In previous implementation of eACL service v2 the response X-headers were
validated at the stage of re-checking eACL. This provoked a mismatch of
records in the eACL table with requests. Fix this behavior by checking the
headers from the request, not the response.
Signed-off-by: Leonard Lyubich <leonard@nspcc.ru>
In previous implementation eACL validator didn't take into account container
and object ID fields of request bodies.
Signed-off-by: Leonard Lyubich <leonard@nspcc.ru>
Sticky bit checks if object owner and request owner are the
same. Container owner should not used in this check.
Signed-off-by: Alex Vanin <alexey@nspcc.ru>
`owner` field may be misused as request sender owner, however
it is a owner of a container for that request. New naming
should be clear.
Signed-off-by: Alex Vanin <alexey@nspcc.ru>
There is a bit to allow or deny bearer token check for
each object service method. If this bit is not set then
ignore bearer token and use extended ACL table from
sidechain.
Signed-off-by: Alex Vanin <alexey@nspcc.ru>
If bearer token is presented in the request then check
if it is a valid one and then use it to process extended
ACL checks.
Signed-off-by: Alex Vanin <alexey@nspcc.ru>
Classifier fetches public key of the request owner
and owner itself. Extended ACL check should rely on
this public key, because it might be extracted from
session token.
Signed-off-by: Alex Vanin <alexey@nspcc.ru>
ACL has to classify request senders by roles:
- owner of the container,
- request from container or inner ring node,
- any other request.
According to this roles ACL checker use different
bits of basic ACL to grant or deny access.
Signed-off-by: Alex Vanin <alexey@nspcc.ru>