# frozen_string_literal: true module DeclarativePolicy # This object represents one step in the runtime decision of whether # an ability is allowed. It contains a Rule and a context (instance # of DeclarativePolicy::Base), which contains the user, the subject, # and the cache. It also contains an "action", which is the symbol # :prevent or :enable. class Step attr_reader :context, :rule, :action def initialize(context, rule, action) @context = context @rule = rule @action = action end # In the flattening process, duplicate steps may be generated in the # same rule. This allows us to eliminate those (see Runner#steps_by_score # and note its use of a Set) def ==(other) @context == other.context && @rule == other.rule && @action == other.action end # In the runner, steps are sorted dynamically by score, so that # we are sure to compute them in close to the optimal order. # # See also Rule#score, ManifestCondition#score, and Runner#steps_by_score. def score # we slightly prefer the preventative actions # since they are more likely to short-circuit case @action when :prevent @rule.score(@context) * (7.0 / 8) when :enable @rule.score(@context) end end def with_action(action) Step.new(@context, @rule, action) end def enable? @action == :enable end def prevent? @action == :prevent end # This rather complex method allows us to split rules into parts so that # they can be sorted independently for better optimization def flattened(roots) case @rule when Rule::Or # A single `Or` step is the same as each of its elements as separate steps @rule.rules.flat_map { |r| Step.new(@context, r, @action).flattened(roots) } when Rule::Ability # This looks like a weird micro-optimization but it buys us quite a lot # in some cases. If we depend on an Ability (i.e. a `can?(...)` rule), # and that ability *only* has :enable actions (modulo some actions that # we already have taken care of), then its rules can be safely inlined. steps = @context.runner(@rule.ability).steps.reject { |s| roots.include?(s) } if steps.all?(&:enable?) # in the case that we are a :prevent step, each inlined step becomes # an independent :prevent, even though it was an :enable in its initial # context. steps.map! { |s| s.with_action(:prevent) } if prevent? steps.flat_map { |s| s.flattened(roots) } else [self] end else [self] end end def pass? @rule.pass?(@context) end def repr "#{@action} when #{@rule.repr} (#{@context.repr})" end end end