On Tue, Mar 18, 2014 at 10:02 AM, Dmitriy Vsekhvalnov <
dvsekhval...@gmail.com> wrote:
> Kalle, do you mean it works only for traversing object graph? (sorry i
> probably have to check myself before asking stupid questions).
>
Yes. It checks that a security principal of the currently executing s
Kalle, do you mean it works only for traversing object graph? (sorry i
probably have to check myself before asking stupid questions).
On Tue, Mar 18, 2014 at 8:31 PM, Kalle Korhonen
wrote:
> On Tue, Mar 18, 2014 at 7:43 AM, Dmitriy Vsekhvalnov <
> dvsekhval...@gmail.com
> > wrote:
>
> > is tapes
On Tue, Mar 18, 2014 at 7:43 AM, Dmitriy Vsekhvalnov wrote:
> is tapestry-security-jpa provides filtering data support? E.g. when i
> execute .list() operation with query can it apply filter based on owner or
> other rule?
> like Hibernate filters?
>
No, this is meant strictly for securing data
On Tue, Mar 18, 2014 at 6:08 AM, Ken in Nashua wrote:
> Thanks Kalle, thats the answer I was seeking.
> Which persistence Service wold in order to ORM o MySQL ?
> Does that JPA construct do it itself somehow like javabeans or can I use
> the existing hibernate persistence service that comes with
is tapestry-security-jpa provides filtering data support? E.g. when i
execute .list() operation with query can it apply filter based on owner or
other rule?
like Hibernate filters?
On Tue, Mar 18, 2014 at 5:08 PM, Ken in Nashua wrote:
> Thanks Kalle, thats the answer I was seeking.
>
> Which pe
Thanks Kalle, thats the answer I was seeking.
Which persistence Service wold in order to ORM o MySQL ?
Does that JPA construct do it itself somehow like javabeans or can I use the
existing hibernate persistence service that comes with your suite ?
Thanks for the solution, appreciate that.
Ken
Very nice.
On 16/03/2014, at 3:00 AM, Kalle Korhonen wrote:
> There's also http://tynamo.org/tapestry-security-jpa+guide that has
> annotations and works at the entity level - it's JPA only at the moment.
>
> Kalle
>
-
To uns
Oops, I said "The service can return a really nasty error if it fails - there's
no need to be nice because the user should not be in that situation unless
they've hacked the URL." What I should have said is that if the user does not
even have read rights to the requested item then the service ca
There's also http://tynamo.org/tapestry-security-jpa+guide that has
annotations and works at the entity level - it's JPA only at the moment.
Kalle
On Sat, Mar 15, 2014 at 5:22 AM, Geoff Callender <
geoff.callender.jumpst...@gmail.com> wrote:
> In my world this distinction is often referred to a
In my world this distinction is often referred to as "data rights" vs.
"function rights".
Function rights can indeed be handled by restricting access to pages and
components with annotations and sometimes a bit of conditional logic in the
template. It's up to you whether you check function rights
Boris, you're not missing anything. 10% of what Ken posts to the tapestry
mailing list is related to tapestry... The other 90% is off topic :)
I could be missing something, but isn't this a database question? how to
model your tables and relationships between them?
I dont see this as being tapestry related question to be honest
On Sat, Mar 15, 2014 at 10:41 AM, Jens Breitenstein wrote:
> Hi Ken!
>
> this sounds more like a "persistenc
Hi Ken!
this sounds more like a "persistence" question, to be honest. How do you
store / persist the user data?
Jens
Am 15.03.14 06:44, schrieb Ken in Nashua:
Hi Folks,
I want to create a web site data model whereby... whatever a user creates...
they own.
And when they come back to the
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