Awesome
Protected Attributes
Protect attributes from mass-assignment in Active Record models.
This plugin adds the class methods attr_accessible
and attr_protected
to your models to be able to declare white or black lists of attributes.
Note: This plugin will be officially supported until the release of Rails 5.0.
Installation
Add this line to your application's Gemfile
:
gem 'protected_attributes'
And then execute:
bundle install
Usage
Mass assignment security provides an interface for protecting attributes from end-user injection. This plugin provides two class methods in Active Record classes to control access to their attributes. The attr_protected
method takes a list of attributes that will be ignored in mass-assignment.
For example:
attr_protected :admin
attr_protected
also optionally takes a role option using :as
which allows you to define multiple mass-assignment groupings. If no role is defined then attributes will be added to the :default
role.
attr_protected :last_login, :as => :admin
A much better way, because it follows the whitelist-principle, is the attr_accessible
method. It is the exact opposite of attr_protected
, because it takes a list of attributes that will be mass-assigned if present. Any other attributes will be ignored. This way you won’t forget to protect attributes when adding new ones in the course of development. Here is an example:
attr_accessible :name
attr_accessible :name, :is_admin, :as => :admin
If you want to set a protected attribute, you will have to assign it individually:
params[:user] # => {:name => "owned", :is_admin => true}
@user = User.new(params[:user])
@user.is_admin # => false, not mass-assigned
@user.is_admin = true
@user.is_admin # => true
When assigning attributes in Active Record using attributes=
the :default
role will be used. To assign attributes using different roles you should use assign_attributes
which accepts an optional :as
options parameter. If no :as
option is provided then the :default
role will be used.
You can also bypass mass-assignment security by using the :without_protection
option. Here is an example:
@user = User.new
@user.assign_attributes(:name => 'Josh', :is_admin => true)
@user.name # => Josh
@user.is_admin # => false
@user.assign_attributes({ :name => 'Josh', :is_admin => true }, :as => :admin)
@user.name # => Josh
@user.is_admin # => true
@user.assign_attributes({ :name => 'Josh', :is_admin => true }, :without_protection => true)
@user.name # => Josh
@user.is_admin # => true
In a similar way, new
, create
, create!
, update_attributes
and update_attributes!
methods all respect mass-assignment security and accept either :as
or :without_protection
options. For example:
@user = User.new({ :name => 'Sebastian', :is_admin => true }, :as => :admin)
@user.name # => Sebastian
@user.is_admin # => true
@user = User.create({ :name => 'Sebastian', :is_admin => true }, :without_protection => true)
@user.name # => Sebastian
@user.is_admin # => true
By default the gem will use the strong parameters protection when assigning attribute, unless your model has attr_accessible
or attr_protected
calls.
Errors
By default, attributes in the params hash which are not allowed to be updated are just ignored. If you prefer an exception to be raised configure:
config.active_record.mass_assignment_sanitizer = :strict
Any protected attributes violation raises ActiveModel::MassAssignmentSecurity::Error
then.
Contributing
- Fork it
- Create your feature branch (
git checkout -b my-new-feature
) - Commit your changes (
git commit -am 'Add some feature'
) - Push to the branch (
git push origin my-new-feature
) - Create new Pull Request