Permissions
Permissions can be managed using Permission
classes. A Permission
class
extends BasePermission
and has a has_permission
method. It can be added to a
field using the permission_classes
keyword argument. A basic example looks
like this:
import typingimport strawberryfrom strawberry.permission import BasePermissionfrom strawberry.types import Info
class IsAuthenticated(BasePermission): message = "User is not authenticated"
# This method can also be async! def has_permission(self, source: typing.Any, info: Info, **kwargs) -> bool: return False
@strawberry.typeclass Query: user: str = strawberry.field(permission_classes=[IsAuthenticated])
Your has_permission
method should check if this request has permission to access the
field. Note that the has_permission
method can also be asynchronous.
If the has_permission
method returns a truthy value then the field access will go
ahead. Otherwise, an error will be raised using the message
class attribute.
Take a look at our Dealing with Errors Guide for more information on how errors are handled.
{ "data": null, "errors": [ { "message": "User is not authenticated" } ]}
Accessing user information
Accessing the current user information to implement your permission checks depends on the web framework you are using.
Most frameworks will have a Request
object where you can either access the current
user directly or access headers/cookies/query parameters to authenticate the user.
All the Strawberry integrations provide this Request object in the info.context
object
that is accessible in every resolver and in the has_permission
function.
You can find more details about a specific framework integration under the "Integrations" heading in the navigation.
In this example we are using starlette
which uses the
ASGI integration:
import typingfrom myauth import authenticate_header, authenticate_query_param
from starlette.requests import Requestfrom starlette.websockets import WebSocketfrom strawberry.permission import BasePermissionfrom strawberry.types import Info
class IsAuthenticated(BasePermission): message = "User is not authenticated"
def has_permission(self, source: typing.Any, info: Info, **kwargs) -> bool: request: typing.Union[Request, WebSocket] = info.context["request"]
if "Authorization" in request.headers: return authenticate_header(request)
if "auth" in request.query_params: return authenticate_query_params(request)
return False
Here we retrieve the request
object from the context
provided by info
.
This object will be either a Request
or Websocket
instance from starlette
(see: Request docs and
Websocket docs).
In the next step we take either the Authorization
header or the auth
query
parameter out of the request
object, depending on which is available. We then
pass those on to some authenticate methods we've implemented ourselves.
Beyond providing hooks, Authentication is not currently Strawberry's responsibility. You should provide your own helpers to figure out if a request has the permissions you expect.
For more discussion on Authentication see Issue #830.