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https://issues.apache.org/jira/browse/PHOENIX-4198?page=com.atlassian.jira.plugin.system.issuetabpanels:all-tabpanel
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Ankit Singhal updated PHOENIX-4198:
-----------------------------------
    Attachment:     (was: PHOENIX-4198_v4.patch)

> Remove the need for users to have access to the Phoenix SYSTEM tables to 
> create tables
> --------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
>
>                 Key: PHOENIX-4198
>                 URL: https://issues.apache.org/jira/browse/PHOENIX-4198
>             Project: Phoenix
>          Issue Type: Bug
>            Reporter: Ankit Singhal
>            Assignee: Ankit Singhal
>              Labels: namespaces, security
>             Fix For: 4.13.0
>
>         Attachments: PHOENIX-4198.patch, PHOENIX-4198_v2.patch, 
> PHOENIX-4198_v3.patch, PHOENIX-4198_v4.patch
>
>
> Problem statement:-
> A user who doesn't have access to a table should also not be able to modify  
> Phoenix Metadata. Currently, every user required to have a write permission 
> to SYSTEM tables which is a security concern as they can 
> create/alter/drop/corrupt meta data of any other table without proper access 
> to the corresponding physical tables.
> [~devaraj] recommended a solution as below.
> 1. A coprocessor endpoint would be implemented and all write accesses to the 
> catalog table would have to necessarily go through that. The 'hbase' user 
> would own that table. Today, there is MetaDataEndpointImpl that's run on the 
> RS where the catalog is hosted, and that could be enhanced to serve the 
> purpose we need.
> 2. The regionserver hosting the catalog table would do the needful for all 
> catalog updates - creating the mutations as needed, that is.
> 3. The coprocessor endpoint could use Ranger to do necessary authorization 
> checks before updating the catalog table. So for example, if a user doesn't 
> have authorization to create a table in a certain namespace, or update the 
> schema, etc., it can reject such requests outright. Only after successful 
> validations, does it perform the operations (physical operations to do with 
> creating the table, and updating the catalog table with the necessary 
> mutations).
> 4. In essence, the code that implements dealing with DDLs, would be hosted in 
> the catalog table endpoint. The client code would be really thin, and it 
> would just invoke the endpoint with the necessary info. The additional thing 
> that needs to be done in the endpoint is the validation of authorization to 
> prevent unauthorized users from making changes to someone else's 
> tables/schemas/etc. For example, one should be able to create a view on a 
> table if he has read access on the base table. That mutation on the catalog 
> table would be permitted. For changing the schema (adding a new column for 
> example), the said user would need write permission on the table... etc etc.
> Thanks [~elserj] for the write-up.



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