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248 lines
9.9 KiB
Text
248 lines
9.9 KiB
Text
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Metadata-Version: 2.0
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Name: aiohttp-auth
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Version: 0.1.1
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Summary: Authorization and authentication middleware plugin for aiohttp.
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Home-page: https://github.com/gnarlychicken/aiohttp_auth
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Author: Gnarly Chicken
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Author-email: gnarlychicken@gmx.com
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License: MIT
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Platform: UNKNOWN
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Classifier: Development Status :: 3 - Alpha
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Classifier: Intended Audience :: Developers
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Classifier: Topic :: Internet :: WWW/HTTP :: Session
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Classifier: License :: OSI Approved :: MIT License
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Classifier: Programming Language :: Python :: 3 :: Only
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Classifier: Programming Language :: Python :: 3.5
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Requires-Dist: aiohttp
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Requires-Dist: ticket-auth
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aiohttp_auth
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============
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This library provides authorization and authentication middleware plugins for
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aiohttp servers.
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These plugins are designed to be lightweight, simple, and extensible, allowing
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the library to be reused regardless of the backend authentication mechanism.
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This provides a familiar framework across projects.
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There are two middleware plugins provided by the library. The auth_middleware
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plugin provides a simple system for authenticating a users credentials, and
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ensuring that the user is who they say they are.
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The acl_middleware plugin provides a simple access control list authorization
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mechanism, where users are provided access to different view handlers depending
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on what groups the user is a member of.
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auth_middleware Usage
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---------------------
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The auth_middleware plugin provides a simple abstraction for remembering and
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retrieving the authentication details for a user across http requests.
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Typically, an application would retrieve the login details for a user, and call
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the remember function to store the details. These details can then be recalled
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in future requests. A simplistic example of users stored in a python dict would
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be::
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from aiohttp_auth import auth
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from aiohttp import web
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# Simplistic name/password map
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db = {'user': 'password',
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'super_user': 'super_password'}
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async def login_view(request):
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params = await request.post()
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user = params.get('username', None)
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if (user in db and
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params.get('password', None) == db[user]):
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# User is in our database, remember their login details
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await auth.remember(request, user)
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return web.Response(body='OK'.encode('utf-8'))
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raise web.HTTPForbidden()
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User data can be verified in later requests by checking that their username is
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valid explicity, or by using the auth_required decorator::
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async def check_explicitly_view(request):
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user = await get_auth(request)
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if user is None:
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# Show login page
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return web.Response(body='Not authenticated'.encode('utf-8'))
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return web.Response(body='OK'.encode('utf-8'))
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@auth.auth_required
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async def check_implicitly_view(request):
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# HTTPForbidden is raised by the decorator if user is not valid
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return web.Response(body='OK'.encode('utf-8'))
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To end the session, the user data can be forgotten by using the forget
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function::
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@auth.auth_required
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async def logout_view(request):
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await auth.forget(request)
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return web.Response(body='OK'.encode('utf-8'))
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The actual mechanisms for storing the authentication credentials are passed as
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a policy to the session manager middleware. New policies can be implemented
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quite simply by overriding the AbstractAuthentication class. The aiohttp_auth
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package currently provides two authentication policies, a cookie based policy
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based loosely on mod_auth_tkt (Apache ticket module), and a second policy that
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uses the aiohttp_session class to store authentication tickets.
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The cookie based policy (CookieTktAuthentication) is a simple mechanism for
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storing the username of the authenticated user in a cookie, along with a hash
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value known only to the server. The cookie contains the maximum age allowed
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before the ticket expires, and can also use the IP address (v4 or v6) of the
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user to link the cookie to that address. The cookies data is not encryptedd,
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but only holds the username of the user and the cookies expiration time, along
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with its security hash::
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def init(loop):
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# Create a auth ticket mechanism that expires after 1 minute (60
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# seconds), and has a randomly generated secret. Also includes the
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# optional inclusion of the users IP address in the hash
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policy = auth.CookieTktAuthentication(urandom(32), 60,
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include_ip=True))
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app = web.Application(loop=loop,
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middlewares=[auth.auth_middleware(policy)])
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app = web.Application()
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app.router.add_route('POST', '/login', login_view)
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app.router.add_route('GET', '/logout', logout_view)
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app.router.add_route('GET', '/test0', check_explicitly_view)
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app.router.add_route('GET', '/test1', check_implicitly_view)
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return app
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The SessionTktAuthentication policy provides many of the same features, but
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stores the same ticket credentials in a aiohttp_session object, allowing
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different storage mechanisms such as Redis storage, and
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EncryptedCookieStorage::
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from aiohttp_session import get_session, session_middleware
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from aiohttp_session.cookie_storage import EncryptedCookieStorage
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def init(loop):
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# Create a auth ticket mechanism that expires after 1 minute (60
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# seconds), and has a randomly generated secret. Also includes the
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# optional inclusion of the users IP address in the hash
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policy = auth.SessionTktAuthentication(urandom(32), 60,
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include_ip=True))
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middlewares = [session_middleware(EncryptedCookieStorage(urandom(32))),
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auth.auth_middleware(policy)]
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app = web.Application(loop=loop, middlewares=middlewares)
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...
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acl_middleware Usage
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---------------------
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The acl_middleware plugin (provided by the aiohttp_auth library), is layered
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on top of the auth_middleware plugin, and provides a access control list (ACL)
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system similar to that used by the Pyramid WSGI module.
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Each user in the system is assigned a series of groups. Each group in the
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system can then be assigned permissions that they are allowed (or not allowed)
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to access. Groups and permissions are user defined, and need only be immutable
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objects, so they can be strings, numbers, enumerations, or other immutable
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objects.
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To specify what groups a user is a member of, a function is passed to the
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acl_middleware factory which taks a user_id (as returned from the
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auth.get_auth function) as a parameter, and expects a sequence of permitted ACL
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groups to be returned. This can be a empty tuple to represent no explicit
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permissions, or None to explicitly forbid this particular user_id. Note that
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the user_id passed may be None if no authenticated user exists. Building apon
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our example, a function may be defined as::
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from aiohttp_auth import acl
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group_map = {'user': (,),
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'super_user': ('edit_group',),}
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async def acl_group_callback(user_id):
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# The user_id could be None if the user is not authenticated, but in
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# our example, we allow unauthenticated users access to some things, so
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# we return an empty tuple.
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return group_map.get(user_id, tuple())
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def init(loop):
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...
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middlewares = [session_middleware(EncryptedCookieStorage(urandom(32))),
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auth.auth_middleware(policy),
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acl.acl_middleware(acl_group_callback)]
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app = web.Application(loop=loop, middlewares=middlewares)
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...
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Note that the ACL groups returned by the function will be modified by the
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acl_middleware to also include the Group.Everyone group (if the value returned
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is not None), and also the Group.AuthenticatedUser and user_id if the user_id
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is not None.
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With the groups defined, a ACL context can be specified for looking up what
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permissions each group is allowed to access. A context is a sequence of ACL
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tuples which consist of a Allow/Deny action, a group, and a sequence of
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permissions for that ACL group. For example::
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from aiohttp_auth.permissions import Group, Permission
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context = [(Permission.Allow, Group.Everyone, ('view',)),
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(Permission.Allow, Group.AuthenticatedUser, ('view', 'view_extra')),
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(Permission.Allow, 'edit_group', ('view', 'view_extra', 'edit')),]
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Views can then be defined using the acl_required decorator, allowing only
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specific users access to a particular view. The acl_required decorator
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specifies a permission required to access the view, and a context to check
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against::
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@acl_required('view', context)
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async def view_view(request):
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return web.Response(body='OK'.encode('utf-8'))
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@acl_required('view_extra', context)
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async def view_extra_view(request):
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return web.Response(body='OK'.encode('utf-8'))
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@acl_required('edit', context)
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async def edit_view(request):
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return web.Response(body='OK'.encode('utf-8'))
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In our example, non-logged in users will have access to the view_view, 'user'
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will have access to both the view_view and view_extra_view, and 'super_user'
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will have access to all three views. If no ACL group of the user matches the
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ACL permission requested by the view, the decorator raises HTTPForbidden.
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ACL tuple sequences are checked in order, with the first tuple that matches the
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group the user is a member of, AND includes the permission passed to the
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function, declared to be the matching ACL group. This means that if the ACL
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context was modified to::
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context = [(Permission.Allow, Group.Everyone, ('view',)),
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(Permission.Deny, 'super_user', ('view_extra')),
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(Permission.Allow, Group.AuthenticatedUser, ('view', 'view_extra')),
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(Permission.Allow, 'edit_group', ('view', 'view_extra', 'edit')),]
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In this example the 'super_user' would be denied access to the view_extra_view
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even though they are an AuthenticatedUser and in the edit_group.
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License
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-------
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The library is licensed under a MIT license.
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