Hi,
We all agree we need something better for deletions. We have a JIRA issues
for this:
http://jira.xwiki.org/jira/browse/XWIKI-543
Sergiu has proposed this and has added a description of how it should work
and questions there. I would be interested to see what you think?
Thanks
-Vincent
From: THOMAS, BRIAN M (SBCSI) [mailto:bt0008@att.com]
Sent: jeudi 4 janvier 2007 19:00
To: xwiki-users(a)objectweb.org
Subject: [xwiki-users] Audit trail for deletions (was: Re: Strange behaviour
on
xwiki.org)
Spickinawich...
I've noted that when a doc is deleted, no record seems to be kept of when it
was done, by whom, or what the document's former history was. When I brag
about XWiki's ability to track and undo changes, I have to sort of gloss
over this little hole in the functionality.
I realize, of course, that permission to delete is separately controllable
(though only as a part of the "admin" right) but I'd like not to have to
forbid anyone deleting documents merely because I can't support an audit
trail for them. Then again, the inability to recover space by means of
wholesale deletion (with optional archiving) of obsolete documents would
make admins pretty unhappy, so some ability to do complete deletions
(without resorting to direct database manipulation) must remain as an
administrative option.
So I think I'd like to see the following:
- auditable, history-recoverable document deletion (and possibly renaming),
granted as part of the "edit" right; and
- auditable but non-recoverable (by ordinary users) deletion and renaming
reserved for the "admin" right.
In order to accomplish this (and other refinements, foreseeable and
otherwise), it might be a good idea to populate
XWikiRightService.getRight()'s actions-to-required-rights map from a
configuration file rather than directly in code as the default rights
service implementation currently does.
Of course, this method does not map "delete" to "admin"; instead it
maps
"delete" to "delete", and checkAccess() deals with "delete"
specially,
succeeding immediately for the document's creator and changing the required
right to "admin" for anyone else, before doing the check. So this is
another example of the unfortunate complexity of the rights system, which
will probably require considerable effort to simplify, if it can be done at
all, and I wouldn't blame the developers if they were reluctant to take it
up; I certainly would be. Thus the age-old conflict between "security is
hard" and "complexity is the enemy of security" continues (though together
they hint that complexity is part of why it's hard)...
brain[sic]