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https://issues.apache.org/jira/browse/SOLR-1895?page=com.atlassian.jira.plugin.system.issuetabpanels:comment-tabpanel&focusedCommentId=13109189#comment-13109189
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Karl Wright commented on SOLR-1895:
-----------------------------------

bq. So I think this boils down to MCF having a custom query parser in it's 
codebase (yes, it'll have to depend on Solr, but it already does in terms of 
being able to index into Solr).

There's currently no such dependency, but it looks like there will be shortly.  
(Indexing is handled via http, so there is no Solr requirements here.)

bq. Any holes in doing it this way? Seems the cleanest/slickest way to me 
currently.

Can you give me an example of multiple filter queries being used?  For example, 
suppose an fq argument comes into the Search Handler - how does the "appends" 
do the right thing?  I'd like this to be transparent to other query parsers 
that may be in use, so I want to verify that there will be no impact in 
silently adding another one to the chain.




> ManifoldCF SearchComponent plugin for enforcing ManifoldCF security at search 
> time
> ----------------------------------------------------------------------------------
>
>                 Key: SOLR-1895
>                 URL: https://issues.apache.org/jira/browse/SOLR-1895
>             Project: Solr
>          Issue Type: New Feature
>          Components: SearchComponents - other
>            Reporter: Karl Wright
>              Labels: document, security, solr
>             Fix For: 3.5, 4.0
>
>         Attachments: LCFSecurityFilter.java, LCFSecurityFilter.java, 
> LCFSecurityFilter.java, LCFSecurityFilter.java, 
> SOLR-1895-service-plugin.patch, SOLR-1895-service-plugin.patch, 
> SOLR-1895.patch, SOLR-1895.patch, SOLR-1895.patch, SOLR-1895.patch, 
> SOLR-1895.patch, SOLR-1895.patch
>
>
> I've written an LCF SearchComponent which filters returned results based on 
> access tokens provided by LCF's authority service.  The component requires 
> you to configure the appropriate authority service URL base, e.g.:
>   <!-- LCF document security enforcement component -->
>   <searchComponent name="lcfSecurity" class="LCFSecurityFilter">
>     <str 
> name="AuthorityServiceBaseURL">http://localhost:8080/lcf-authority-service</str>
>   </searchComponent>
> Also required are the following schema.xml additions:
>    <!-- Security fields -->
>    <field name="allow_token_document" type="string" indexed="true" 
> stored="false" multiValued="true"/>
>    <field name="deny_token_document" type="string" indexed="true" 
> stored="false" multiValued="true"/>
>    <field name="allow_token_share" type="string" indexed="true" 
> stored="false" multiValued="true"/>
>    <field name="deny_token_share" type="string" indexed="true" stored="false" 
> multiValued="true"/>
> Finally, to tie it into the standard request handler, it seems to need to run 
> last:
>   <requestHandler name="standard" class="solr.SearchHandler" default="true">
>     <arr name="last-components">
>       <str>lcfSecurity</str>
>     </arr>
> ...
> I have not set a package for this code.  Nor have I been able to get it 
> reviewed by someone as conversant with Solr as I would prefer.  It is my 
> hope, however, that this module will become part of the standard Solr 1.5 
> suite of search components, since that would tie it in with LCF nicely.

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