Quickstart: Cat Videos Example
This example describes a video sharing service. The individual videos are
organized in directories. Every directory has an owner and every video has the
same owner as it's parent directory. The owner has elevated privileges about the
video files that aren't modeled individually in Ory Keto. The only other
privilege modeled in this example is "view access." Every owner has view access
to their objects, and this privilege can be granted to other users as well. The
video sharing application interprets the special *
user ID as any user,
including anonymous users. Note that Ory Keto doesn't interpret this subject any
differently from other subjects. It also doesn't know anything about directory
structures or induced ownership.
Terminology
The "Keto client" is the application interacting with Keto. In this case we refer to the video sharing service backend as the Keto client.
Starting the Exampleβ
First, install Keto.
Now you can start the example using either docker-compose
or a bash script.
The bash script requires you to have the keto
binary in your $PATH
.
Alternatively, use Docker to automatically get the required images.
# clone the repository if you don't have it yet
git clone git@github.com:ory/keto.git && cd keto
docker-compose -f contrib/cat-videos-example/docker-compose.yml up
# or
./contrib/cat-videos-example/up.sh
# output: all initially created relation tuples
# NAMESPACE OBJECT RELATION NAME SUBJECT
# videos /cats/1.mp4 owner videos:/cats#owner
# videos /cats/1.mp4 view videos:/cats/1.mp4#owner
# videos /cats/1.mp4 view *
# videos /cats/2.mp4 owner videos:/cats#owner
# videos /cats/2.mp4 view videos:/cats/2.mp4#owner
# videos /cats owner cat lady
# videos /cats view videos:/cats#owner
State of the Systemβ
At the current state only one user with the username cat lady
has added
videos. Both videos are in the /cats
directory owned by cat lady
. The file
/cats/1.mp4
can be viewed by anyone (*
), while /cats/2.mp4
has no extra
sharing options, and can therefore only be viewed by its owner, cat lady
. The
relation tuple definitions are located in the
contrib/cat-videos-example/relation-tuples
directory.
Simulating the Video Sharing Applicationβ
Now you can open a second terminal to run the queries against, just like the video service client would do. In this example we will use the Keto CLI client.
If you want to run the Keto CLI within Docker, set the alias
alias keto="docker run -it --network cat-videos-example_default -e KETO_READ_REMOTE=\"keto:4466\" oryd/keto:v0.7.0-alpha.1"
in your terminal session. Alternatively, you need to set the remote endpoint so that the Keto CLI knows where to connect to (not necessary if using Docker):
export KETO_READ_REMOTE="127.0.0.1:4466"
Check Incoming Requestsβ
First off, we get a request by an anonymous user that would like to view
/cats/2.mp4
. The client now has to ask Keto if that operation should be
allowed or denied.
# Is "*" allowed to "view" the object "videos":"/cats/2.mp4"?
keto check "*" view videos /cats/2.mp4
# output:
# Denied
We already discussed that this request should be denied, but it's always good to see this in action.
Now cat lady
wants to change some view permissions of /cats/1.mp4
. For this,
the video service application has to show all users that are allowed to view the
video. It uses Keto's
expand-API to get these data:
# Who is allowed to "view" the object "videos":"/cats/2.mp4"?
keto expand view videos /cats/1.mp4
# output:
# βͺ videos:/cats/1.mp4#view
# ββ βͺ videos:/cats/1.mp4#owner
# β ββ βͺ videos:/cats#owner
# β β ββ β cat ladyοΈ
# ββ β *οΈ
Here we can see the full subject set expansion. The first branch
videos:/cats/1.mp4#view
indicates that every owner of the object is allowed to view
videos:/cats/1.mp4#owner
In the next step we see that the object's owners are the owners of /cats
videos:/cats#owner
We see that cat lady
is the owner of /cats
.
Note that there is no direct relation tuple that would grant cat lady
view
access on /cats/1.mp4
as this is indirectly defined via the ownership
relation.
The special user *
on the other hand was directly granted view access on the
object, as it's a first-level leaf of the expansion tree. The following CLI
command proves that this is the case:
# Is "*" allowed to "view" the object "videos":"/cats/1.mp4"?
keto check "*" view videos /cats/1.mp4
# output:
# Allowed
Updating the view permissions will be added here at a later stage.