'$RCSfile: eml-access.xsd,v $'
Copyright: 1997-2002 Regents of the University of California,
University of New Mexico, and
Arizona State University
Sponsors: National Center for Ecological Analysis and Synthesis and
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Other funding: National Science Foundation (see README for details)
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For Details: http://knb.ecoinformatics.org/
'$Author: jones $'
'$Date: 2009-03-05 18:59:36 $'
'$Revision: 1.82 $'
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eml-access
The eml-access module - Access control rules for resources
The eml-access module describes the level of access that is
to be allowed or denied to a resource for a particular user or
group of users, and can be described independently for metadata
and data. The eml-access
module uses a reference to a particular authentication system
to determine the set of principals (users or groups) that can be
specified in the access rules.
The special principal 'public' can be used to indicate that any
user or group has access permission, thereby making
it easier to specify that anonymous access is allowed.
There are two mechanisms for including access control
via the eml-access module:
1) The top-level "eml" element may have an optional
<access> element
that is used to establish the default access
control for the entire EML package.
If this access element is omitted from the
document, then the package submitter should be
given full access to the package but all other users should
be denied all access. To allow the package to be publicly viewable,
the EML author must explicitly include a rule stating so.
2) Exceptions for particular entity-level
components of the package can be controlled at a finer grain by
using an access description in that entity's physical/distribution
tree.
When access control rules are specified at this level, they apply
only to the data in the parent distribution element, and not to the metadata.
Thus, it will control access to the content of the <inline>
element, as well as resources that are referenced by the
<online/url> and <online/connection> paths.
These exceptions to access for particular data resources are
applied after the default access rules at the package-level have been
applied,
so they effectively override the default rules when they overlap.
In previous versions of EML access rules for entity-level
distribution were contained
in <additionalMetadata> sections and referenced via the
<describes> tag. Although in theory these could have referenced
any node, in application such node-level access control is problematic.
Since the most common uses of access control rules were to limit access
to specific data entities, the access tree has been placed there explicitly
in EML 2.1.0.
Access is specified with a choice of child elements, either <allow>
or <deny>. Within these rules, values can be assigned for each
<principal> using the <permission>
element. Users given "read" permission can view the resource;
"write" allows changes to the resource excluding changes to the
access rules; "changePermission" includes "write" plus the
changing of access rules. Users allowed "all" permissions; may do all
of the above.
An example is given below, with non-critical sections deleted:
<eml>
<access
authSystem="ldap://ldap.ecoinformatics.org:389/dc=ecoinformatics,dc=org"
order="allowFirst">
<allow>
<principal>uid=alice,o=NASA,dc=ecoinformatics,dc=org</principal>
<permission>read</permission>
<permission>write</permission>
<allow>
</access>
<dataset>
...
...
<dataTable id="entity123">
...
<physical>
...
<distribution>
...
<access id="access123"
authSystem="ldap://ldap.ecoinformatics.org:389/dc=ecoinformatics,dc=org"
order="allowFirst">
<deny>
<principal>uid=alice,o=NASA,dc=ecoinformatics,dc=org</principal>
<permission>write</permission>
</deny>
</access>
</distribution>
</physical>
</dataTable>
<dataTable id="entity234">
...
<physical>
...
<distribution>
...
<access>
<references>access123</references>
</access>
</distribution>
</physical>
</dataTable>
...
</dataset>
<eml>
In this example, the overall default access is to allow the
user=alice (but no one else) to read and write all metadata and data.
However,
under "entity123" and "entity234", there is an additional rule
saying that user=alice does not have write permission. The net
effect is that Alice can read and make changes to the metadata,
but cannot make changes to the two data entities. In addition, Alice
cannot change these access rules; although the submitter can.
This example also shows how the eml-access module, like other modules,
may be "referenced" via the <references> tag. This
allows an access control document to be described once, and then
used as a reference in other locations within the EML document
via its ID.
In summary, access rules can be applied in two places in an
eml document. Default access rules are established
in the top <access> element for the main eml document (e.g.,
"/eml/access"). These default rules can be overridden
for particular data entities by adding additional <access>
elements in the physical/distribution trees of those entities.
all data where controlling user access to the
dataset is an issue
yes
Access control rules
The rules defined in this element will determine the level
of access to a resource for the defined users and groups.
The access element contains a list of rules defining
permissions for this resource. For descriptions of the individual elements,
see the AccessType.The permission rules defined here can be overridden
by rules added to an access tree in the PhysicalDistributionType
at the entity level.
See the description of the AccessType.
Access control rules
The rules defined in this element will determine the level
of access to a resource for the defined users and groups.
The access element contains a list of rules that define
the level of access for a resource. There are two uses of access trees: to
control access to either metadata or data. To control access to metadata
use the eml/access tree. By default, these rules will also apply to the contained
data. To override the default controls for specific data entities, use the
access element available in the entity's physical/distribution tree. A
combination of access trees and their "order rules" (see description of
the "order" attribute) allows EML authors
to have fine control over permissions for individuals and groups.
Allow rule
A rule that grants a permission
type.
The allow element indicates that a particular
user or group is granted the defined permission.
allow
Deny rule
A rule that revokes a permission
type.
The deny element indicates that a particular
user or group is not granted the defined
permission.
deny
Rule order
The order in which the allow and deny rules should be
applied.
To obtain the desired access control, use the order
attribute to define which rules should be applied first. The acceptable
values are 'allowFirst' and 'denyFirst'. If 'allowFirst' is
specified, then all 'allow' rules are processed, and then overridden
by all 'deny' rules. If 'denyFirst' is specified, then all 'deny'
rules are processed, and then overridden by all 'allow' rules.
allowFirst
Authentication system
The authentication system is used to verify the user or
group to whom access is allowed or denied.
The authentication system determines the set of
principals (users + groups) that can be used in the access control
list, and the membership of users in groups. This element is intended
to provide a reference to the authentication system that is used to
verify the user or group. This reference is typically in the form
of a URI, which includes the connection protocol, Internet host, and
path to the authentication mechanism.
ldap://ldap.ecoinformatics.org:389/dc=ecoinformatics,dc=org
Access Rule
Access Rules define a user's access to a
resource.
The AccessRule type defines a list of users that are
derived from a particular authentication system (such as an LDAP
directory), whether the user or group is allowed or denied access, the
extent of their access (read, write , or changePermission
access).
User or group
The user or group (principal) for which the access
control applies.
The principal element defines the user or group to
which the access control rule applies. The users and groups must be
defined in the authentication system described in the authSystem
element. The special principal 'public' can be used to indicate
that any user or group has a particular access permission, thereby
making it easier to specify that anonymous access is allowed.
public
uid=alice,o=LTER,dc=ecoinformatics,dc=org
Type of permission
The type of permission being granted or denied.
The permission that is being granted or denied
to a particular user or group for a given resource. The list of
permissions come from a predetermined list:
'read' - allow or deny viewing of the resource,
'write' - allow or deny modification of the resource (except for access rules),
'changePermission' - modifications including access rules, and
'all' - all of the above.
This element also allows other permission values that may be applicable to some other authentication systems but are not defined in this specification (if these other values are used, access rule enforcement is indeterminate outside of the originating system).
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