We've developed code that basically returns data for a user's permissions on an entity. For instance, an entity could be one of the following:
-Company
-Contact
-Project
-Issue etc...
We then can assign policies (and a person can get multiple policies) that allow a user to perform an action:
-Create
-Edit
-Delete
-Export
So basically one policy could say that user A has the right to create a company, but another policy which this same user has says that he does not have the right to create a company. In this case we take the rights that allow before the rights that dont allow. In this example, he/she would be allowed to create a company.
So basically you end up with data like so:
Policy1 Company Create Yes
Policy1 Company Edit Yes
Policy1 Company Delete No
Policy2 Company Create No
Policy2 Company Edit Yes
Policy2 Company Delete No
I have a query which we use to return what is this user's permission based on the rules we discussed.
In this case running the query the result would be:
Company create yes
Company edit yes
Company delete no
Our app isn't just a bit yes / no for whether they can perform the action or not. We have yes / no / owner only (for records that should only be edited / deleted by the owner only. Our query is great and is returning the correct data.
My question is what data type should I use in C# to basically say:
Given an entity (company) given an action (create) what is the value. Basically at the end of the day I want to build a matrix that looks like this:
Create Edit Delete
Company Yes Owner Only Yes
Contact No No No
Project Yes Yes Owner Only
The rows on the first column represent the entity, the columns after that represent the actions (create, edit, delete). The combination of the 2 for instance index:
[Company][Create] = Yes
would give you the right of the action based on the entity.
So what datatype fits this model where I can perform some index like: [Contact][Edit]=No
.
We also have to session this object / come up with a way (maybe dynamically) to get the result based on an entity and action.
I thought session would be good so that we can check the rights once and only once until the user logs out.