logic before dispatcher + controller? - model-view-controller

I believe for a typical MVC web application the router / dispatcher routine is used to decide which controller is loaded based primarily on the area requested in the url by the user.
However, in addition to checking the url query string, I also like to use the dispatcher to check whether the user is currently logged in or not to decide which controller is loaded. For example if they are logged in and request the login page, the dispatcher would load their account instead.
But is this a fairly non-standard design? Would it violate MVC in any way? I only ask as the examples I've read through this weekend have had no major calculations performed before the dispatcher routine, and commonly check whether the user is logged in or not per controller, and then redirect where necessary.
But to me it seems odd to redirect a logged in user from the login area to account area if you could just load the account controller in the first place?
I hope I've explained my consternation well enough, but could anyone offer some details on how they handle logged in users, and similar session data?

The current MVC framework that I'm using has pre dispatched and post dispatched features. I normally place the login checking in the predispatch process rather than directly putting it in the dispatcher. Also, an authentication class may do the job for you.

This seems to be fair requirement, and can be achieved using a intercepting filter. The request header can be inspected and flagged as an attempt to login, or mark as a malicious attempt. Alternatively the dispatcher can delegate this to a different controller which can do the same and redirect the request appropriately. MVC is all about segregation of intelligence in the application. This case falls under sanity check (technical requriement than a business requirement).

Related

After session expires redirect to login page in yii

I am developing an web application which has several levels and modules. In application everything working fine.
If users are not working after logging they leave the application in login state and try to use it after 1 hour then session expires and system sate variables are lost. So in this case application not redirecting to login page (site/login) which is bad user experience.
I am not able to identify what the problem is. How can i fix this ?
A way of solving this would be to have your controllers not extend from CController directly.
You could have an intermediate controller say ModuleController that extends CController.
Then all your controllers extend that controller.
Override beforeAction() in ModuleController and check whether sessions are set and redirect to login if not.
So every time a user tries to access a page it will first check for whether the session is set. You could use ACL to fine tune this better.
This method could be applied to a variety of issues in Yii development.
Hope this helps!

Why is auth typically in the Controller in MVC?

I've been doing a lot of tutorials for different MVC frameworks, and it seems very typical for Authorization to take place in the Controller. Why?
My thought is the Controller should only be used to orchestrate Model actions, to handle redirection and to handle error events. These are the things that are dependent on the specific request. Putting Authorization in the Controller seems like you're going to have to duplicate the authorization whenever you're using the same Model action in different Controller actions or different Controllers. If Auth is in the Model, you have consistent requirements for carrying out an action or state change on the data.
I've been googling and looking at other questions such as Should authorization be part of the model or controller? but I don't really see why it's the accepted convention.
Is there a specific reason I'm missing for putting Authorization in the controller over the model?
To sum up points in the comments:
Controllers are responsible for altering the state of the model layer and the current view. Nothing else.
Authorization belongs where an action is being carried out, if you're following a strict MVC pattern this would most likely be the model, and a Controller is certainly not responsible for authorizing the use of model actions.
Cookies should be treated like any other datastore: abstracted and used within the models, not directly by controllers.
Authentication and Authorization are separate issues, though they both usually go in the model layer, because they usually involve checks against values in datastores (such as cookies).
Is there a specific reason I'm missing for putting Authorization in the controller over the model?
Well, the most common reason I can imagine is laziness. I don't mean that morally, it's just far easier to flunge some authorization concept on top into a layer that is more close to the concrete request then to have differentiated access on the model layer. To have authorization with the models is a much higher design.
To add some more practical advice to the answer, I think you should analyse for each program where and for what you would want to introduce authorization. The needs for that can be (extremely) different.
Then only in the next step you should think about which design is most beneficial to introduce authorization and authentication to fulfill these needs.
In an MVC approach, you need to put security in a location where:
it cannot be circumvented
it can be configured, managed and updated easily
This applies - as a matter of fact - to any architecture / type of application.
Specifically, in MVC, imagine you put authorization in the view. For instance you decide to control who can approve a transaction by enabling / disabling a button. A user of your view will not be able to approve a transaction if he/she is not allowed. Imagine now that you expose your controller over an API rather than a view. The approve authorization check now needs to be reimplemented in the API layer.
This example shows you are better off moving authorization away from the view / the different end-points and into a common, central point - your controller.
Similarly, if you want to control access to large sets of data (e.g. medical records), you ideally want to put the authorization in the model. This is both for performance reasons and for security reasons: you'd rather have the controller handle less data and you should always strive to protect as close as possible to the source of the sensitive data.
Note that having authorization hooks / checks in the view, controller, and model at the same time may lead to an altogether enhanced experience. See authorization in the view as a "safety / usability" mechanism whereby a user is only presenetd with those relevant menus and widgets on screen based on their permissions. If they were malicious and knew their way around the UI to the controller, authorization there would still kick in.
Finally, generally speaking, you want to decouple non-functional requirements / logic from functional requirements / logic. Much like you do not implement logging in code but use a configurable framework (e.g. Log4J) or you rely on the container for authentication (e.g. HTTP BASIC in Apache Tomcat), you want to use an externalized authorization framework such as Claims-based authorization in the Microsofct MVC4 world, Spring Security in Java, CanCan in Ruby, or XACML, a standard part of the same body as SAML (OASIS) and which will let you apply authorization to any type of application and any layer.
Authorization as an entire process should be involved in both: Controller and Model layers.
But, all the logc (SQL queries, etc) should definitely happen in the model.
Controller is kind of an intermediate layer between the view (representation) and the Model.
But, you simply cannot throw away the Controller from this scheme, because Controller is responsible for handling Sessions and Cookies. Without these two things all your Authentication/Authorization logic is useless, because it is stateless by its nature. Sessions and Cookies bring state to it.
Moreover, as you correctly mentioned, Controller is responsible for redirects.

Wicket authorization: Grant access based on page model

I'm developing a fairly standard web application with Wicket, Spring & Hibernate. I've been using wicket-auth-roles and spring-security to authenticate users, and now want to add more fine grained authorizations to my applications.
In my applications users are members of groups, and groups have access to a subset of Hibernate objects that I use as wicket IModel objects. As such the decision whether or not a user may view certain page does not depend on the page path, but on the page model. (Most implementations of authorization for Wicket I've seen either grant access to a url or restrict it; they do not perform any checks on the model object.)
At present I've implemented this restriction as a custom IAuthorizationStrategy like this:
#Override
public boolean isActionAuthorized(final Component component, final Action action) {
if (!(component instanceof GenePage))
// We only check access to the GenePage for now
return true;
// Figure out from component what Gene the user is trying to view
Gene gene = (Gene) component.getDefaultModelObject();
User user = MySession.get().getUserModel().getObject();
return geneDAO.hasAccess(user, gene);
}
The problem with this implementation is that it fully composes the page and only in Page#onConfigure throws an uncaught UnauthorizedActionException. So far I've been unable to catch this exception, so it's logged as a problem even though it's part of the normal program flow. Fully composing the page also triggers a few actions in my page constructor and Page#onInitialize that I would only like to run if the user may actually view the Page.
Can anyone recommend me a better approach to restrict page access based on whether users have access to the Model object?
Solutions that tie in anywhere along the stack using Hibernate, Spring, Spring Security, Wicket and/or Wicket-Auth-Roles would be preferred. I know there are other wicket auth-integrations out there, so if you feel those could help in this instance, please let me know!
I feel that you expect a weird behaviour. This authz mechanism is designed to protect against Insecure Direct Object Reference Vulnerabilities. So you should not use it as a "part of the normal program flow". If you have kind of valid use cases then such kind of "hasAccess" failures should be handled somehow differently as valid behaviour, you should use some other mechanism, probably something custom built, as in most cases it will be very specific to your application.

check for username against password in base controller mvc 3

I want to know how can I force a user to log in the the application again if the page is being opened in new tab or new browser.
Edit:-
My apologies I misunderstood the requirement.
I am authenticating the user in my log-in page but not anywhere else. So what is happening because of that, even if i log out of application and type url say bla.com/apple I can access my application.
I figured to prevent this from happening, I have to write a base controller that checks for the right user. Am I moving in the right direction.
Thanks
Addressing the edit -
Authentication can be handled per controller or on individual actions. Simple place the [Authorize] attribute appropriately. This assumes however that somewhere an authentication token is being set. [Authorize] checks against the HttpContext's current User (an IPrincipal).
You mentioned above that you're just validating against a local username and password, in one place, so I'm guessing that no token (session, cookie) are being set?
You have a few options here to get that token stored and persisted across requests:
ASP.Net integrated membership provider (Intro)
A custom MembershipProvider (Example)
Full-on custom flow. (Example)
Each has ups and downs and depends on how exactly you want to handle on-boarding your users. It's hard to answer more specifically because it can be a very large topic (and a very broad question).
Here's the official pages for MVC security.

Should authorization be part of the model or controller?

I'm writing a web application with some ACL requirements: a user can make changes to some items, some items may be editable by several users, administrator can edit anything and a manager can edit everything within her organization etc.
I'm using the Play! framework, and by the looks of the Secure module, it seems that the place to put authorization concerns is in the Controllers. However, it seems to me that the authorization issues are part of the business logic, and therefore should be in the model. Furthermore, I'm starting to see duplicated logic in the controllers that I need to refactor out.
On the other hand, adding authorization to the model means that I'd have to have some way of getting the current user from within the model, which doesn't seem right. Alternatively, I could add a "current_user" parameter to every model method, but that seems even worse.
So what is the common practice? Can/should I put authorization code in the model, or keep it in the controller?
I think this is a grey area. One could argue that the user access is part of the mapping between the HTTP world and the Object-Oriented world. This is what the controller is intended for (hence the heavy use of statics), to transform the incoming request, ready to process the business rules on the domain model.
I would suggest that the controller logic is absolutely the right place for controlling the access to the model, especially as this is managed largely at an annotation level, and the authentication is abstracted off to a Security class.
Authorization should neither be part of controller or domain model.
Instead it should be in the service layer.
Controller should just act as dispatcher and delegate between HTTP and application service.
It's the application service where the orchestration takes place. This is the best place for placing authorization.
Suppose user A is authorized to access data from domain X, but not authorized for even a read access for data from domain Y. If authorization is placed in the controller, then user A gets authorized in the controller X, and via the service calls can access data from domain Y, which is not what we expected.
Since domain models communicate with each other on service layer, hence it best to place the authorization on the same level.
In most cases, the security should be one (or more) layer above the Model. Security is a domain on it's own, restricting access to a lower level layer.
I don't think the security should be done at the controller level.
In my opinion, this should look like that:
View -> Controller -> Security -> Model
The security layer could be a façade or a proxy over the model, protecting access, but be transparent to the controller.
However, if the views are to be modified depending on the access rights of the user, some checks might have to happen at the controller level (like setting the value of a CanEdit boolean property on the ViewModel).
I personally really like the way the Play! Secure module handles this (the tutorial is ever-helpful here). If you don't mind using the #Before annotation, it's pretty painless.
I am at this stage and intending to handle this in the following way:
No form validation by JS, instead via HTTPS ajax
An Ajax php class
Form data sent to a model as its data for concrete validation for
common type such as email and password (likely assoc array validation will be reused by other classes so this is definately a model area).
if no error a lookup in a User table for the credentials email /
password credentials passed to a Controller with the authentication
type such as login / signup / password reset
the controller then produces the required output view or sets user logged in session etc
This is based in Laravel but I have my own library as want it independent of laravel and just loosely based for this vital requirement.
The point being that the Model looks up the required credentials as data, then sends to the Controller as it does not care how it should be processed. I think this is the only way to make this area a definitive responsibility between each of the components.
From my personal experience with MVC frameworks I would say:
Model is an object that is representing database table it should be
pure and should not contain any additional logic.
Controller is the place where are made the decisions and other
custom logic, so the authorization should be in the controller. It
could be designed some hook that can check if the user is authorized
or not in all needed places so you wont have a code repetition DRY.
The best way to give permission to user if you are using a typical
REST architecture is to make a token , save it in the databse and on
client side and verify this token on every request. If you are using
web browser app you can use server-side sessions for authorization (
Its much more easier).
So my propose is to keep the authorization logic in the Controller.
I'll use Rails as an example. The authorization library, pundit, places authorization firmly within the "model" domain - this is enforced through their helper methods.
Suppose you have a ShoppingBag model. You might want to create a ShoppingBag
class ShoppingBagController
def create
authorize ShoppingBag.new, current_user
end
end
It works really well if you have a 1-1 mapping between a model and a controller. But what if you need a second controller on the same model? Now you're stuck!
class DiscountedShoppingBagController
def create
authorize ShoppingBag.new, current_user # does not work for us. we want a slightly different authorization, on the same model.
end
end
It's for that reason I dislike pundit, and CanCanCan. Authorization at the controller level, for me, is ideal. Doing so on the model level limits me too much, without any commensurate gain.

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