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Role-based access control (RBAC) and permission management extension for oauth2fast-fastapi

Project description

permissions2fast-fastapi

🔒 Role-Based Access Control (RBAC) extension for oauth2fast-fastapi.

Easily manage user roles and permissions in your FastAPI application with support for High-Performance Redis Caching.

Features

  • 👥 Role Management: Create, assign, and manage roles for users.
  • 🔑 Granular Permissions: Define specific permissions and assign them to roles or directly to users (polymorphic assignments).
  • Redis Caching (Optional): High-performance permission evaluation using Redis to minimize database lookups.
  • �🛡️ Route Protection: Dependencies to protect endpoints based on roles or permissions.
  • Async Support: Fully async database interactions via pgsqlasync2fast-fastapi.
  • 🔌 Seamless Integration: Built to extend oauth2fast-fastapi.

Installation

pip install permissions2fast-fastapi

Configuration

This package uses the same database connection logic as oauth2fast-fastapi. Configure your environment variables in .env.

Basic Settings

# Database Configuration
DB_CONNECTIONS__AUTH__USERNAME=db_user
DB_CONNECTIONS__AUTH__PASSWORD=db_password
DB_CONNECTIONS__AUTH__HOST=localhost
DB_CONNECTIONS__AUTH__DATABASE=db_name
DB_CONNECTIONS__AUTH__PORT=5432

Advanced Features (Redis)

You can enable Redis caching by setting the following environment variables:

PERMISSIONS_REDIS_RBAC_ENABLED=True

# Redis connection details (if caching is enabled)
PERMISSIONS_REDIS__HOST=localhost
PERMISSIONS_REDIS__PORT=6379
PERMISSIONS_REDIS__DB=0
# PERMISSIONS_REDIS__PASSWORD=your_redis_password

Usage

1. Basic Integration

from fastapi import FastAPI
from permissions2fast_fastapi import permissions_router, roles_router
from oauth2fast_fastapi import router as auth_router

app = FastAPI()

app.include_router(auth_router)
app.include_router(permissions_router)
app.include_router(roles_router)

2. Protecting Routes

Use the provided dependencies to restrict access to endpoints. The system will automatically check Redis cache if enabled, and fallback to database queries if needed.

from fastapi import Depends
from permissions2fast_fastapi.dependencies import has_permission, has_role
from oauth2fast_fastapi.models import User

# Require a specific role
@app.get("/admin-dashboard")
async def admin_dashboard(user: User = Depends(has_role("admin"))):
    return {"message": "Welcome Admin"}

# Require a specific permission
@app.get("/edit-post")
async def edit_post(user: User = Depends(has_permission("posts.edit"))):
    return {"message": "You can edit posts"}

3. Using the Default Seeder

To quickly set up default access control for the package routes itself (admin role and necessary permissions to add/remove routes, roles, and permissions), you can use the built-in JSON seeder during the application startup process (lifespan).

from contextlib import asynccontextmanager
from fastapi import FastAPI
from pgsqlasync2fast_fastapi import startup_database, get_db_manager
from oauth2fast_fastapi import get_db_engine, AuthModel
from permissions2fast_fastapi import seed_rbac_from_json

@asynccontextmanager
async def lifespan(app: FastAPI):
    # This example assumes you have an 'auth' bound session using pgsqlasync2fast-fastapi
    await startup_database()

    # List configured connections
    manager = get_db_manager()

    # Create auth database tables
    engine = get_db_engine("auth", manager)
    async with engine.begin() as conn:
        # Create auth tables (User, etc.)
        await conn.run_sync(AuthModel.metadata.create_all)
    # Run the seeder when starting up your application
    session = await manager.get_session("auth")
    try:
        # Seeder is idempotent and won't duplicate data on multiple startups
        await seed_rbac_from_json(session, route_prefix="")
    finally:
        await session.close()

app = FastAPI(lifespan=lifespan)

📋 Naming Conventions

This package follows consistent naming conventions for models and database tables:

Model Classes (Python)

  • Singular PascalCase
  • Examples: User, Role, Permission, Route, RoleUser

Database Tables

  • Plural snake_case
  • Examples: users, roles, permissions, routes, role_users

Many-to-Many Join Tables

  • Plural snake_case on both table names
  • Alphabetical order of the two table names
  • Examples: role_users (r < u), permission_roles (p < r)

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