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Redactable Models for Laravel

Latest Version on Packagist Total Downloads PHP from Packagist GitHub license

Table of Contents

Overview

Important

This package is still in development. There may be some bugs and API changes before the first stable release.

A Laravel package that you can use to redact, obfuscate, or mask fields from your models in a consistent and easy way.

When building web applications, you'll often need to keep hold of old data for auditing or reporting purposes. But for data privacy and security reasons, you may want to redact the sensitive information from the data that you store. This way, you can keep the rows in the database, but without the sensitive information.

This package allows you to define which models and fields should be redacted, and how they should be redacted.

Installation

Requirements

The package has been developed and tested to work with the following minimum requirements:

  • PHP 8.2
  • Laravel 10

Install the Package

You can install the package via Composer:

composer require ashallendesign/redactable-models

Usage

Defining Redactable Models

In order to make a model redactable, you need to add the AshAllenDesign\RedactableModels\Interfaces\Redactable interface to the model. This will enforce two new methods (redactable and redactionStrategy) that you need to implement.

Your model may look something like so:

use AshAllenDesign\RedactableModels\Interfaces\Redactable;
use Illuminate\Contracts\Database\Eloquent\Builder

class User extends Model implements Redactable
{
    // ...
    
    public function redactable(): Builder
    {
        // ...
    }

    public function redactionStrategy(): RedactionStrategy
    {
        // ...
    }
}

The redactable method allows you to return an instance of Illuminate\Contracts\Database\Eloquent\Builder which defines the models that are redactable.

The redactionStrategy method allows you to return an instance of AshAllenDesign\RedactableModels\Interfaces\RedactionStrategy which defines how the fields should be redacted. We'll cover the available strategies further down.

As an example, if we wanted to redact the email and name fields from all App\Models\User models older than 30 days, we could do the following:

use AshAllenDesign\RedactableModels\Support\Strategies\ReplaceContents;
use AshAllenDesign\RedactableModels\Interfaces\Redactable;
use Illuminate\Contracts\Database\Eloquent\Builder

class User extends Model implements Redactable
{
    // ...
    
    public function redactable(): Builder
    {
        return static::query()->where('created_at', '<', now()->subDays(30));
    }

    public function redactionStrategy(): RedactionStrategy
    {
        return app(ReplaceContents::class)->replaceWith([
            'name' => 'REDACTED',
            'email' => '[email protected]',
        ]);
    }
}

The model:redact Command

In order to automatically redact the fields on the models, you can use the package's model:redact command like so:

php artisan model:redact

This will find all the models within your app's app/Models directory that implement the AshAllenDesign\RedactableModels\Interfaces\Redactable interface and redact the fields based on the defined redaction strategy and query.

You may want to set this to run on a schedule (such as on a daily basis) in your Laravel app's scheduler.

Redaction Strategies

The package ships with several strategies that you can use redacting fields:

ReplaceContents

The ReplaceContents strategy allows you to replace the contents of the fields with a specified value.

For example, if we wanted to replace the name and email fields, we could do the following:

use AshAllenDesign\RedactableModels\Support\Strategies\ReplaceContents;
use AshAllenDesign\RedactableModels\Interfaces\Redactable;
use Illuminate\Foundation\Auth\User as Authenticatable;

class User extends Authenticatable implements Redactable
{
    // ...

    public function redactionStrategy(): RedactionStrategy
    {
        return app(ReplaceContents::class)->replaceWith([
            'name' => 'REDACTED',
            'email' => '[email protected]',
        ]);
    }
}

Running this against a model would replace the name field with REDACTED and the email field with [email protected].

The ReplaceContents strategy also allows you to use a closure to define the replacement value. This can be useful if you want a bit more control over the redaction process. The closure should accept the model as an argument and have a void return type.

For example, say you want to replace the name field with name_ followed by their ID. You could do the following:

use AshAllenDesign\RedactableModels\Support\Strategies\ReplaceContents;
use AshAllenDesign\RedactableModels\Interfaces\Redactable;
use Illuminate\Foundation\Auth\User as Authenticatable;

class User extends Authenticatable implements Redactable
{
    // ...

    public function redactionStrategy(): RedactionStrategy
    {
        return app(ReplaceContents::class)->replaceWith(function (User $user): void {
            $user->name = 'name_'.$user->id;
        });
    }
}

Imagine we have a user with ID 123 and a name of John Doe. Running the above code would replace the name field with name_123.

HashContents

The HashContents strategy allows you to MD5 hash the contents of the field.

This can be useful when you still want to be able to compare the redacted fields, but don't want to expose the original data.

For example, imagine you have an invitations table that contains an email field. You may want to find out how many unique email addresses have been invited, but you don't want to expose the email addresses themselves. You could do the following:

use AshAllenDesign\RedactableModels\Support\Strategies\HashContents;
use AshAllenDesign\RedactableModels\Interfaces\Redactable;
use Illuminate\Database\Eloquent\Model;

class Invitation extends Model implements Redactable
{
    // ...

    public function redactionStrategy(): RedactionStrategy
    {
        return app(HashContents::class))->fields([
            'email',
        ]);
    }
}

MaskContents

The MaskContents strategy allows you to mask the contents of the field with a specified character.

You can define the character to use for the mask, and how many characters from the start and end of the field to leave unmasked like so:

use AshAllenDesign\RedactableModels\Support\Strategies\MaskContents;
use AshAllenDesign\RedactableModels\Interfaces\Redactable;
use Illuminate\Foundation\Auth\User as Authenticatable;

class User extends Authenticatable implements Redactable
{
    // ...

    public function redactionStrategy(): RedactionStrategy
    {
        return app(MaskContents::class)
            ->mask(field: 'name', character: '*', index: 0, length: 4)
            ->mask(field: 'email', character: '-', index: 2, length: 3);
    }
}

In the above example, the name field would be masked with * and the first 4 characters would be left unmasked. The email field would be masked with - and the first 2 and last 3 characters would be left unmasked.

This means if a user's name was "Ash Allen" and their email was "[email protected]", after redaction their name would be "****Allen" and their email would be "as---xample.com".

Custom Redaction Strategies

Although the package ships with several redaction strategies out of the box, you can create your own custom redaction strategies.

You just need to create a class that implements the AshAllenDesign\RedactableModels\Interfaces\RedactionStrategy interface. This method enforces an apply method which accepts the model and defines the redaction logic.

An example of a custom redaction strategy might look like so:

use AshAllenDesign\RedactableModels\Interfaces\Redactable;
use AshAllenDesign\RedactableModels\Interfaces\RedactionStrategy;
use Illuminate\Database\Eloquent\Model;

class CustomStrategy implements RedactionStrategy
{
    public function apply(Redactable&Model $model): void
    {
        // Redaction logic goes here
    }
}

Manually Redacting Models

There may be times when you want to manually redact a model rather than using the model:redact command. To do this you can use the redactFields method that is available via the AshAllenDesign\RedactableModels\Traits\HasRedactableFields trait.

You can apply the trait to your model like so:

use AshAllenDesign\RedactableModels\Interfaces\Redactable;
use AshAllenDesign\RedactableModels\Traits\HasRedactableFields;
use Illuminate\Foundation\Auth\User as Authenticatable;

class User extends Authenticatable implements Redactable
{
    use HasRedactableFields;
    
    // ...
}

You can now use the redactFields method to redact the fields on the model like so:

$user = User::find(1);

$user->redactFields();

By default, this will redact the fields using the strategy defined in the model's redactionStrategy method.

You can override this by passing a custom redaction strategy to the redactFields method like so:

use App\Models\User;
use AshAllenDesign\RedactableModels\Support\Strategies\ReplaceContents;

$user = User::find(1);

$user->redactFields(
    strategy: app(ReplaceContents::class)->replaceWith(['name' => 'REDACTED'])
);

Events

ModelRedacted

When a model is redacted, an AshAllenDesign\RedactableModels\Events\ModelRedacted event is fired that can be listened on.

Testing

To run the package's unit tests, run the following command:

vendor/bin/phpunit

Security

If you find any security related issues, please contact me directly at [email protected] to report it.

Contribution

If you wish to make any changes or improvements to the package, feel free to make a pull request.

Note: A contribution guide will be added soon.

Credits

Changelog

Check the CHANGELOG to get more information about the latest changes.

License

The MIT License (MIT). Please see License File for more information.

Support Me

If you've found this package useful, please consider buying a copy of Battle Ready Laravel to support me and my work.

Every sale makes a huge difference to me and allows me to spend more time working on open-source projects and tutorials.

To say a huge thanks, you can use the code BATTLE20 to get a 20% discount on the book.

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