Setting up guest access

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DreamFactoryTutorialsSetting up guest access
    1. Tutorial

Setting up access to certain API services for unauthenticated users and users without login accounts, also known as guest access.

    1. Background

You may provide access to certain API services and resources based on the provisioned API key alone, without requiring authentication or session instantiation. The permissions granted these users are based solely on the API key they provide and the access granted by the default role of that API key. Calls to the API using this API key will be treated as guest calls as long as no session token is provided along with the call, so both non-existent users and not-logged-in users are treated the same with respect to access.

    1. Example: using the admin app GUI

1. Create a role with the desired access.

  • Navigate to 'Roles' > 'Create', enter 'Name' and 'Description' values, and check the box labeled 'Active'.
Guest role basic.png
  • Navigate to the 'Access' tab of the role being created and add access rule(s) as desired. In this example, we will allow GET access to all contents of the local storage folder called images.
Guest role access.png
Note the two access components granted: images/ permits the role to list the contents of the folder by calling api/v2/images/ and images/* permits access to all contents of the folder.
  • Click 'Create Role' and observe a green pop-up message informing you "Role saved successfully."

2. Create an API key for guest usage.

  • Navigate to 'Apps' > 'Create', enter 'Application Name' and 'Description' values, select the role you created in step #1 under 'Assign a Default Role', and check the box labeled 'Active'.
Guest app create.png
  • Click 'Create Application' and observe a green pop-up message informing you "{Application Name} saved successfully."
  • Navigate back to 'Apps' > 'Manage', click on the row of the app you just created, and make note of the API key that has been generated for you.
Guest app api key.png

3. Create a CORS entry.

  • To allow truly anyone to retrieve this resource, CORS must permit all domains to access this REST path. Navigate to 'Config' > 'CORS' and click [ + ] to create a new CORS Entry.
Guest cors create.png
  • During development and testing, a CORS entry with Origin=*, Paths=*, Headers=*, Max Age=0, and all Methods permitted is the easiest to work with. When moving into production, security can be further restricted. For this example, we only need to provide GET Method access to api/v2/files/images/*. So enter Origin=*, Paths=api/v2/files/images/*, Headers=*, Max Age=0, select the GET Method, and check the box labeled 'Enabled'.
Guest cors save.png
  • Click 'Save' and observe a green pop-up message informing you "CORS entry created successfully."

4. Test.

    1. Example: calling the API directly

The below API calls will be made from cURL for the sake of raw simplicity.

1. Instantiate an admin session.

  • Since the below changes are made to system resources, an Admin user session must be used to make these API calls. (Refer to the Logging In and Access Using JWT tutorials for details.)
$ curl -X POST api/v2/system/admin/session \
-d '{"email":"[email protected]","password":"password"}'
 
{
  "session_token":"eyJ0eCblwx",
  "session_id":"eyJ0eXUpa1",
  "id":4,
  "name":"Admin Name",
  "first_name":"Admin",
  "last_name":"Name",
  "email":"[email protected]",
  "is_sys_admin":true,
  "last_login_date":"2015-11-02 20:26:58",
  "host":"console"
}

  • For the remainder of this tutorial, the session_token received in response to the above call will be passed with every API call as HTTP header X-DreamFactory-Session-Token.

2. Create a role with the desired access.

  • Construct a JSON definition of the desired role configuration. In this case, the files service is known to have "service_id":7, "verb_mask":1 is known to be GET, and "requestor_mask":1 is known to be API.
{
  "resource":
    [
      {
        "name":"public",
        "description":"public",
        "is_active":true,
        "role_service_access_by_role_id":
          [
            {
              "verb_mask":1,
              "requestor_mask":1,
              "component":"images/",
              "service_id":7
            },
            {
              "verb_mask":1,
              "requestor_mask":1,
              "component":"images/*",
              "service_id":7
            }
          ]
      }
    ]
}

  • POST this JSON to api/v2/system/role and receive back the id of the created role.
$ curl -X POST api/v2/system/role \
-H 'X-DreamFactory-Session-Token: eyJ0eCblwx' \
-d '{ "resource": [ { "name":"public", "description":"public", "is_active":true, "role_service_access_by_role_id": [ { "verb_mask":1, "requestor_mask":1, "component":"images/", "service_id":3 }, { "verb_mask":1, "requestor_mask":1, "component":"images/*", "service_id":3 } ] } ] }'
 
{"resource":[{"id":42}]}

This indicates you've successfully created the role, and DreamFactory has assigned it an id of 42.

3. Create an API key for guest usage.

  • Construct a JSON definition of the desired app configuration. Note that the default role_id should be set to the id of the role created in step #2, and "type":0 corresponds to the app type labeled in the GUI as "No Storage Required - remote device, client, or desktop."
{
  "resource":
    [
      {
        "name":"General Public",
        "description":"Resources available to everyone without login.",
        "type":0,
        "role_id":42,
        "is_active":true
      }
    ]
}

  • POST this JSON to api/v2/system/app and receive back the id of the created role. To avoid making an additional call to retrieve the created API key, specify additional fields to return by appending ?fields=* (which will return all fields defined for the created app) or ?fields=id%2Capi_key (which will return id and api_key only) to the POST call.
$ curl -X POST api/v2/system/app?fields=id%2Capi_key \
-H 'X-DreamFactory-Session-Token: eyJ0eCblwx' \
-d '{ "resource": [ { "name":"General Public", "description":"Resources available to everyone without login.", "type":0, "role_id":42, "is_active":true } ] }'
 
{"resource":[{"id":13,"api_key":c448049d7eecd5337b7cc531d68b0d46a94cd8eb8555ba1de3fb05566cad66d9}]}

This indicates you've successfully created the app, and DreamFactory has assigned it an id of 42 and an api_key of c448049d7eecd5337b7cc531d68b0d46a94cd8eb8555ba1de3fb05566cad66d9.

4. Create a CORS entry.

  • To allow truly anyone to retrieve this resource, CORS must permit all domains to access this REST path. During development and testing, a wide-open CORS entry is the easiest to work with. When moving into production, security can be further restricted. For this example, we only need to provide GET Method access to api/v2/files/images/*, so we may construct a JSON definition for the desired CORS entry as follows:
{
  "resource":
    [
      {
        "origin":"*",
        "path":"api/v2/files/images/*",
        "method":["GET"],
        "enabled":true,
        "header":"*",
        "max_age":0
      }
    ]
}
  • POST this JSON to api/v2/system/cors and receive back the id of the created CORS entry.
$ curl -X POST api/v2/system/cors \
-H 'X-DreamFactory-Session-Token: eyJ0eCblwx' \
-d '{ "resource": [ { "origin":"*", "path":"api/v2/files/images", "method":["GET"], "enabled":true, "header":"*", "max_age":0 } ] }'

{"resource":[{"id":5}]}
This indicates you've successfully created the CORS entry, and DreamFactory has assigned it an id of 5.

5. Test.

    1. Testing
Note: To allow cross-domain access (for example, while testing an app locally with a DreamFactory instance hosted elsewhere), you will need to configure a CORS Entry.
During development and testing, a CORS entry with Origin=*, Paths=*, Headers=*, Max Age=0, and all Methods permitted is the easiest to work with.

To test from the REST API client or app of your choice, simply make an unauthenticated API call to the resource(s) you've made available using the API key you've created.

      1. Using a browser

Since all browsers perform a GET by default, navigate to api/v2/files/images/?api_key=c448049d7eecd5337b7cc531d68b0d46a94cd8eb8555ba1de3fb05566cad66d9 to list the contents of the images folder:

{ "resource":
  [
   { "path":"images/awesome.gif",
     "content_type":"image/gif",
     "last_modified":"Thu, 05 Nov 2015 15:44:11 GMT",
     "content_length":25947,
     "name":"awesome.gif",
     "type":"file" },
   { "path":"images/howrude.jpg",
     "content_type":"image/jpeg",
     "last_modified":"Thu, 05 Nov 2015 16:11:08 GMT",
     "content_length":17436,
     "name":"howrude.jpg",
     "type":"file" }
  ]
}

Now that you know the two files that exist in the folder, you can retrieve awesome.gif by navigating to api/v2/files/images/awesome.gif?api_key=c448049d7eecd5337b7cc531d68b0d46a94cd8eb8555ba1de3fb05566cad66d9

Guest access browser file.png

Since we did not permit access to list all resources under api/v2/files/, if you navigate to api/v2/files/?api_key=c448049d7eecd5337b7cc531d68b0d46a94cd8eb8555ba1de3fb05566cad66d9 you will be denied access:

Guest access browser 401.png

      1. Using cURL

To list the contents of the images folder from cURL:

$ curl -X GET api/v2/files/images/ \
-H 'X-DreamFactory-Api-Key: c448049d7eecd5337b7cc531d68b0d46a94cd8eb8555ba1de3fb05566cad66d9'
 
{"resource":[{"path":"images/awesome.gif","content_type":"image/gif","last_modified":"Thu, 05 Nov 2015 15:44:11 GMT","content_length":25947,"name":"awesome.gif","type":"file"},{"path":"images/howrude.jpg","content_type":"image/jpeg","last_modified":"Thu, 05 Nov 2015 16:11:08 GMT","content_length":17436,"name":"howrude.jpg","type":"file"}]}

And then to download awesome.gif to the current folder:

$ curl -O -X GET api/v2/files/images/awesome.gif \
-H 'X-DreamFactory-Api-Key: c448049d7eecd5337b7cc531d68b0d46a94cd8eb8555ba1de3fb05566cad66d9'
 
  % Total    % Received % Xferd  Average Speed   Time    Time     Time  Current
                                 Dload  Upload   Total   Spent    Left  Speed
100 25947  100 25947    0     0   193k      0 --:--:-- --:--:-- --:--:--  193k
 
$ ls -l | grep awesome
-rw-rw-r--  1 user user  25947 Nov  5 14:22 awesome.gif

Since we did not permit access to list all resources under api/v2/files/, attempting to list all the contents of the files/ directory will fail:

$ curl -X GET api/v2/files/ \
-H 'X-DreamFactory-Api-Key: c448049d7eecd5337b7cc531d68b0d46a94cd8eb8555ba1de3fb05566cad66d9'
 
{"error":{"context":null,"message":"Unauthorized.","code":401}}

Since we only allowed unauthenticated GET requests, attempting to upload a file via POST will fail also:

$ curl -X POST -T virus.exe \
api/v2/files/images/definitelynotavirus.exe \
-H 'X-DreamFactory-Api-Key: c448049d7eecd5337b7cc531d68b0d46a94cd8eb8555ba1de3fb05566cad66d9'
 
{"error":{"context":null,"message":"Unauthorized.","code":401}}

      1. Using a REST client

From a REST client such as the POSTman extension for Google Chrome, to list the contents of the images folder:

Guest postman folder.png
And then to retrieve howrude.jpg:
Guest postman file.png

Since we did not permit access to list all resources under api/v2/files/, attempting to list all the contents of the files/ directory will fail:

Guest postman folder fail.png

Since we only allowed unauthenticated GET requests, attempting to upload a file via POST will fail also:

Guest postman upload fail.png