The DCWorkflow giveth and the SubtractiveWorkflow taketh away.
Project description
Introduction
This product provides an alternative type of workflow definition. It works much like a regular workflow, but instead of granting permissions when entering a particular state, it takes them away from the selected roles.
The original use case was to support “confidential” content items via a secondary workflow. The primary chain on the type has a publishing workflow that will grant the View permission to various roles in various states. The secondary ‘confidentiality workflow’ has two states: ‘normal’ and ‘confidential’. In the ‘normal’ state, no roles are selected for the View permission, and so the role mappings from the primary workflow apply. However, in the ‘confidential’ state, Anonymous, Authenticated and Member have been selected for the View permission and so these roles no longer have the ability to view the item.
Note that the ‘acquire’ flag should almost always be off. The subtractive workflow will set the acquire property in the same way as the default workflow definition, but the results will probably not be what you expect, since permissions that were “turned off” may well be acquired.
Also note that group-to-local role mappings are not “subtractive” and work exactly as in the standard workflow definition. In general, local roles are always inherited in Zope (although Plone has an extension to turn this off).
The effects of multiple workflows
This product depends on an interpretation of the DCWorkflow permissions system as follows:
If there are multiple workflows in a chain, the item’s state is determined by all the workflows, not just the last one.
In particular, the permission settings in all workflows in the chain apply at all times. Later workflows can override earlier ones.
To support this, an event handler is installed that will, when a transition occurs, “re-play” the updateRoleMappings() call for all workflows in the chain (there is an optimisation to avoid duplicate work if there’s only one workflow in the chain). It will do nothing if there are no subtractive workflows in the chain, but as soon as there is one, you will get this behaviour.
Thus, if you have a subtractive workflow as the second workflow in a two-workflow chain, and you invoke a transition from either the first or the second workflow, the permissions from both will apply, with the subtractive workflow allowed to override the normal workflow.
Note that this may affect existing multi-workflow chains, because by default, DCWorkflow does not “re-play” the role mappings in this way, letting instead the most recently entered state determine the role mappings and fully overriding roles from the current state of any other workflows in the chain.
Changelog
2.0b1 (2010-09-11)
The fact of setting dummy to the container generate an AddedObjectEvent, Products.CMFCore.CMFCatalogAware.handleContentishEvent catch the event and call wftool.notifyCreated(dummy). Products.CMFCore 2.2, in Products.CMFCore.WorkflowTool.notifyCreated, added a check, wf.notifyCreated is not called if it was previously called (workflow_history not empty). So in the tests, wftool.notifyCreated(dummy) does nothing after the dummy object has been set to the container. All the tests have been adapted and fixed. [vincentfretin]
Removed the explicit check “event.transition is None, then return” in react.object_transitioned subscriber. We want the roles mapping to be updated if the confidential state is the initial state. [vincentfretin]
Fixed workflow GenericSetup import, the _initDCWorkflow signature changed in Products.DCWorkflow 2.2 used by Plone 4. This version will not work anymore with Products.DCWorkflow 2.1 used by Plone 3. [vincentfretin]
1.0b1 - 2009-04-03
Initial release
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