Basic: Olymp library
A basic, down-to-earth full feature example
Consider a file sharing application called "Olymp Library". Each file is stored in a key-value store, where the key is a UUIDv4 (pseudorandom unique identifier), while the value is the metadata and content. The application uses Ory Keto to keep track of ownership and granted access on a per file level.
This example assumes there is a namespace files
with the relations owner
and access
defined,
where each owner
of an object also has access
to that object. All relation tuples are stored in that namespace.
Now, the user identified by its unique username demeter
wants to upload a file containing the most fertile grounds. The file
gets assigned the UUID ec788a82-a12e-45a4-b906-3e69f78c94e4
. The application adds the following
relation tuple to Ory Keto through the write-API:
ec788a82-a12e-45a4-b906-3e69f78c94e4#owner@demeter
To prepare for an important meeting with the user athena
, demeter
wants to share the file with fertile grounds with athena
so that they can both read it. Therefore, he opens the "Olymp Library" and is presented with a list of all files he owns. The
application will internally request all objects (file IDs) with the owner demeter
by using the
list-API. The response will contain the object
ec788a82-a12e-45a4-b906-3e69f78c94e4
, which the application maps to the file in question.
The user demeter
will then ask the application to share the file with athena
. The application will translate that request into
a write-API request adding the following relation tuple to Ory Keto:
ec788a82-a12e-45a4-b906-3e69f78c94e4#access@athena
To confirm the successful operation, the application uses Ory Keto's expand-API to compile a list of everyone who can access the file:
// The following subject set is expanded by Keto
ec788a82-a12e-45a4-b906-3e69f78c94e4#access
which returns the expansion tree
∪ ec788a82-a12e-45a4-b906-3e69f78c94e4#access
├─ ∪ ec788a82-a12e-45a4-b906-3e69f78c94e4#owner
│ ├─ ☘ demeter
├─ ☘ athena
The "Olymp Library" can then display this information to demeter
.
When athena
wants to get the file containing fertile grounds, the application uses the
check-API to verify that athena
has access to the file before it returns
the file. This will allow demeter
to revoke athena
's access at any point by deleting the corresponding relation tuple.
This diagram illustrates the relationships in this example: