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More docs; this will never end

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Philipp Heckel 2022-02-02 19:26:17 -05:00
parent 1552d8103e
commit 0ad85262c1
2 changed files with 87 additions and 9 deletions

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@ -50,7 +50,7 @@ Arguments:
- deny (alias: none)
Examples:
ntfy access
ntfy access # Shows entire access control list
ntfy access phil # Shows access for user phil
ntfy access phil mytopic rw # Allow read-write access to mytopic for user phil
ntfy access everyone mytopic rw # Allow anonymous read-write access to mytopic

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@ -125,21 +125,99 @@ and `visitor-attachment-daily-bandwidth-limit`. Setting these conservatively is
By default, the ntfy server is open for everyone, meaning **everyone can read and write to any topic**. To restrict access
to your own server, you can optionally configure authentication and authorization.
ntfy's auth is implemented with a simple SQLite-based backend. It implements two roles (`user` and `admin`) and per-topic
`read` and `write` permissions using an access control list (ACL). Access control entries can be applied to users as well
as the special everyone user (`*`), which represents anonymous API access.
ntfy's auth is implemented with a simple [SQLite](https://www.sqlite.org/)-based backend. It implements two roles
(`user` and `admin`) and per-topic `read` and `write` permissions using an [access control list (ACL)](https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Access-control_list).
Access control entries can be applied to users as well as the special everyone user (`*`), which represents anonymous API access.
To set up auth, simply configure the following two options:
* `auth-file` is the SQLite user/access database; it is created automatically if it doesn't already exist
* `auth-file` is the user/access database; it is created automatically if it doesn't already exist
* `auth-default-access` defines the default/fallback access if no access control entry is found; it can be
set to `read-write` (default), `read-only`, `write-only` or `deny-all`.
### Managing users + access
Once configured, you can use the `ntfy user` command to add/modify/delete users, and the `ntfy access` command
to modify the access control list to allow/deny access to specific topic or topic patterns.
Once configured, you can use the `ntfy user` command to [add or modify users](#users-and-roles), and the `ntfy access` command
lets you [modify the access control list](#access-control-list-acl) for specific users and topic patterns. Both of these
commands directly edit the auth database (as defined in `auth-file`), so they only work on the server, and only if the user
accessing them has the right permissions.
XXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXx
### Users and roles
The `ntfy user` command allows you to add/remove/change users in the ntfy user database, as well as change
passwords or roles (`user` or `admin`). In practice, you'll often just create one admin
user with `ntfy user add --role=admin ...` and be done with all this (see [example below](#example-private-instance)).
**Roles:**
* Role `user` (default): Users with this role have no special permissions. Manage access using `ntfy access`
(see [below](#access-control-list-acl)).
* Role `admin`: Users with this role can read/write to all topics. Granular access control is not necessary.
**Example commands** (type `ntfy user --help` or `ntfy user COMMAND --help` for more details):
```
ntfy user list # Shows list of users
ntfy user add phil # Add regular user phil
ntfy user add --role=admin phil # Add admin user phil
ntfy user del phil # Delete user phil
ntfy user change-pass phil # Change password for user phil
ntfy user change-role phil admin # Make user phil an admin
```
### Access control list (ACL)
The access control list manages access to topics for non-admin users. Each entry represents the access permissions for
a user to a specific topic or topic pattern. Here's an example ACL:
```
$ ntfy access
User phil (admin)
- read-write access to all topics (admin role)
User ben (user)
- read-write access to topic garagedoor
- read-write access to topic alerts*
- read-only access to topic furnace
User * (anonymous)
- read-only access to topic announcements
- read-only access to topic server-stats
- no access to any (other) topics (server config)
```
In this example, `phil` has the role `admin`, so he has read-write access to all topics (no ACL entries are necessary).
User `ben` has three topic-specific entries. He can read, but not write to topic `furnace`, and has read-write access
to topic `garagedoor` and all topics starting with the word `alerts` (wildcards). Clients that are not authenticated
(called `*`/`everyone`) only have read access to the `announcements` and `server-stats` topics.
**Modifying the ACL**
The access control list can be modified with the `ntfy access` command:
```
ntfy access # Shows the entire access control list
ntfy access USERNAME # Shows access control entries for USERNAME
ntfy access USERNAME TOPIC PERMISSION # Allow/deny access for USERNAME to TOPIC
```
XXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXX
USERNAME an existing user, as created with 'ntfy user add', or "everyone"/"*"
to define access rules for anonymous/unauthenticated clients
TOPIC name of a topic with optional wildcards, e.g. "mytopic*"
**Permissions:**
* read-write (alias: rw)
- read-only (aliases: read, ro)
- write-only (aliases: write, wo)
- deny (alias: none)
**Example commands** (type `ntfy access --help` for more details):
```
ntfy access # Shows entire access control list
ntfy access phil # Shows access for user phil
ntfy access phil mytopic rw # Allow read-write access to mytopic for user phil
ntfy access everyone mytopic rw # Allow anonymous read-write access to mytopic
ntfy access everyone "up*" write # Allow anonymous write-only access to topics "up..."
ntfy access --reset # Reset entire access control list
ntfy access --reset phil # Reset all access for user phil
ntfy access --reset phil mytopic # Reset access for user phil and topic mytopic
```
### Example: Private instance
The easiest way to configure a private instance is to set `auth-default-access` to `deny-all` in the `server.yml`: