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Installing TAAC: 1. Get the TAAC source code from http://dig.csail.mit.edu/hg/taac (You already did this!) 2. Get the tmswap directory needed for TAAC to properly operate and copy it into the directory in which proxy.py sits. - You may clone from http://dig.csail.mit.edu/hg/air-reasoner, take the airreasoner/ directory, and copy that into the taac source code directory under the name tmswap/. If the airreasoner/ directory does not exist, then take the contents of the root of the repository. 3. Install rdflib (http://www.rdflib.net/) if you want RDFa support. Otherwise (right now) you'll get a mod_python error if you try to access with an RDFa-based subjectAltUrl. You should now have a directory layout which looks something like the following: taac/ proxy.py tmswap/ [copied from the air-reasoner repository] policyrunner.py ... taac/ __init__.py ... 4. Configure TAAC. The primary configuration for TAAC is in taac/config.py. You most probably don’t need to change any of the settings, but you should be aware of their setting, as it impacts the remainder of this installation process. POLICY_FILE is the relative path from proxy.py to the file that links your protected files to the corresponding policy files governing access. POLICY_TYPE is the MIME type of POLICY_FILE (‘text/rdf+n3′ or ‘application/rdf+xml’ most likely). LOG_FILE is the relative path from proxy.py to the file to log access information to. The other settings are not terribly relevant to FOAF+SSL and can be left alone. 5. Setup your policy file. Your policy file (at the path specified by POLICY_FILE, defaulting to ‘./policies.n3′) is the key to protecting your URIs with FOAF+SSL. The policy file is an RDF file that links resources representing the protected URIs to their corresponding policy files. This is most easily done with the rein:access-policy (http://dig.csail.mit.edu/2005/09/rein/network#access-policy) property (subject to change in future TAAC releases). Here’s a very simple policies.n3 that protects my_file.html: @prefix rein: <http://dig.csail.mit.edu/2005/09/rein/network#> . <./my_file.html> rein:access-policy <./my_file.policy.n3> . 6. Create a policy. The policy is the access-policy attached by policies.n3. This policy is written in the AIR language, may be somewhat daunting for someone trying to write their first policy. A couple of sample policies include http://www.pipian.com/rdf/tami/juliette.policy.n3#JulietteLocationDissemPolicy, which permits any valid authentication via FOAF+SSL, and http://www.pipian.com/rdf/tami/juliette.policy.n3#JulietteFOAFDissemPolicy, which allows only friends and friends of friends of Juliette access. NOTE: The above policies may use outdated AIR syntax. You will need to use the version of the AIR language supported by the version of the air-reasoner you copied. You should probably take a look at the example/ directory in the air-reasoner repository for the general format of a rule. 7. Create your log file with mode 0666. This is usually ‘log.n3′. 8. Edit your .htaccess file. In order to actually enable the protection, you need to create a .htaccess file that actually adds proxy.py as a mod_python proxy and explicitly enables SSL client certificates to be passed to proxy.py. http://mr-burns.w3.org/taac/htaccess is a good example for Apache 1.3 SSL servers. Apache 2.0′s mod_ssl requires somewhat different flags to enable passing SSL client certificates (melvin carvalho says that SSLOptions should be set to +StdEnvVars and +ExportCertData). NOTE: Make sure to update the PythonPath directive to include the TAAC directory! 9. TAAC should now be set up and running
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FOAF+SSL access control module for mod_python using AIR
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