numerus/deploy/login.sql

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Setup authentication schema and user relation User authentication is based on PostgREST’s[0]: There is a noninherit role, authenticator, whose function is only to switch to a different role according to the application’s session. Accordingly, this role has no permission for anything. The roles that this authentication can switch to are guest, invoicer, or admin. Guest is for anonymous users, when they need to login or register; invoicers are regular users; and admin are application’s administrators, that can change other user’s status, when they have to be removed or have they password changed, for example. The user relation is actually inaccessible to all roles and can only be used through a security definer function, login, so that passwords are not accessible from the application. I hesitated on what to use as the user’s primary key. The email seemed a good candiate, because it will be used for login. But something rubs me the wrong way. It is not that they can change because, despite what people on the Internet keeps parroting, they do not need to be “immutable”, PostgreSQL can cascade updates to foreign keys, and people do **not** change email addresses that ofter. What i **do** know is that email addresses should be unique in order to be used for login and password, hovewer i had to decide what “unique” means here, because the domain part is case insensitive, but the local part who knows? I made the arbitrary decision of assuming that the whole address is case sensitive. I have the feeling that this will bite me harder in the ass than using it as the primary key. [0]: https://postgrest.org/en/stable/auth.html
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-- Deploy numerus:login to pg
-- requires: roles
-- requires: schema_numerus
-- requires: schema_auth
Setup authentication schema and user relation User authentication is based on PostgREST’s[0]: There is a noninherit role, authenticator, whose function is only to switch to a different role according to the application’s session. Accordingly, this role has no permission for anything. The roles that this authentication can switch to are guest, invoicer, or admin. Guest is for anonymous users, when they need to login or register; invoicers are regular users; and admin are application’s administrators, that can change other user’s status, when they have to be removed or have they password changed, for example. The user relation is actually inaccessible to all roles and can only be used through a security definer function, login, so that passwords are not accessible from the application. I hesitated on what to use as the user’s primary key. The email seemed a good candiate, because it will be used for login. But something rubs me the wrong way. It is not that they can change because, despite what people on the Internet keeps parroting, they do not need to be “immutable”, PostgreSQL can cascade updates to foreign keys, and people do **not** change email addresses that ofter. What i **do** know is that email addresses should be unique in order to be used for login and password, hovewer i had to decide what “unique” means here, because the domain part is case insensitive, but the local part who knows? I made the arbitrary decision of assuming that the whole address is case sensitive. I have the feeling that this will bite me harder in the ass than using it as the primary key. [0]: https://postgrest.org/en/stable/auth.html
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-- requires: email
-- requires: user
begin;
set search_path to numerus, auth;
create or replace function login(email email, password text) returns name as
$$
declare
user_role name;
Setup authentication schema and user relation User authentication is based on PostgREST’s[0]: There is a noninherit role, authenticator, whose function is only to switch to a different role according to the application’s session. Accordingly, this role has no permission for anything. The roles that this authentication can switch to are guest, invoicer, or admin. Guest is for anonymous users, when they need to login or register; invoicers are regular users; and admin are application’s administrators, that can change other user’s status, when they have to be removed or have they password changed, for example. The user relation is actually inaccessible to all roles and can only be used through a security definer function, login, so that passwords are not accessible from the application. I hesitated on what to use as the user’s primary key. The email seemed a good candiate, because it will be used for login. But something rubs me the wrong way. It is not that they can change because, despite what people on the Internet keeps parroting, they do not need to be “immutable”, PostgreSQL can cascade updates to foreign keys, and people do **not** change email addresses that ofter. What i **do** know is that email addresses should be unique in order to be used for login and password, hovewer i had to decide what “unique” means here, because the domain part is case insensitive, but the local part who knows? I made the arbitrary decision of assuming that the whole address is case sensitive. I have the feeling that this will bite me harder in the ass than using it as the primary key. [0]: https://postgrest.org/en/stable/auth.html
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begin
select role
into user_role
from "user"
where "user".email = login.email
and "user".password = crypt(login.password, "user".password);
if user_role is null then
Setup authentication schema and user relation User authentication is based on PostgREST’s[0]: There is a noninherit role, authenticator, whose function is only to switch to a different role according to the application’s session. Accordingly, this role has no permission for anything. The roles that this authentication can switch to are guest, invoicer, or admin. Guest is for anonymous users, when they need to login or register; invoicers are regular users; and admin are application’s administrators, that can change other user’s status, when they have to be removed or have they password changed, for example. The user relation is actually inaccessible to all roles and can only be used through a security definer function, login, so that passwords are not accessible from the application. I hesitated on what to use as the user’s primary key. The email seemed a good candiate, because it will be used for login. But something rubs me the wrong way. It is not that they can change because, despite what people on the Internet keeps parroting, they do not need to be “immutable”, PostgreSQL can cascade updates to foreign keys, and people do **not** change email addresses that ofter. What i **do** know is that email addresses should be unique in order to be used for login and password, hovewer i had to decide what “unique” means here, because the domain part is case insensitive, but the local part who knows? I made the arbitrary decision of assuming that the whole address is case sensitive. I have the feeling that this will bite me harder in the ass than using it as the primary key. [0]: https://postgrest.org/en/stable/auth.html
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raise invalid_password using message = 'invalid user or password';
end if;
return user_role;
Setup authentication schema and user relation User authentication is based on PostgREST’s[0]: There is a noninherit role, authenticator, whose function is only to switch to a different role according to the application’s session. Accordingly, this role has no permission for anything. The roles that this authentication can switch to are guest, invoicer, or admin. Guest is for anonymous users, when they need to login or register; invoicers are regular users; and admin are application’s administrators, that can change other user’s status, when they have to be removed or have they password changed, for example. The user relation is actually inaccessible to all roles and can only be used through a security definer function, login, so that passwords are not accessible from the application. I hesitated on what to use as the user’s primary key. The email seemed a good candiate, because it will be used for login. But something rubs me the wrong way. It is not that they can change because, despite what people on the Internet keeps parroting, they do not need to be “immutable”, PostgreSQL can cascade updates to foreign keys, and people do **not** change email addresses that ofter. What i **do** know is that email addresses should be unique in order to be used for login and password, hovewer i had to decide what “unique” means here, because the domain part is case insensitive, but the local part who knows? I made the arbitrary decision of assuming that the whole address is case sensitive. I have the feeling that this will bite me harder in the ass than using it as the primary key. [0]: https://postgrest.org/en/stable/auth.html
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end;
$$
language plpgsql
stable
security definer
set search_path = auth, numerus, pg_temp;
Setup authentication schema and user relation User authentication is based on PostgREST’s[0]: There is a noninherit role, authenticator, whose function is only to switch to a different role according to the application’s session. Accordingly, this role has no permission for anything. The roles that this authentication can switch to are guest, invoicer, or admin. Guest is for anonymous users, when they need to login or register; invoicers are regular users; and admin are application’s administrators, that can change other user’s status, when they have to be removed or have they password changed, for example. The user relation is actually inaccessible to all roles and can only be used through a security definer function, login, so that passwords are not accessible from the application. I hesitated on what to use as the user’s primary key. The email seemed a good candiate, because it will be used for login. But something rubs me the wrong way. It is not that they can change because, despite what people on the Internet keeps parroting, they do not need to be “immutable”, PostgreSQL can cascade updates to foreign keys, and people do **not** change email addresses that ofter. What i **do** know is that email addresses should be unique in order to be used for login and password, hovewer i had to decide what “unique” means here, because the domain part is case insensitive, but the local part who knows? I made the arbitrary decision of assuming that the whole address is case sensitive. I have the feeling that this will bite me harder in the ass than using it as the primary key. [0]: https://postgrest.org/en/stable/auth.html
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comment on function login(email, text) is
'Checks that the email and password pair is valid and returns the users databasse role.';
revoke execute on function login(email, text) from public;
Setup authentication schema and user relation User authentication is based on PostgREST’s[0]: There is a noninherit role, authenticator, whose function is only to switch to a different role according to the application’s session. Accordingly, this role has no permission for anything. The roles that this authentication can switch to are guest, invoicer, or admin. Guest is for anonymous users, when they need to login or register; invoicers are regular users; and admin are application’s administrators, that can change other user’s status, when they have to be removed or have they password changed, for example. The user relation is actually inaccessible to all roles and can only be used through a security definer function, login, so that passwords are not accessible from the application. I hesitated on what to use as the user’s primary key. The email seemed a good candiate, because it will be used for login. But something rubs me the wrong way. It is not that they can change because, despite what people on the Internet keeps parroting, they do not need to be “immutable”, PostgreSQL can cascade updates to foreign keys, and people do **not** change email addresses that ofter. What i **do** know is that email addresses should be unique in order to be used for login and password, hovewer i had to decide what “unique” means here, because the domain part is case insensitive, but the local part who knows? I made the arbitrary decision of assuming that the whole address is case sensitive. I have the feeling that this will bite me harder in the ass than using it as the primary key. [0]: https://postgrest.org/en/stable/auth.html
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grant execute on function login(email, text) to guest;
commit;