The Context Handler is a RESTful web service component of Consent2Share. It is responsible for sending XACML response context that includes authorization decisions along with applied policy obligations to Policy Enforcement Point (PEP) components. The Context Handler sends the XACML request context to the Policy Decision Point (PDP). The PDP evaluates the applicable policies either from the Patient Consent Management (PCM) or a Fast Healthcare Interoperability Resource (FHIR) server against the request context, and returns the response context that includes authorization decisions along with obligations of applied policies to the Context Handler. The Context Handler sends XACML response context back to the PEP component. The PDP uses HERAS-AF, an open source XACML 2.0 implementation, for XACML evaluation, and uses either a PCM database as a local policy repository or a FHIR server to retrieve XACML policies that are generated from patients’ consents.
- Oracle Java JDK 8 with Java Cryptography Extension (JCE) Unlimited Strength Jurisdiction Policy
- Docker Engine (for building a Docker image from the project)
- Logback-Audit
This is a Maven project and requires Apache Maven 3.3.3 or greater to build it. It is recommended to use the Maven Wrapper scripts provided with this project. Maven Wrapper requires an Internet connection to download Maven and project dependencies for the very first build.
To build the project, navigate to the folder that contains pom.xml
file using the terminal/command line.
- To build a JAR:
- For Windows, run
mvnw.cmd clean install
- For *nix systems, run
mvnw clean install
- For Windows, run
- To build a Docker Image (this will create an image with
bhitsdev/context-handler:latest
tag):- For Windows, run
mvnw.cmd clean package docker:build
- For *nix systems, run
mvnw clean package docker:build
- For Windows, run
- This API uses the PCM database as a local policy repository to retrieve XACML policies. Thus, it needs to have a database user configuration with read privileges to the PCM database. Please see the Configure section for details of configuring the data source.
- As an alternative, this API can also be configured to retrieve XACML policies from a FHIR server. The following properties are required to be added in
application.yml
. Please see Configure section for more details.
c2s:
context-handler:
...
fhir:
enabled: true
# configure fhir server base url
serverUrl: <<server-url>>
clientSocketTimeoutInMs: 768000
ssn:
system: http://hl7.org/fhir/sid/us-ssn
oid: urn:oid:2.16.840.1.113883.4.1
label: SSN
npi:
system: http://hl7.org/fhir/sid/us-npi
oid: urn:oid:2.16.840.1.113883.4.6
label: PRN
pou:
system: http://hl7.org/fhir/v3/ActReason
oid: urn:oid:2.16.840.1.113883.1.11.20448
label: PurposeOfUse
mrn:
system: https://bhits-dev.github.io/consent2share/
oid: urn:oid:1.3.6.1.4.1.21367.13.20.200
label: MRN
...
- This API also needs to call the Logback-Audit server, so please follow the Logback-Audit deployment instruction to set it up.
- After the Logback-Audit server is up, the hostname (currently is localhost) in the default configuration needs to be replaced with the real server name. Logback-Audit configuration section in the configuration file
...
audit-service:
host: localhost
port: 9630
...
This is a Spring Boot project and serves the API via an embedded Tomcat instance. Therefore, there is no need for a separate application server to run this service.
- Run as a JAR file:
java -jar context-handler-x.x.x-SNAPSHOT.jar <additional program arguments>
- Run as a Docker Container:
docker run -d bhitsdev/context-handler:latest <additional program arguments>
NOTE: In order for this API to fully function as a microservice in the Consent2Share application, it is required to set up the dependency microservices and support level infrastructure. Please refer to the Consent2Share Deployment Guide for instructions to set up the Consent2Share infrastructure.
This API utilizes Configuration Server
which is based on Spring Cloud Config to manage externalized configuration, which is stored in a Configuration Data Git Repository
. We provide a Default Configuration Data Git Repository
.
This API can run with the default configuration, which is targeted for a local development environment. Default configuration data is from three places: bootstrap.yml
, application.yml
, and the data which Configuration Server
reads from Configuration Data Git Repository
. Both bootstrap.yml
and application.yml
files are located in the resources
folder of this source code.
We recommend overriding the configuration as needed in the Configuration Data Git Repository
, which is used by the Configuration Server
.
Also, please refer to Spring Cloud Config Documentation to see how the config server works, Spring Boot Externalized Configuration documentation to see how Spring Boot applies the order to load the properties, and Spring Boot Common Properties documentation to see the common properties used by Spring Boot.
java -jar context-handler-x.x.x-SNAPSHOT.jar --server.port=80
-
docker run -d bhitsdev/context-handler:latest --server.port=80
-
In a
docker-compose.yml
, this can be provided as:
version: '2'
services:
...
context-handler.c2s.com:
image: "bhitsdev/context-handler:latest"
command: ["--server.port=80"]
...
NOTE: Please note that these additional arguments will be appended to the default ENTRYPOINT
specified in the Dockerfile
unless the ENTRYPOINT
is overridden.
For simplicity in development and testing environments, SSL is NOT enabled by default configuration. SSL can easily be enabled following the examples below:
java -jar context-handler-x.x.x-SNAPSHOT.jar --spring.profiles.active=ssl --server.ssl.key-store=/path/to/ssl_keystore.keystore --server.ssl.key-store-password=strongkeystorepassword
docker run -d -v "/path/on/dockerhost/ssl_keystore.keystore:/path/to/ssl_keystore.keystore" bhitsdev/context-handler:latest --spring.profiles.active=ssl --server.ssl.key-store=/path/to/ssl_keystore.keystore --server.ssl.key-store-password=strongkeystorepassword
- In a
docker-compose.yml
, this can be provided as:
version: '2'
services:
...
context-handler.c2s.com:
image: "bhitsdev/context-handler:latest"
command: ["--spring.profiles.active=ssl","--server.ssl.key-store=/path/to/ssl_keystore.keystore", "--server.ssl.key-store-password=strongkeystorepassword"]
volumes:
- /path/on/dockerhost/ssl_keystore.keystore:/path/to/ssl_keystore.keystore
...
NOTE: As seen in the examples above, /path/to/ssl_keystore.keystore
is made available to the container via a volume mounted from the Docker host running this container.
Java has a default CA Certificates Store that allows it to trust well-known certificate authorities. For development and testing purposes, one might want to trust additional self-signed certificates. In order to override the default Java CA Certificates Store in a Docker container, one can mount a custom cacerts
file over the default one in the Docker image as follows:
docker run -d -v "/path/on/dockerhost/to/custom/cacerts:/etc/ssl/certs/java/cacerts" bhitsdev/context-handler:latest
NOTE: The cacerts
references refered to in the volume mapping above are files, not directories.
View license information for the software contained in this repository.
If you have any questions, comments, or concerns please see Consent2Share project site.
Please use GitHub Issues page to report issues.