NAME
Dancer::Plugin::Auth::RBAC::Credentials::PostgreSQL - Dancer::Plugin::Auth::RBAC authentication via PostgreSQL!
VERSION
version 1.110720
SYNOPSIS
# in your app code
my $auth = auth($login, $password);
if ($auth) {
# login successful
}
# use your own encryption (if the user account password is encrypted)
my $auth = auth($login, encrypt($password));
if ($auth) {
# login successful
}
DESCRIPTION
Dancer::Plugin::Auth::RBAC::Credentials::PostgreSQL uses your PostgreSQL database connection as the application's user management system.
METHODS
authorize
The authorize method (found in every authentication class) validates a user against the defined datastore using the supplied arguments and configuration file options.
CONFIGURATION
plugins:
Database:
driver: 'Pg'
database: 'test'
username: 'root'
password: '****'
Auth::RBAC:
credentials:
class: PostgreSQL
Sometime you might define multiple connections for the Database plugin, make sure you tell the Auth::RBAC plugin about it... e.g.
plugins:
Database:
foo:
driver: 'sqlite'
database: 'example1.db'
bar:
driver: 'Pg'
database: 'test'
username: 'root'
password: '****'
Auth::RBAC:
credentials:
class: PostgreSQL
options:
handle: bar
Please see Dancer::Plugin::Database for a list of all available connection options and arguments.
DATABASE SETUP
# users table (feel free to add more columns as you see fit)
CREATE TABLE "users" (
"id" SERIAL NOT NULL PRIMARY KEY,
"name" TEXT,
"login" TEXT NOT NULL,
"password" TEXT NOT NULL,
"roles" TEXT
);
# create an initial adminstrative user (should probably encrypt the password)
# Note! this module is not responsible for creating user accounts, it simply
# provides a consistant authentication framework
INSERT INTO users (name, login, password, roles)
VALUES ('Administrator', 'admin', '*****', 'guest, user, admin');
AUTHOR
Al Newkirk <awncorp@cpan.org>
COPYRIGHT AND LICENSE
This software is copyright (c) 2010 by awncorp.
This is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify it under the same terms as the Perl 5 programming language system itself.