Catalyst::AuthenticatiUserRContribCatalyst::Authentication::Realm::SimpleDB(3)NAMECatalyst::Authentication::Realm::SimpleDB - A simplified Catalyst
authentication configurator.
SYNOPSIS
use Catalyst qw/
Authentication
/;
__PACKAGE__->config->{'Plugin::Authentication'} =
{
default => {
class => 'SimpleDB',
user_model => 'MyApp::User'
}
}
# later on ...
$c->authenticate({ username => 'myusername',
password => 'mypassword' });
my $age = $c->user->get('age');
$c->logout;
DESCRIPTION
The Catalyst::Authentication::Realm::SimpleDB provides a simple way to
configure Catalyst Authentication when using the most common
configuration of a password protected user retrieved from an SQL
database.
CONFIGURATION
The SimpleDB Realm class configures the Catalyst authentication system
based on the following:
· Your user data is stored in a table that is accessible via
$c->model($cfg->{user_model});
· Your passwords are stored in the 'password' field in your users
table and are encrypted using the standard crypt() routine.
· Your roles for users are stored in a separate table and are
directly accessible via a DBIx::Class relationship called 'roles'
and the text of the role is stored in a field called 'role' within
the role table.
· Your user information is stored in the session once the user is
authenticated.
For the above usage, only one configuration option is necessary,
'user_model'. user_model should contain the class name of your user
class. See the "PREPARATION" section for info on how to set up your
database for use with this module.
If your system differs from the above, some minor configuration may be
necessary. The options available are detailed below. These options
match the configuration options used by the underlying credential and
store modules. More information on these options can be found in
Catalyst::Authentication::Credential::Password and
Catalyst::Authentication::Store::DBIx::Class.
user_model
Contains the class name (as passed to $c->model() ) of the
DBIx::Class schema to use as the source for user information. This
config item is REQUIRED.
password_field
If your password field is not 'password' set this option to the
name of your password field. Note that if you change this to, say
'users_password' you will need to use that in the authenticate
call:
$c->authenticate({ username => 'bob', users_password => 'foo' });
password_type
If the password is not stored in plaintext you will need to define
what format the password is in. The common options are crypted and
hashed. Crypted uses the standard unix crypt to encrypt the
password. Hashed uses the Digest modules to perform password
hashing.
password_hash_type
If you use a hashed password type - this defines the type of
hashing. See Catalyst::Authentication::Credential::Password for
more details on this setting.
role_column
If your users roles are stored directly in your user table, set
this to the column name that contains your roles. For example, if
your user table contains a field called 'permissions', the value of
role_column would be 'permissions'. NOTE: If multiple values are
stored in the role column, they should be space or pipe delimited.
role_relation and role_field
These define an alternate role relationship name and the column
that holds the role's name in plain text. See "CONFIGURATION" in
Catalyst::Authentication::Store::DBIx::Class for more details on
these settings.
use_userdata_from_session
This is a simple 1 / 0 setting which determines how a user's data
is saved / restored from the session. If it is set to 1, the
user's complete information (at the time of authentication) is
cached between requests. If it is set to 0, the users information
is loaded from the database on each request.
PREPARATION
This module makes several assumptions about the structure of your
database. Below is an example of a table structure which will function
with this module in it's default configuration. You can use this table
structure as-is or add additional fields as necessary. NOTE that this
is the default SimpleDB configuration only. Your table structure can
differ significantly from this when using the DBIx::Class Store
directly.
--
-- note that you can add any additional columns you require to the users table.
--
CREATE TABLE users (
id INTEGER PRIMARY KEY,
username TEXT,
password TEXT,
);
CREATE TABLE roles (
id INTEGER PRIMARY KEY,
role TEXT
);
CREATE TABLE user_roles (
user_id INTEGER,
role_id INTEGER,
PRIMARY KEY (user_id, role_id)
);
Also, after you have loaded this table structure into your DBIx::Class
schema, please be sure that you have a many_to_many DBIx::Class
relationship defined for the users to roles relation. Your schema files
should contain something along these lines:
"lib/MyApp/Schema/Users.pm":
__PACKAGE__->has_many(map_user_role => 'MyApp::Schema::UserRoles', 'user_id');
__PACKAGE__->many_to_many(roles => 'map_user_role', 'role');
"lib/MyApp/Schema/UserRoles.pm":
__PACKAGE__->belongs_to(role => 'MyApp::Schema::Roles', 'role_id');
MIGRATION
If and when your application becomes complex enough that you need more
features than SimpleDB gives you access to, you can migrate to a
standard Catalyst Authentication configuration fairly easily. SimpleDB
simply creates a standard Auth config based on the inputs you give it.
The config SimpleDB creates by default looks like this:
MyApp->config('Plugin::Authentication') = {
default => {
credential => {
class => 'Password',
password_type => 'crypted'
},
store => {
class => 'DBIx::Class',
role_relation => 'roles',
role_field => 'role',
use_userdata_from_session => '1',
user_model => $user_model_from_simpledb_config
}
}
};
SEE ALSO
This module relies on a number of other modules to do it's job. For
more information you can refer to the following:
· Catalyst::Manual::Tutorial::Authentication
· Catalyst::Plugin::Authentication
· Catalyst::Authentication::Credential::Password
· Catalyst::Authentication::Store::DBIx::Class
· Catalyst::Plugin::Authorization::Roles
perl v5.14.1Catalyst::Authentication::Realm::SimpleDB(3)