStoreFactory the developer can
>> provide an alternative factory for creating IdentityStore instances
>> based on non built-in configurations before bootstrap() is called.
>>
>> Here's an example where the built-in identity stores are supplemented
>> with support for a native Hibernate-based identity store:
>>
>> IdentityManager identityManager = new DefaultIdentityManager();
>>
>> DefaultIdentityStoreFactory factory = new DefaultIdentityStoreFactory();
>> factory.mapConfiguration(HibernateIdentityStoreConfiguration.class,
>> HibernateIdentityStore.class);
>> identityManager.setIdentityStoreFactory(factory);
>>
>> identityManager.bootstrap(identityConfig, new
>> DefaultIdentityStoreInvocationContextFactory(null));
>>
>> The last piece of the puzzle is the second parameter to the bootstrap()
>> method. This parameter should be an instance of
>> IdentityStoreInvocationContextFactory (I know, it's a mouthful), an SPI
>> interface that declares a single method:
>>
>> public interface IdentityStoreInvocationContextFactory {
>> IdentityStoreInvocationContext getContext(IdentityStore store);
>> }
>>
>> The implementation of this interface is responsible for creating
>> IdentityStoreInvocationContext instances, which are passed as a
>> parameter value to pretty much all of the IdentityStore methods and
>> allow the IdentityStore implementation to be shared between multiple
>> threads (i.e. a stateless design). The IdentityStoreInvocationContext
>> is responsible for providing the IdentityStore with any state (besides
>> the IdentityStore configuration) required to execute its requested
>> operation. It also provides a gateway to the event bridge, which allows
>> events to be raised during an IdentityStore operation and propagated to
>> any environment, such as the CDI event bus. The
>> IdentityStoreInvocationContext implementation/s are currently still a
>> work in progress, however the basic API should not change.
>>
>> This essentially wraps up the description of the configuration API. What
>> I haven't touched upon yet are the builders (classes that parse a
>> configuration source such as a file to create an
>> IdentityStoreConfiguration) however I'm hoping Anil that you might want
>> to have a go at this.
>>
>> With these changes comes a small TO-DO list:
>>
>> 1) IdentityStoreConfiguration implementations should be created in the
>> API module within the org.picketlink.idm.config package for each of the
>> IdentityStore implementations (we already have one for LDAP, but it
>> needs to be moved and possibly renamed to LDAPIdentityStoreConfiguration
>> for consistency).
>>
>> 2) During the course of the refactor I had to provide workarounds for
>> many of the tests, and I also managed to totally break quite a few
>> others. The test suite needs a quick review to see why the tests are
>> broken, and once configurations are provided for the other identity
>> stores the workarounds can be removed.
>>
>> 3) The getFeatureSet() method should be correctly implemented for all
>> IdentityStores. With the change to the configuration API we now have
>> proper support for partitioning, and it's important that this method
>> accurately reflect the underlying capabilities of the IdentityStore
>> implementation for this feature to work correctly.
>>
>> Thanks for listening, and I'm looking forward to getting some feedback
>> on this!
>>
>> Shane
>> _______________________________________________
>> security-dev mailing list
>> security-dev at lists.jboss.org
>> https://lists.jboss.org/mailman/listinfo/security-dev
>
>
>
> --
> Jason Porter
> http://lightguard-jp.blogspot.com
> http://twitter.com/lightguardjp
>
> Software Engineer
> Open Source Advocate
>
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