Remove files from oslo-incubator

Looks like if we switch to oslo.policy then we don't need any
files from oslo-incubator, so we just get rid of all of them.

Change-Id: I631a743d9131339b41b7470abdd64bbfcd4cbf3f
This commit is contained in:
Davanum Srinivas 2015-06-10 07:01:11 -04:00 committed by Davanum Srinivas (dims)
parent 1611cba86f
commit 353843bb9e
10 changed files with 9 additions and 1882 deletions

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[DEFAULT]
module=_i18n
module=fileutils
module=install_venv
module=local
module=log
module=policy
module=with_venv
base=openstack_dashboard

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# Licensed under the Apache License, Version 2.0 (the "License"); you may
# not use this file except in compliance with the License. You may obtain
# a copy of the License at
#
# http://www.apache.org/licenses/LICENSE-2.0
#
# Unless required by applicable law or agreed to in writing, software
# distributed under the License is distributed on an "AS IS" BASIS, WITHOUT
# WARRANTIES OR CONDITIONS OF ANY KIND, either express or implied. See the
# License for the specific language governing permissions and limitations
# under the License.
"""oslo.i18n integration module.
See http://docs.openstack.org/developer/oslo.i18n/usage.html
"""
import oslo_i18n
# NOTE(dhellmann): This reference to o-s-l-o will be replaced by the
# application name when this module is synced into the separate
# repository. It is OK to have more than one translation function
# using the same domain, since there will still only be one message
# catalog.
_translators = oslo_i18n.TranslatorFactory(domain='openstack_dashboard')
# The primary translation function using the well-known name "_"
_ = _translators.primary
# Translators for log levels.
#
# The abbreviated names are meant to reflect the usual use of a short
# name like '_'. The "L" is for "log" and the other letter comes from
# the level.
_LI = _translators.log_info
_LW = _translators.log_warning
_LE = _translators.log_error
_LC = _translators.log_critical

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# Copyright 2011 OpenStack Foundation.
# All Rights Reserved.
#
# Licensed under the Apache License, Version 2.0 (the "License"); you may
# not use this file except in compliance with the License. You may obtain
# a copy of the License at
#
# http://www.apache.org/licenses/LICENSE-2.0
#
# Unless required by applicable law or agreed to in writing, software
# distributed under the License is distributed on an "AS IS" BASIS, WITHOUT
# WARRANTIES OR CONDITIONS OF ANY KIND, either express or implied. See the
# License for the specific language governing permissions and limitations
# under the License.
import contextlib
import errno
import os
import tempfile
from oslo_utils import excutils
from openstack_dashboard.openstack.common import log as logging
LOG = logging.getLogger(__name__)
_FILE_CACHE = {}
def ensure_tree(path):
"""Create a directory (and any ancestor directories required)
:param path: Directory to create
"""
try:
os.makedirs(path)
except OSError as exc:
if exc.errno == errno.EEXIST:
if not os.path.isdir(path):
raise
else:
raise
def read_cached_file(filename, force_reload=False):
"""Read from a file if it has been modified.
:param force_reload: Whether to reload the file.
:returns: A tuple with a boolean specifying if the data is fresh
or not.
"""
global _FILE_CACHE
if force_reload:
delete_cached_file(filename)
reloaded = False
mtime = os.path.getmtime(filename)
cache_info = _FILE_CACHE.setdefault(filename, {})
if not cache_info or mtime > cache_info.get('mtime', 0):
LOG.debug("Reloading cached file %s" % filename)
with open(filename) as fap:
cache_info['data'] = fap.read()
cache_info['mtime'] = mtime
reloaded = True
return (reloaded, cache_info['data'])
def delete_cached_file(filename):
"""Delete cached file if present.
:param filename: filename to delete
"""
global _FILE_CACHE
if filename in _FILE_CACHE:
del _FILE_CACHE[filename]
def delete_if_exists(path, remove=os.unlink):
"""Delete a file, but ignore file not found error.
:param path: File to delete
:param remove: Optional function to remove passed path
"""
try:
remove(path)
except OSError as e:
if e.errno != errno.ENOENT:
raise
@contextlib.contextmanager
def remove_path_on_error(path, remove=delete_if_exists):
"""Protect code that wants to operate on PATH atomically.
Any exception will cause PATH to be removed.
:param path: File to work with
:param remove: Optional function to remove passed path
"""
try:
yield
except Exception:
with excutils.save_and_reraise_exception():
remove(path)
def file_open(*args, **kwargs):
"""Open file
see built-in open() documentation for more details
Note: The reason this is kept in a separate module is to easily
be able to provide a stub module that doesn't alter system
state at all (for unit tests)
"""
return open(*args, **kwargs)
def write_to_tempfile(content, path=None, suffix='', prefix='tmp'):
"""Create temporary file or use existing file.
This util is needed for creating temporary file with
specified content, suffix and prefix. If path is not None,
it will be used for writing content. If the path doesn't
exist it'll be created.
:param content: content for temporary file.
:param path: same as parameter 'dir' for mkstemp
:param suffix: same as parameter 'suffix' for mkstemp
:param prefix: same as parameter 'prefix' for mkstemp
For example: it can be used in database tests for creating
configuration files.
"""
if path:
ensure_tree(path)
(fd, path) = tempfile.mkstemp(suffix=suffix, dir=path, prefix=prefix)
try:
os.write(fd, content)
finally:
os.close(fd)
return path

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# Copyright 2011 OpenStack Foundation.
# All Rights Reserved.
#
# Licensed under the Apache License, Version 2.0 (the "License"); you may
# not use this file except in compliance with the License. You may obtain
# a copy of the License at
#
# http://www.apache.org/licenses/LICENSE-2.0
#
# Unless required by applicable law or agreed to in writing, software
# distributed under the License is distributed on an "AS IS" BASIS, WITHOUT
# WARRANTIES OR CONDITIONS OF ANY KIND, either express or implied. See the
# License for the specific language governing permissions and limitations
# under the License.
"""Local storage of variables using weak references"""
import threading
import weakref
class WeakLocal(threading.local):
def __getattribute__(self, attr):
rval = super(WeakLocal, self).__getattribute__(attr)
if rval:
# NOTE(mikal): this bit is confusing. What is stored is a weak
# reference, not the value itself. We therefore need to lookup
# the weak reference and return the inner value here.
rval = rval()
return rval
def __setattr__(self, attr, value):
value = weakref.ref(value)
return super(WeakLocal, self).__setattr__(attr, value)
# NOTE(mikal): the name "store" should be deprecated in the future
store = WeakLocal()
# A "weak" store uses weak references and allows an object to fall out of scope
# when it falls out of scope in the code that uses the thread local storage. A
# "strong" store will hold a reference to the object so that it never falls out
# of scope.
weak_store = WeakLocal()
strong_store = threading.local()

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@ -1,710 +0,0 @@
# Copyright 2011 OpenStack Foundation.
# Copyright 2010 United States Government as represented by the
# Administrator of the National Aeronautics and Space Administration.
# All Rights Reserved.
#
# Licensed under the Apache License, Version 2.0 (the "License"); you may
# not use this file except in compliance with the License. You may obtain
# a copy of the License at
#
# http://www.apache.org/licenses/LICENSE-2.0
#
# Unless required by applicable law or agreed to in writing, software
# distributed under the License is distributed on an "AS IS" BASIS, WITHOUT
# WARRANTIES OR CONDITIONS OF ANY KIND, either express or implied. See the
# License for the specific language governing permissions and limitations
# under the License.
"""OpenStack logging handler.
This module adds to logging functionality by adding the option to specify
a context object when calling the various log methods. If the context object
is not specified, default formatting is used. Additionally, an instance uuid
may be passed as part of the log message, which is intended to make it easier
for admins to find messages related to a specific instance.
It also allows setting of formatting information through conf.
"""
import inspect
import itertools
import logging
import logging.config
import logging.handlers
import os
import socket
import sys
import traceback
from oslo_config import cfg
from oslo_serialization import jsonutils
from oslo_utils import importutils
import six
from six import moves
_PY26 = sys.version_info[0:2] == (2, 6)
from openstack_dashboard.openstack.common._i18n import _
from openstack_dashboard.openstack.common import local
_DEFAULT_LOG_DATE_FORMAT = "%Y-%m-%d %H:%M:%S"
common_cli_opts = [
cfg.BoolOpt('debug',
short='d',
default=False,
help='Print debugging output (set logging level to '
'DEBUG instead of default WARNING level).'),
cfg.BoolOpt('verbose',
short='v',
default=False,
help='Print more verbose output (set logging level to '
'INFO instead of default WARNING level).'),
]
logging_cli_opts = [
cfg.StrOpt('log-config-append',
metavar='PATH',
deprecated_name='log-config',
help='The name of a logging configuration file. This file '
'is appended to any existing logging configuration '
'files. For details about logging configuration files, '
'see the Python logging module documentation.'),
cfg.StrOpt('log-format',
metavar='FORMAT',
help='DEPRECATED. '
'A logging.Formatter log message format string which may '
'use any of the available logging.LogRecord attributes. '
'This option is deprecated. Please use '
'logging_context_format_string and '
'logging_default_format_string instead.'),
cfg.StrOpt('log-date-format',
default=_DEFAULT_LOG_DATE_FORMAT,
metavar='DATE_FORMAT',
help='Format string for %%(asctime)s in log records. '
'Default: %(default)s .'),
cfg.StrOpt('log-file',
metavar='PATH',
deprecated_name='logfile',
help='(Optional) Name of log file to output to. '
'If no default is set, logging will go to stdout.'),
cfg.StrOpt('log-dir',
deprecated_name='logdir',
help='(Optional) The base directory used for relative '
'--log-file paths.'),
cfg.BoolOpt('use-syslog',
default=False,
help='Use syslog for logging. '
'Existing syslog format is DEPRECATED during I, '
'and will change in J to honor RFC5424.'),
cfg.BoolOpt('use-syslog-rfc-format',
# TODO(bogdando) remove or use True after existing
# syslog format deprecation in J
default=False,
help='(Optional) Enables or disables syslog rfc5424 format '
'for logging. If enabled, prefixes the MSG part of the '
'syslog message with APP-NAME (RFC5424). The '
'format without the APP-NAME is deprecated in I, '
'and will be removed in J.'),
cfg.StrOpt('syslog-log-facility',
default='LOG_USER',
help='Syslog facility to receive log lines.')
]
generic_log_opts = [
cfg.BoolOpt('use_stderr',
default=True,
help='Log output to standard error.')
]
DEFAULT_LOG_LEVELS = ['amqp=WARN', 'amqplib=WARN', 'boto=WARN',
'qpid=WARN', 'sqlalchemy=WARN', 'suds=INFO',
'oslo.messaging=INFO', 'iso8601=WARN',
'requests.packages.urllib3.connectionpool=WARN',
'urllib3.connectionpool=WARN', 'websocket=WARN',
"keystonemiddleware=WARN", "routes.middleware=WARN",
"stevedore=WARN"]
log_opts = [
cfg.StrOpt('logging_context_format_string',
default='%(asctime)s.%(msecs)03d %(process)d %(levelname)s '
'%(name)s [%(request_id)s %(user_identity)s] '
'%(instance)s%(message)s',
help='Format string to use for log messages with context.'),
cfg.StrOpt('logging_default_format_string',
default='%(asctime)s.%(msecs)03d %(process)d %(levelname)s '
'%(name)s [-] %(instance)s%(message)s',
help='Format string to use for log messages without context.'),
cfg.StrOpt('logging_debug_format_suffix',
default='%(funcName)s %(pathname)s:%(lineno)d',
help='Data to append to log format when level is DEBUG.'),
cfg.StrOpt('logging_exception_prefix',
default='%(asctime)s.%(msecs)03d %(process)d TRACE %(name)s '
'%(instance)s',
help='Prefix each line of exception output with this format.'),
cfg.ListOpt('default_log_levels',
default=DEFAULT_LOG_LEVELS,
help='List of logger=LEVEL pairs.'),
cfg.BoolOpt('publish_errors',
default=False,
help='Enables or disables publication of error events.'),
cfg.BoolOpt('fatal_deprecations',
default=False,
help='Enables or disables fatal status of deprecations.'),
# NOTE(mikal): there are two options here because sometimes we are handed
# a full instance (and could include more information), and other times we
# are just handed a UUID for the instance.
cfg.StrOpt('instance_format',
default='[instance: %(uuid)s] ',
help='The format for an instance that is passed with the log '
'message.'),
cfg.StrOpt('instance_uuid_format',
default='[instance: %(uuid)s] ',
help='The format for an instance UUID that is passed with the '
'log message.'),
]
CONF = cfg.CONF
CONF.register_cli_opts(common_cli_opts)
CONF.register_cli_opts(logging_cli_opts)
CONF.register_opts(generic_log_opts)
CONF.register_opts(log_opts)
# our new audit level
# NOTE(jkoelker) Since we synthesized an audit level, make the logging
# module aware of it so it acts like other levels.
logging.AUDIT = logging.INFO + 1
logging.addLevelName(logging.AUDIT, 'AUDIT')
try:
NullHandler = logging.NullHandler
except AttributeError: # NOTE(jkoelker) NullHandler added in Python 2.7
class NullHandler(logging.Handler):
def handle(self, record):
pass
def emit(self, record):
pass
def createLock(self):
self.lock = None
def _dictify_context(context):
if context is None:
return None
if not isinstance(context, dict) and getattr(context, 'to_dict', None):
context = context.to_dict()
return context
def _get_binary_name():
return os.path.basename(inspect.stack()[-1][1])
def _get_log_file_path(binary=None):
logfile = CONF.log_file
logdir = CONF.log_dir
if logfile and not logdir:
return logfile
if logfile and logdir:
return os.path.join(logdir, logfile)
if logdir:
binary = binary or _get_binary_name()
return '%s.log' % (os.path.join(logdir, binary),)
return None
class BaseLoggerAdapter(logging.LoggerAdapter):
def audit(self, msg, *args, **kwargs):
self.log(logging.AUDIT, msg, *args, **kwargs)
def isEnabledFor(self, level):
if _PY26:
# This method was added in python 2.7 (and it does the exact
# same logic, so we need to do the exact same logic so that
# python 2.6 has this capability as well).
return self.logger.isEnabledFor(level)
else:
return super(BaseLoggerAdapter, self).isEnabledFor(level)
class LazyAdapter(BaseLoggerAdapter):
def __init__(self, name='unknown', version='unknown'):
self._logger = None
self.extra = {}
self.name = name
self.version = version
@property
def logger(self):
if not self._logger:
self._logger = getLogger(self.name, self.version)
if six.PY3:
# In Python 3, the code fails because the 'manager' attribute
# cannot be found when using a LoggerAdapter as the
# underlying logger. Work around this issue.
self._logger.manager = self._logger.logger.manager
return self._logger
class ContextAdapter(BaseLoggerAdapter):
warn = logging.LoggerAdapter.warning
def __init__(self, logger, project_name, version_string):
self.logger = logger
self.project = project_name
self.version = version_string
self._deprecated_messages_sent = dict()
@property
def handlers(self):
return self.logger.handlers
def deprecated(self, msg, *args, **kwargs):
"""Call this method when a deprecated feature is used.
If the system is configured for fatal deprecations then the message
is logged at the 'critical' level and :class:`DeprecatedConfig` will
be raised.
Otherwise, the message will be logged (once) at the 'warn' level.
:raises: :class:`DeprecatedConfig` if the system is configured for
fatal deprecations.
"""
stdmsg = _("Deprecated: %s") % msg
if CONF.fatal_deprecations:
self.critical(stdmsg, *args, **kwargs)
raise DeprecatedConfig(msg=stdmsg)
# Using a list because a tuple with dict can't be stored in a set.
sent_args = self._deprecated_messages_sent.setdefault(msg, list())
if args in sent_args:
# Already logged this message, so don't log it again.
return
sent_args.append(args)
self.warn(stdmsg, *args, **kwargs)
def process(self, msg, kwargs):
# NOTE(jecarey): If msg is not unicode, coerce it into unicode
# before it can get to the python logging and
# possibly cause string encoding trouble
if not isinstance(msg, six.text_type):
msg = six.text_type(msg)
if 'extra' not in kwargs:
kwargs['extra'] = {}
extra = kwargs['extra']
context = kwargs.pop('context', None)
if not context:
context = getattr(local.store, 'context', None)
if context:
extra.update(_dictify_context(context))
instance = kwargs.pop('instance', None)
instance_uuid = (extra.get('instance_uuid') or
kwargs.pop('instance_uuid', None))
instance_extra = ''
if instance:
instance_extra = CONF.instance_format % instance
elif instance_uuid:
instance_extra = (CONF.instance_uuid_format
% {'uuid': instance_uuid})
extra['instance'] = instance_extra
extra.setdefault('user_identity', kwargs.pop('user_identity', None))
extra['project'] = self.project
extra['version'] = self.version
extra['extra'] = extra.copy()
return msg, kwargs
class JSONFormatter(logging.Formatter):
def __init__(self, fmt=None, datefmt=None):
# NOTE(jkoelker) we ignore the fmt argument, but its still there
# since logging.config.fileConfig passes it.
self.datefmt = datefmt
def formatException(self, ei, strip_newlines=True):
lines = traceback.format_exception(*ei)
if strip_newlines:
lines = [moves.filter(
lambda x: x,
line.rstrip().splitlines()) for line in lines]
lines = list(itertools.chain(*lines))
return lines
def format(self, record):
message = {'message': record.getMessage(),
'asctime': self.formatTime(record, self.datefmt),
'name': record.name,
'msg': record.msg,
'args': record.args,
'levelname': record.levelname,
'levelno': record.levelno,
'pathname': record.pathname,
'filename': record.filename,
'module': record.module,
'lineno': record.lineno,
'funcname': record.funcName,
'created': record.created,
'msecs': record.msecs,
'relative_created': record.relativeCreated,
'thread': record.thread,
'thread_name': record.threadName,
'process_name': record.processName,
'process': record.process,
'traceback': None}
if hasattr(record, 'extra'):
message['extra'] = record.extra
if record.exc_info:
message['traceback'] = self.formatException(record.exc_info)
return jsonutils.dumps(message)
def _create_logging_excepthook(product_name):
def logging_excepthook(exc_type, value, tb):
extra = {'exc_info': (exc_type, value, tb)}
getLogger(product_name).critical(
"".join(traceback.format_exception_only(exc_type, value)),
**extra)
return logging_excepthook
class LogConfigError(Exception):
message = _('Error loading logging config %(log_config)s: %(err_msg)s')
def __init__(self, log_config, err_msg):
self.log_config = log_config
self.err_msg = err_msg
def __str__(self):
return self.message % dict(log_config=self.log_config,
err_msg=self.err_msg)
def _load_log_config(log_config_append):
try:
logging.config.fileConfig(log_config_append,
disable_existing_loggers=False)
except (moves.configparser.Error, KeyError) as exc:
raise LogConfigError(log_config_append, six.text_type(exc))
def setup(product_name, version='unknown'):
"""Setup logging."""
if CONF.log_config_append:
_load_log_config(CONF.log_config_append)
else:
_setup_logging_from_conf(product_name, version)
sys.excepthook = _create_logging_excepthook(product_name)
def set_defaults(logging_context_format_string=None,
default_log_levels=None):
# Just in case the caller is not setting the
# default_log_level. This is insurance because
# we introduced the default_log_level parameter
# later in a backwards in-compatible change
if default_log_levels is not None:
cfg.set_defaults(
log_opts,
default_log_levels=default_log_levels)
if logging_context_format_string is not None:
cfg.set_defaults(
log_opts,
logging_context_format_string=logging_context_format_string)
def _find_facility_from_conf():
facility_names = logging.handlers.SysLogHandler.facility_names
facility = getattr(logging.handlers.SysLogHandler,
CONF.syslog_log_facility,
None)
if facility is None and CONF.syslog_log_facility in facility_names:
facility = facility_names.get(CONF.syslog_log_facility)
if facility is None:
valid_facilities = facility_names.keys()
consts = ['LOG_AUTH', 'LOG_AUTHPRIV', 'LOG_CRON', 'LOG_DAEMON',
'LOG_FTP', 'LOG_KERN', 'LOG_LPR', 'LOG_MAIL', 'LOG_NEWS',
'LOG_AUTH', 'LOG_SYSLOG', 'LOG_USER', 'LOG_UUCP',
'LOG_LOCAL0', 'LOG_LOCAL1', 'LOG_LOCAL2', 'LOG_LOCAL3',
'LOG_LOCAL4', 'LOG_LOCAL5', 'LOG_LOCAL6', 'LOG_LOCAL7']
valid_facilities.extend(consts)
raise TypeError(_('syslog facility must be one of: %s') %
', '.join("'%s'" % fac
for fac in valid_facilities))
return facility
class RFCSysLogHandler(logging.handlers.SysLogHandler):
def __init__(self, *args, **kwargs):
self.binary_name = _get_binary_name()
# Do not use super() unless type(logging.handlers.SysLogHandler)
# is 'type' (Python 2.7).
# Use old style calls, if the type is 'classobj' (Python 2.6)
logging.handlers.SysLogHandler.__init__(self, *args, **kwargs)
def format(self, record):
# Do not use super() unless type(logging.handlers.SysLogHandler)
# is 'type' (Python 2.7).
# Use old style calls, if the type is 'classobj' (Python 2.6)
msg = logging.handlers.SysLogHandler.format(self, record)
msg = self.binary_name + ' ' + msg
return msg
def _setup_logging_from_conf(project, version):
log_root = getLogger(None).logger
for handler in log_root.handlers:
log_root.removeHandler(handler)
logpath = _get_log_file_path()
if logpath:
filelog = logging.handlers.WatchedFileHandler(logpath)
log_root.addHandler(filelog)
if CONF.use_stderr:
streamlog = ColorHandler()
log_root.addHandler(streamlog)
elif not logpath:
# pass sys.stdout as a positional argument
# python2.6 calls the argument strm, in 2.7 it's stream
streamlog = logging.StreamHandler(sys.stdout)
log_root.addHandler(streamlog)
if CONF.publish_errors:
try:
handler = importutils.import_object(
"openstack_dashboard.openstack.common.log_handler.PublishErrorsHandler",
logging.ERROR)
except ImportError:
handler = importutils.import_object(
"oslo.messaging.notify.log_handler.PublishErrorsHandler",
logging.ERROR)
log_root.addHandler(handler)
datefmt = CONF.log_date_format
for handler in log_root.handlers:
# NOTE(alaski): CONF.log_format overrides everything currently. This
# should be deprecated in favor of context aware formatting.
if CONF.log_format:
handler.setFormatter(logging.Formatter(fmt=CONF.log_format,
datefmt=datefmt))
log_root.info('Deprecated: log_format is now deprecated and will '
'be removed in the next release')
else:
handler.setFormatter(ContextFormatter(project=project,
version=version,
datefmt=datefmt))
if CONF.debug:
log_root.setLevel(logging.DEBUG)
elif CONF.verbose:
log_root.setLevel(logging.INFO)
else:
log_root.setLevel(logging.WARNING)
for pair in CONF.default_log_levels:
mod, _sep, level_name = pair.partition('=')
logger = logging.getLogger(mod)
# NOTE(AAzza) in python2.6 Logger.setLevel doesn't convert string name
# to integer code.
if sys.version_info < (2, 7):
level = logging.getLevelName(level_name)
logger.setLevel(level)
else:
logger.setLevel(level_name)
if CONF.use_syslog:
try:
facility = _find_facility_from_conf()
# TODO(bogdando) use the format provided by RFCSysLogHandler
# after existing syslog format deprecation in J
if CONF.use_syslog_rfc_format:
syslog = RFCSysLogHandler(facility=facility)
else:
syslog = logging.handlers.SysLogHandler(facility=facility)
log_root.addHandler(syslog)
except socket.error:
log_root.error('Unable to add syslog handler. Verify that syslog '
'is running.')
_loggers = {}
def getLogger(name='unknown', version='unknown'):
if name not in _loggers:
_loggers[name] = ContextAdapter(logging.getLogger(name),
name,
version)
return _loggers[name]
def getLazyLogger(name='unknown', version='unknown'):
"""Returns lazy logger.
Creates a pass-through logger that does not create the real logger
until it is really needed and delegates all calls to the real logger
once it is created.
"""
return LazyAdapter(name, version)
class WritableLogger(object):
"""A thin wrapper that responds to `write` and logs."""
def __init__(self, logger, level=logging.INFO):
self.logger = logger
self.level = level
def write(self, msg):
self.logger.log(self.level, msg.rstrip())
class ContextFormatter(logging.Formatter):
"""A context.RequestContext aware formatter configured through flags.
The flags used to set format strings are: logging_context_format_string
and logging_default_format_string. You can also specify
logging_debug_format_suffix to append extra formatting if the log level is
debug.
For information about what variables are available for the formatter see:
http://docs.python.org/library/logging.html#formatter
If available, uses the context value stored in TLS - local.store.context
"""
def __init__(self, *args, **kwargs):
"""Initialize ContextFormatter instance
Takes additional keyword arguments which can be used in the message
format string.
:keyword project: project name
:type project: string
:keyword version: project version
:type version: string
"""
self.project = kwargs.pop('project', 'unknown')
self.version = kwargs.pop('version', 'unknown')
logging.Formatter.__init__(self, *args, **kwargs)
def format(self, record):
"""Uses contextstring if request_id is set, otherwise default."""
# NOTE(jecarey): If msg is not unicode, coerce it into unicode
# before it can get to the python logging and
# possibly cause string encoding trouble
if not isinstance(record.msg, six.text_type):
record.msg = six.text_type(record.msg)
# store project info
record.project = self.project
record.version = self.version
# store request info
context = getattr(local.store, 'context', None)
if context:
d = _dictify_context(context)
for k, v in d.items():
setattr(record, k, v)
# NOTE(sdague): default the fancier formatting params
# to an empty string so we don't throw an exception if
# they get used
for key in ('instance', 'color', 'user_identity'):
if key not in record.__dict__:
record.__dict__[key] = ''
if record.__dict__.get('request_id'):
fmt = CONF.logging_context_format_string
else:
fmt = CONF.logging_default_format_string
if (record.levelno == logging.DEBUG and
CONF.logging_debug_format_suffix):
fmt += " " + CONF.logging_debug_format_suffix
if sys.version_info < (3, 2):
self._fmt = fmt
else:
self._style = logging.PercentStyle(fmt)
self._fmt = self._style._fmt
# Cache this on the record, Logger will respect our formatted copy
if record.exc_info:
record.exc_text = self.formatException(record.exc_info, record)
return logging.Formatter.format(self, record)
def formatException(self, exc_info, record=None):
"""Format exception output with CONF.logging_exception_prefix."""
if not record:
return logging.Formatter.formatException(self, exc_info)
stringbuffer = moves.StringIO()
traceback.print_exception(exc_info[0], exc_info[1], exc_info[2],
None, stringbuffer)
lines = stringbuffer.getvalue().split('\n')
stringbuffer.close()
if CONF.logging_exception_prefix.find('%(asctime)') != -1:
record.asctime = self.formatTime(record, self.datefmt)
formatted_lines = []
for line in lines:
pl = CONF.logging_exception_prefix % record.__dict__
fl = '%s%s' % (pl, line)
formatted_lines.append(fl)
return '\n'.join(formatted_lines)
class ColorHandler(logging.StreamHandler):
LEVEL_COLORS = {
logging.DEBUG: '\033[00;32m', # GREEN
logging.INFO: '\033[00;36m', # CYAN
logging.AUDIT: '\033[01;36m', # BOLD CYAN
logging.WARN: '\033[01;33m', # BOLD YELLOW
logging.ERROR: '\033[01;31m', # BOLD RED
logging.CRITICAL: '\033[01;31m', # BOLD RED
}
def format(self, record):
record.color = self.LEVEL_COLORS[record.levelno]
return logging.StreamHandler.format(self, record)
class DeprecatedConfig(Exception):
message = _("Fatal call to deprecated config: %(msg)s")
def __init__(self, msg):
super(Exception, self).__init__(self.message % dict(msg=msg))

View File

@ -1,924 +0,0 @@
# Copyright (c) 2012 OpenStack Foundation.
# All Rights Reserved.
#
# Licensed under the Apache License, Version 2.0 (the "License"); you may
# not use this file except in compliance with the License. You may obtain
# a copy of the License at
#
# http://www.apache.org/licenses/LICENSE-2.0
#
# Unless required by applicable law or agreed to in writing, software
# distributed under the License is distributed on an "AS IS" BASIS, WITHOUT
# WARRANTIES OR CONDITIONS OF ANY KIND, either express or implied. See the
# License for the specific language governing permissions and limitations
# under the License.
"""
Common Policy Engine Implementation
Policies can be expressed in one of two forms: A list of lists, or a
string written in the new policy language.
In the list-of-lists representation, each check inside the innermost
list is combined as with an "and" conjunction--for that check to pass,
all the specified checks must pass. These innermost lists are then
combined as with an "or" conjunction. This is the original way of
expressing policies, but there now exists a new way: the policy
language.
In the policy language, each check is specified the same way as in the
list-of-lists representation: a simple "a:b" pair that is matched to
the correct code to perform that check. However, conjunction
operators are available, allowing for more expressiveness in crafting
policies.
As an example, take the following rule, expressed in the list-of-lists
representation::
[["role:admin"], ["project_id:%(project_id)s", "role:projectadmin"]]
In the policy language, this becomes::
role:admin or (project_id:%(project_id)s and role:projectadmin)
The policy language also has the "not" operator, allowing a richer
policy rule::
project_id:%(project_id)s and not role:dunce
It is possible to perform policy checks on the following user
attributes (obtained through the token): user_id, domain_id or
project_id::
domain_id:<some_value>
Attributes sent along with API calls can be used by the policy engine
(on the right side of the expression), by using the following syntax::
<some_value>:user.id
Contextual attributes of objects identified by their IDs are loaded
from the database. They are also available to the policy engine and
can be checked through the `target` keyword::
<some_value>:target.role.name
All these attributes (related to users, API calls, and context) can be
checked against each other or against constants, be it literals (True,
<a_number>) or strings.
Finally, two special policy checks should be mentioned; the policy
check "@" will always accept an access, and the policy check "!" will
always reject an access. (Note that if a rule is either the empty
list ("[]") or the empty string, this is equivalent to the "@" policy
check.) Of these, the "!" policy check is probably the most useful,
as it allows particular rules to be explicitly disabled.
"""
import abc
import ast
import os
import re
from oslo_config import cfg
from oslo_serialization import jsonutils
import six
import six.moves.urllib.parse as urlparse
import six.moves.urllib.request as urlrequest
from openstack_dashboard.openstack.common import fileutils
from openstack_dashboard.openstack.common._i18n import _, _LE, _LW
from openstack_dashboard.openstack.common import log as logging
policy_opts = [
cfg.StrOpt('policy_file',
default='policy.json',
help=_('The JSON file that defines policies.')),
cfg.StrOpt('policy_default_rule',
default='default',
help=_('Default rule. Enforced when a requested rule is not '
'found.')),
cfg.MultiStrOpt('policy_dirs',
default=['policy.d'],
help=_('The directories of policy configuration files is '
'stored')),
]
CONF = cfg.CONF
CONF.register_opts(policy_opts)
LOG = logging.getLogger(__name__)
_checks = {}
class PolicyNotAuthorized(Exception):
def __init__(self, rule):
msg = _("Policy doesn't allow %s to be performed.") % rule
super(PolicyNotAuthorized, self).__init__(msg)
class Rules(dict):
"""A store for rules. Handles the default_rule setting directly."""
@classmethod
def load_json(cls, data, default_rule=None):
"""Allow loading of JSON rule data."""
# Suck in the JSON data and parse the rules
rules = dict((k, parse_rule(v)) for k, v in
jsonutils.loads(data).items())
return cls(rules, default_rule)
def __init__(self, rules=None, default_rule=None):
"""Initialize the Rules store."""
super(Rules, self).__init__(rules or {})
self.default_rule = default_rule
def __missing__(self, key):
"""Implements the default rule handling."""
if isinstance(self.default_rule, dict):
raise KeyError(key)
# If the default rule isn't actually defined, do something
# reasonably intelligent
if not self.default_rule:
raise KeyError(key)
if isinstance(self.default_rule, BaseCheck):
return self.default_rule
# We need to check this or we can get infinite recursion
if self.default_rule not in self:
raise KeyError(key)
elif isinstance(self.default_rule, six.string_types):
return self[self.default_rule]
def __str__(self):
"""Dumps a string representation of the rules."""
# Start by building the canonical strings for the rules
out_rules = {}
for key, value in self.items():
# Use empty string for singleton TrueCheck instances
if isinstance(value, TrueCheck):
out_rules[key] = ''
else:
out_rules[key] = str(value)
# Dump a pretty-printed JSON representation
return jsonutils.dumps(out_rules, indent=4)
class Enforcer(object):
"""Responsible for loading and enforcing rules.
:param policy_file: Custom policy file to use, if none is
specified, `CONF.policy_file` will be
used.
:param rules: Default dictionary / Rules to use. It will be
considered just in the first instantiation. If
`load_rules(True)`, `clear()` or `set_rules(True)`
is called this will be overwritten.
:param default_rule: Default rule to use, CONF.default_rule will
be used if none is specified.
:param use_conf: Whether to load rules from cache or config file.
"""
def __init__(self, policy_file=None, rules=None,
default_rule=None, use_conf=True):
self.rules = Rules(rules, default_rule)
self.default_rule = default_rule or CONF.policy_default_rule
self.policy_path = None
self.policy_file = policy_file or CONF.policy_file
self.use_conf = use_conf
def set_rules(self, rules, overwrite=True, use_conf=False):
"""Create a new Rules object based on the provided dict of rules.
:param rules: New rules to use. It should be an instance of dict.
:param overwrite: Whether to overwrite current rules or update them
with the new rules.
:param use_conf: Whether to reload rules from cache or config file.
"""
if not isinstance(rules, dict):
raise TypeError(_("Rules must be an instance of dict or Rules, "
"got %s instead") % type(rules))
self.use_conf = use_conf
if overwrite:
self.rules = Rules(rules, self.default_rule)
else:
self.rules.update(rules)
def clear(self):
"""Clears Enforcer rules, policy's cache and policy's path."""
self.set_rules({})
fileutils.delete_cached_file(self.policy_path)
self.default_rule = None
self.policy_path = None
def load_rules(self, force_reload=False):
"""Loads policy_path's rules.
Policy file is cached and will be reloaded if modified.
:param force_reload: Whether to overwrite current rules.
"""
if force_reload:
self.use_conf = force_reload
if self.use_conf:
if not self.policy_path:
self.policy_path = self._get_policy_path(self.policy_file)
self._load_policy_file(self.policy_path, force_reload)
for path in CONF.policy_dirs:
try:
path = self._get_policy_path(path)
except cfg.ConfigFilesNotFoundError:
LOG.warn(_LW("Can not find policy directories %s"), path)
continue
self._walk_through_policy_directory(path,
self._load_policy_file,
force_reload, False)
def _walk_through_policy_directory(self, path, func, *args):
# We do not iterate over sub-directories.
policy_files = next(os.walk(path))[2]
policy_files.sort()
for policy_file in [p for p in policy_files if not p.startswith('.')]:
func(os.path.join(path, policy_file), *args)
def _load_policy_file(self, path, force_reload, overwrite=True):
reloaded, data = fileutils.read_cached_file(
path, force_reload=force_reload)
if reloaded or not self.rules:
rules = Rules.load_json(data, self.default_rule)
self.set_rules(rules, overwrite)
LOG.debug("Rules successfully reloaded")
def _get_policy_path(self, path):
"""Locate the policy json data file/path.
:param path: It's value can be a full path or related path. When
full path specified, this function just returns the full
path. When related path specified, this function will
search configuration directories to find one that exists.
:returns: The policy path
:raises: ConfigFilesNotFoundError if the file/path couldn't
be located.
"""
policy_path = CONF.find_file(path)
if policy_path:
return policy_path
raise cfg.ConfigFilesNotFoundError((path,))
def enforce(self, rule, target, creds, do_raise=False,
exc=None, *args, **kwargs):
"""Checks authorization of a rule against the target and credentials.
:param rule: A string or BaseCheck instance specifying the rule
to evaluate.
:param target: As much information about the object being operated
on as possible, as a dictionary.
:param creds: As much information about the user performing the
action as possible, as a dictionary.
:param do_raise: Whether to raise an exception or not if check
fails.
:param exc: Class of the exception to raise if the check fails.
Any remaining arguments passed to check() (both
positional and keyword arguments) will be passed to
the exception class. If not specified, PolicyNotAuthorized
will be used.
:return: Returns False if the policy does not allow the action and
exc is not provided; otherwise, returns a value that
evaluates to True. Note: for rules using the "case"
expression, this True value will be the specified string
from the expression.
"""
self.load_rules()
# Allow the rule to be a Check tree
if isinstance(rule, BaseCheck):
result = rule(target, creds, self)
elif not self.rules:
# No rules to reference means we're going to fail closed
result = False
else:
try:
# Evaluate the rule
result = self.rules[rule](target, creds, self)
except KeyError:
LOG.debug("Rule [%s] doesn't exist" % rule)
# If the rule doesn't exist, fail closed
result = False
# If it is False, raise the exception if requested
if do_raise and not result:
if exc:
raise exc(*args, **kwargs)
raise PolicyNotAuthorized(rule)
return result
@six.add_metaclass(abc.ABCMeta)
class BaseCheck(object):
"""Abstract base class for Check classes."""
@abc.abstractmethod
def __str__(self):
"""String representation of the Check tree rooted at this node."""
pass
@abc.abstractmethod
def __call__(self, target, cred, enforcer):
"""Triggers if instance of the class is called.
Performs the check. Returns False to reject the access or a
true value (not necessary True) to accept the access.
"""
pass
class FalseCheck(BaseCheck):
"""A policy check that always returns False (disallow)."""
def __str__(self):
"""Return a string representation of this check."""
return "!"
def __call__(self, target, cred, enforcer):
"""Check the policy."""
return False
class TrueCheck(BaseCheck):
"""A policy check that always returns True (allow)."""
def __str__(self):
"""Return a string representation of this check."""
return "@"
def __call__(self, target, cred, enforcer):
"""Check the policy."""
return True
class Check(BaseCheck):
"""A base class to allow for user-defined policy checks."""
def __init__(self, kind, match):
"""Initiates Check instance.
:param kind: The kind of the check, i.e., the field before the
':'.
:param match: The match of the check, i.e., the field after
the ':'.
"""
self.kind = kind
self.match = match
def __str__(self):
"""Return a string representation of this check."""
return "%s:%s" % (self.kind, self.match)
class NotCheck(BaseCheck):
"""Implements the "not" logical operator.
A policy check that inverts the result of another policy check.
"""
def __init__(self, rule):
"""Initialize the 'not' check.
:param rule: The rule to negate. Must be a Check.
"""
self.rule = rule
def __str__(self):
"""Return a string representation of this check."""
return "not %s" % self.rule
def __call__(self, target, cred, enforcer):
"""Check the policy.
Returns the logical inverse of the wrapped check.
"""
return not self.rule(target, cred, enforcer)
class AndCheck(BaseCheck):
"""Implements the "and" logical operator.
A policy check that requires that a list of other checks all return True.
"""
def __init__(self, rules):
"""Initialize the 'and' check.
:param rules: A list of rules that will be tested.
"""
self.rules = rules
def __str__(self):
"""Return a string representation of this check."""
return "(%s)" % ' and '.join(str(r) for r in self.rules)
def __call__(self, target, cred, enforcer):
"""Check the policy.
Requires that all rules accept in order to return True.
"""
for rule in self.rules:
if not rule(target, cred, enforcer):
return False
return True
def add_check(self, rule):
"""Adds rule to be tested.
Allows addition of another rule to the list of rules that will
be tested. Returns the AndCheck object for convenience.
"""
self.rules.append(rule)
return self
class OrCheck(BaseCheck):
"""Implements the "or" operator.
A policy check that requires that at least one of a list of other
checks returns True.
"""
def __init__(self, rules):
"""Initialize the 'or' check.
:param rules: A list of rules that will be tested.
"""
self.rules = rules
def __str__(self):
"""Return a string representation of this check."""
return "(%s)" % ' or '.join(str(r) for r in self.rules)
def __call__(self, target, cred, enforcer):
"""Check the policy.
Requires that at least one rule accept in order to return True.
"""
for rule in self.rules:
if rule(target, cred, enforcer):
return True
return False
def add_check(self, rule):
"""Adds rule to be tested.
Allows addition of another rule to the list of rules that will
be tested. Returns the OrCheck object for convenience.
"""
self.rules.append(rule)
return self
def _parse_check(rule):
"""Parse a single base check rule into an appropriate Check object."""
# Handle the special checks
if rule == '!':
return FalseCheck()
elif rule == '@':
return TrueCheck()
try:
kind, match = rule.split(':', 1)
except Exception:
LOG.exception(_LE("Failed to understand rule %s") % rule)
# If the rule is invalid, we'll fail closed
return FalseCheck()
# Find what implements the check
if kind in _checks:
return _checks[kind](kind, match)
elif None in _checks:
return _checks[None](kind, match)
else:
LOG.error(_LE("No handler for matches of kind %s") % kind)
return FalseCheck()
def _parse_list_rule(rule):
"""Translates the old list-of-lists syntax into a tree of Check objects.
Provided for backwards compatibility.
"""
# Empty rule defaults to True
if not rule:
return TrueCheck()
# Outer list is joined by "or"; inner list by "and"
or_list = []
for inner_rule in rule:
# Elide empty inner lists
if not inner_rule:
continue
# Handle bare strings
if isinstance(inner_rule, six.string_types):
inner_rule = [inner_rule]
# Parse the inner rules into Check objects
and_list = [_parse_check(r) for r in inner_rule]
# Append the appropriate check to the or_list
if len(and_list) == 1:
or_list.append(and_list[0])
else:
or_list.append(AndCheck(and_list))
# If we have only one check, omit the "or"
if not or_list:
return FalseCheck()
elif len(or_list) == 1:
return or_list[0]
return OrCheck(or_list)
# Used for tokenizing the policy language
_tokenize_re = re.compile(r'\s+')
def _parse_tokenize(rule):
"""Tokenizer for the policy language.
Most of the single-character tokens are specified in the
_tokenize_re; however, parentheses need to be handled specially,
because they can appear inside a check string. Thankfully, those
parentheses that appear inside a check string can never occur at
the very beginning or end ("%(variable)s" is the correct syntax).
"""
for tok in _tokenize_re.split(rule):
# Skip empty tokens
if not tok or tok.isspace():
continue
# Handle leading parens on the token
clean = tok.lstrip('(')
for i in range(len(tok) - len(clean)):
yield '(', '('
# If it was only parentheses, continue
if not clean:
continue
else:
tok = clean
# Handle trailing parens on the token
clean = tok.rstrip(')')
trail = len(tok) - len(clean)
# Yield the cleaned token
lowered = clean.lower()
if lowered in ('and', 'or', 'not'):
# Special tokens
yield lowered, clean
elif clean:
# Not a special token, but not composed solely of ')'
if len(tok) >= 2 and ((tok[0], tok[-1]) in
[('"', '"'), ("'", "'")]):
# It's a quoted string
yield 'string', tok[1:-1]
else:
yield 'check', _parse_check(clean)
# Yield the trailing parens
for i in range(trail):
yield ')', ')'
class ParseStateMeta(type):
"""Metaclass for the ParseState class.
Facilitates identifying reduction methods.
"""
def __new__(mcs, name, bases, cls_dict):
"""Create the class.
Injects the 'reducers' list, a list of tuples matching token sequences
to the names of the corresponding reduction methods.
"""
reducers = []
for key, value in cls_dict.items():
if not hasattr(value, 'reducers'):
continue
for reduction in value.reducers:
reducers.append((reduction, key))
cls_dict['reducers'] = reducers
return super(ParseStateMeta, mcs).__new__(mcs, name, bases, cls_dict)
def reducer(*tokens):
"""Decorator for reduction methods.
Arguments are a sequence of tokens, in order, which should trigger running
this reduction method.
"""
def decorator(func):
# Make sure we have a list of reducer sequences
if not hasattr(func, 'reducers'):
func.reducers = []
# Add the tokens to the list of reducer sequences
func.reducers.append(list(tokens))
return func
return decorator
@six.add_metaclass(ParseStateMeta)
class ParseState(object):
"""Implement the core of parsing the policy language.
Uses a greedy reduction algorithm to reduce a sequence of tokens into
a single terminal, the value of which will be the root of the Check tree.
Note: error reporting is rather lacking. The best we can get with
this parser formulation is an overall "parse failed" error.
Fortunately, the policy language is simple enough that this
shouldn't be that big a problem.
"""
def __init__(self):
"""Initialize the ParseState."""
self.tokens = []
self.values = []
def reduce(self):
"""Perform a greedy reduction of the token stream.
If a reducer method matches, it will be executed, then the
reduce() method will be called recursively to search for any more
possible reductions.
"""
for reduction, methname in self.reducers:
if (len(self.tokens) >= len(reduction) and
self.tokens[-len(reduction):] == reduction):
# Get the reduction method
meth = getattr(self, methname)
# Reduce the token stream
results = meth(*self.values[-len(reduction):])
# Update the tokens and values
self.tokens[-len(reduction):] = [r[0] for r in results]
self.values[-len(reduction):] = [r[1] for r in results]
# Check for any more reductions
return self.reduce()
def shift(self, tok, value):
"""Adds one more token to the state. Calls reduce()."""
self.tokens.append(tok)
self.values.append(value)
# Do a greedy reduce...
self.reduce()
@property
def result(self):
"""Obtain the final result of the parse.
Raises ValueError if the parse failed to reduce to a single result.
"""
if len(self.values) != 1:
raise ValueError("Could not parse rule")
return self.values[0]
@reducer('(', 'check', ')')
@reducer('(', 'and_expr', ')')
@reducer('(', 'or_expr', ')')
def _wrap_check(self, _p1, check, _p2):
"""Turn parenthesized expressions into a 'check' token."""
return [('check', check)]
@reducer('check', 'and', 'check')
def _make_and_expr(self, check1, _and, check2):
"""Create an 'and_expr'.
Join two checks by the 'and' operator.
"""
return [('and_expr', AndCheck([check1, check2]))]
@reducer('and_expr', 'and', 'check')
def _extend_and_expr(self, and_expr, _and, check):
"""Extend an 'and_expr' by adding one more check."""
return [('and_expr', and_expr.add_check(check))]
@reducer('check', 'or', 'check')
def _make_or_expr(self, check1, _or, check2):
"""Create an 'or_expr'.
Join two checks by the 'or' operator.
"""
return [('or_expr', OrCheck([check1, check2]))]
@reducer('or_expr', 'or', 'check')
def _extend_or_expr(self, or_expr, _or, check):
"""Extend an 'or_expr' by adding one more check."""
return [('or_expr', or_expr.add_check(check))]
@reducer('not', 'check')
def _make_not_expr(self, _not, check):
"""Invert the result of another check."""
return [('check', NotCheck(check))]
def _parse_text_rule(rule):
"""Parses policy to the tree.
Translates a policy written in the policy language into a tree of
Check objects.
"""
# Empty rule means always accept
if not rule:
return TrueCheck()
# Parse the token stream
state = ParseState()
for tok, value in _parse_tokenize(rule):
state.shift(tok, value)
try:
return state.result
except ValueError:
# Couldn't parse the rule
LOG.exception(_LE("Failed to understand rule %s") % rule)
# Fail closed
return FalseCheck()
def parse_rule(rule):
"""Parses a policy rule into a tree of Check objects."""
# If the rule is a string, it's in the policy language
if isinstance(rule, six.string_types):
return _parse_text_rule(rule)
return _parse_list_rule(rule)
def register(name, func=None):
"""Register a function or Check class as a policy check.
:param name: Gives the name of the check type, e.g., 'rule',
'role', etc. If name is None, a default check type
will be registered.
:param func: If given, provides the function or class to register.
If not given, returns a function taking one argument
to specify the function or class to register,
allowing use as a decorator.
"""
# Perform the actual decoration by registering the function or
# class. Returns the function or class for compliance with the
# decorator interface.
def decorator(func):
_checks[name] = func
return func
# If the function or class is given, do the registration
if func:
return decorator(func)
return decorator
@register("rule")
class RuleCheck(Check):
def __call__(self, target, creds, enforcer):
"""Recursively checks credentials based on the defined rules."""
try:
return enforcer.rules[self.match](target, creds, enforcer)
except KeyError:
# We don't have any matching rule; fail closed
return False
@register("role")
class RoleCheck(Check):
def __call__(self, target, creds, enforcer):
"""Check that there is a matching role in the cred dict."""
return self.match.lower() in [x.lower() for x in creds['roles']]
@register('http')
class HttpCheck(Check):
def __call__(self, target, creds, enforcer):
"""Check http: rules by calling to a remote server.
This example implementation simply verifies that the response
is exactly 'True'.
"""
url = ('http:' + self.match) % target
data = {'target': jsonutils.dumps(target),
'credentials': jsonutils.dumps(creds)}
post_data = urlparse.urlencode(data)
f = urlrequest.urlopen(url, post_data)
return f.read() == "True"
@register(None)
class GenericCheck(Check):
def __call__(self, target, creds, enforcer):
"""Check an individual match.
Matches look like:
tenant:%(tenant_id)s
role:compute:admin
True:%(user.enabled)s
'Member':%(role.name)s
"""
try:
match = self.match % target
except KeyError:
# While doing GenericCheck if key not
# present in Target return false
return False
try:
# Try to interpret self.kind as a literal
leftval = ast.literal_eval(self.kind)
except ValueError:
try:
kind_parts = self.kind.split('.')
leftval = creds
for kind_part in kind_parts:
leftval = leftval[kind_part]
except KeyError:
return False
return match == six.text_type(leftval)

View File

@ -20,7 +20,7 @@ from django.conf import settings
from openstack_auth import utils as auth_utils
from oslo_config import cfg
from openstack_dashboard.openstack.common import policy
from oslo_policy import policy
LOG = logging.getLogger(__name__)
@ -42,15 +42,17 @@ def _get_enforcer():
_ENFORCER = {}
policy_files = getattr(settings, 'POLICY_FILES', {})
for service in policy_files.keys():
enforcer = policy.Enforcer()
enforcer.policy_path = os.path.join(_BASE_PATH,
policy_files[service])
if os.path.isfile(enforcer.policy_path):
policy_path = os.path.join(_BASE_PATH,
policy_files[service])
if os.path.isfile(policy_path):
LOG.debug("adding enforcer for service: %s" % service)
enforcer = policy.Enforcer(CONF)
CONF.oslo_policy.policy_dirs = []
enforcer.policy_path = policy_path
_ENFORCER[service] = enforcer
else:
LOG.warn("policy file for service: %s not found at %s" %
(service, enforcer.policy_path))
(service, policy_path))
return _ENFORCER

View File

@ -23,6 +23,7 @@ netaddr>=0.7.12
oslo.concurrency>=2.0.0 # Apache-2.0
oslo.config>=1.11.0 # Apache-2.0
oslo.i18n>=1.5.0 # Apache-2.0
oslo.policy>=0.5.0 # Apache-2.0
oslo.serialization>=1.4.0 # Apache-2.0
oslo.utils>=1.4.0 # Apache-2.0
pyScss>=1.3.4 # MIT License