Skip to content

ThundR67/scope

Folders and files

NameName
Last commit message
Last commit date

Latest commit

 

History

13 Commits
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 

Repository files navigation

Go Report Card GoDoc GoCover

Scope

Easily Manage OAuth2 Scopes In Go

Scope Matching Using Wildcard Strategy

import "github.com/SonicRoshan/scope"

scopeA := "read:user:*"
scopeB := "read:user:username"

doesMatch := scope.MatchScopes(scopeA, scopeB)

This strategy will work like this :-

  • users.* matches users.read
  • users.* matches users.read.foo
  • users.read matches users.read
  • users does not match users.read
  • users.read.* does not match users.read
  • users.*.* does not match users.read
  • users.*.* matches users.read.own
  • users.*.* matches users.read.own.other
  • users.read.* matches users.read.own
  • users.read.* matches users.read.own.other
  • users.write.* does not match users.read.own
  • users.*.bar matches users.baz.bar
  • users.*.bar does not users.baz.baz.bar

Filtering Struct For Read Request

When a client request certain data, this function will eliminate any data in the struct for which the client does not have a read scope.

type user struct {
    username string `readScope:"user:read:username"`
    email string `readScope:"user:read:email"`
}


func main() {
    output := user{username : "Test", email : "[email protected]"}
    scopesHeldByClient := []string{"user:read:username"}
    scope.FilterRead(output, scopesHeldByClient)

    // Now output.email will be nil as client does not have scope required to read email field

    output := user{username : "Test", email : "[email protected]"}
    scopesHeldByClient := []string{"user:read:*"}
    scope.FilterRead(&output, scopesHeldByClient)

    // Now none of the field in output will be nil as client has scopes to read everything in user struct
}

About

Easily Manage OAuth2 Scopes In Go

Resources

License

Stars

Watchers

Forks

Releases

No releases published

Packages

No packages published

Languages