apostrophe-secure-attachments

2.0.1 • Public • Published

apostrophe-secure-attachments

Why?

You want to limit access to certain uploaded files, such as PDFs, to website users who have specifically been given permission to view those files.

Wait, what's the standard behavior?

By default, files uploaded to your Apostrophe site can be accessed by anyone who knows the URL... which is why the URLs are unguessable. This is a common approach for high-traffic services. It allows media to be served as fast as possible by static webservers. And it still protects that media from being discovered by search engines, until someone shares that link in public.

This compromise works well for most sites, but it is not acceptable for Intranet sites. And that's why you tracked this module down.

Sounds great, what's the catch?

All attachments are delivered a little bit slower, including attachments that have public permissions. That's because Apostrophe must get involved in serving each one. It's not terrible, but there's an impact. So just bear that in mind, and don't use this module on a super-high-traffic site that doesn't really need it.

Installation

NOTE: node 8 is required for this module.

npm install apostrophe-secure-attachments

Restrictions (please read)

This module only works with the local storage backend of uploadfs. This is the default way attachments are stored in Apostrophe. You cannot use this module with the s3 or azure storage backends.

"Why not?" Those services are basically static webservers for your media. That defeats the purpose of using this module.

Limitations

Please note that limiting access to a URL doesn't prevent an authorized user from saving a file to their hard drive, then sharing that file directly. All this module does is prevent link sharing. However, it is still a useful tool to keep sensitive documents from being indexed accidentally after being inadvertently linked once on a public page, etc.

Configuration

Just turn it on in app.js:

module.exports = {
  // in app.js
  const apos = require('apostrophe')({
    modules: {
      'apostrophe-secure-attachments': {}
    }
  });
};

Migrating your existing uploads

  1. Move public/uploads to data/secure-uploads.

  2. Your data folder should already be a shared, persistent folder and if you are using our stagecoach deployment system, then it is. But if you're not... make very sure this folder is shared and persistent between deployments. Otherwise, you'll lose your uploads every time you deploy.

  3. That's all.

Legacy URLs like /uploads/attachments/yyy-some-file.pdf will be automatically redirected to /secure-uploads/attachments/yyy-some-file.pdf.

So wait... now how do I secure a file?

Just click on "Images" or "Files" in your admin bar, browse to the file of interest, click to edit, and select the Permissions tab. You can set up view permissions just as you would for a page, including options like "Login Required" and "Certain People." The latter can be locked down both by user and by group.

What if I have my own custom attachment fields?

If you have added attachment schema fields directly to your own pages or pieces, just set the view permissions for those pages and pieces. For pages, this option is always available via "Page Settings." For pieces, it becomes available in the editor if you set permissionsFields: true as an option to your pieces module, like this:

// lib/modules/products/index.js
 
module.exports = {
  extend: 'apostrophe-pieces',
  name: 'product',
  // Enables view permissions on a per-piece basis
  permissionsFields: true,
  addFields: [
    {
      type: 'attachment',
      group: 'office',
      name: 'resume'
    }
  ]
};

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Install

npm i apostrophe-secure-attachments

Weekly Downloads

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Version

2.0.1

License

MIT

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