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Consent module
==============
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The consent module is implemented as an Authentication Processing Filter. That 
means it can be configured in the global config.php file or the SP remote or 
IdP hosted metadata.

It is recommended to run the consent module at the IdP, and configure the 
filter to run after all attribute mangling filters have completed, to show the 
user the exact same attributes that are sent to the SP.
  * [Read more about processing filters in SimpleSAMLphp](simplesamlphp-authproc)
How to setup the consent module
-------------------------------
In order to generate the privacy preserving hashes in the consent module, you 
need to name one attribute that is always available and that is unique to all 
users. An example of such an attribute is eduPersonPrincipalName.

In your `saml20-idp-hosted.php` add the name of the user ID attribute:

	'userid.attribute' => 'uid', 

If the attribute defined above is not available for a user, an error message 
will be shown, and the user will not be allowed through the filter. So make 
sure that you select an attribute that is available to all users.

Next you need to enable the consent module; touch an `enable` file, in the
consent module:
	
    touch modules/consent/enable
The simplest way to setup the consent module is to not use any storage at 
all. This means that the user will always be asked to give consent each time 
the user logs in.
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        'class' => 'consent:Consent',
Using storage
-------------
The consent module is shipped with two storage options, Cookie and Database.
### Using cookies as storage ###

In order to use a storage backend, you need to set the `store` option. To use
cookies as storage you need to set the `store` option to `consent:Cookie`.

Example: 

	90 => array(
		'class' 	=> 'consent:Consent', 
		'store' 	=> 'consent:Cookie', 
	),


### Using a database as storage ###
In order to use a database backend storage, you first need to setup the
Here is the initialization SQL script:

	CREATE TABLE consent (
		consent_date TIMESTAMP NOT NULL DEFAULT CURRENT_TIMESTAMP,
		usage_date TIMESTAMP NOT NULL DEFAULT CURRENT_TIMESTAMP,
		hashed_user_id VARCHAR(80) NOT NULL,
		service_id VARCHAR(255) NOT NULL,
		attribute VARCHAR(80) NOT NULL,
		UNIQUE (hashed_user_id, service_id)
	);

The `consent:Database` backend storage has the following options:

`class`
:   Must be set to `consent:Database`.

`dsn`
:   Data Source Name must comply to the syntax for the PHP PDO layer.

`username`
:   Username for the database user to be used for the connection.

`password`
:   Password for the database user used for the connection.

`table`
:   Name of the table used for storing the consents. This option is optional
and defaults to `consent`.

`timeout`
:   The number of seconds to wait for a connection to the database server. This option is optional. If unset, it uses the default from the database-driver.

Example config using PostgreSQL database:

	90 => array(
		'class'	=> 'consent:Consent', 
		'store'	=> array(
			'consent:Database', 
			'dsn' => 'pgsql:host=sql.example.org;dbname=consent',
			'username' => 'simplesaml',
			'password' => 'sdfsdf',
		),
	),

Example config using MySQL database:
	90 => array(
		'class'	=> 'consent:Consent', 
		'store'	=> array(
			'consent:Database', 
            'dsn' => 'mysql:host=db.example.org;dbname=simplesaml',
			'username' => 'simplesaml',
			'password' => 'sdfsdf',
		),
	),


Options
-------
The following options can be used when configuring the Consent module:
:   Boolean value that indicates whether the values of the attributes should be 
    used in calculating the unique hashes that identifies the consent. If 
    includeValues is set and the value of an attribute changes, then the 
    consent becomes invalid. This option is optional and defaults to FALSE.
:   Boolean value that indicates whether the "Remember" consent checkbox is
    checked by default. This option is optional and defaults to FALSE. 
:   Indicates whether the "Yes" or "No" button is in focus by default. This
    option is optional and can take the value 'yes' or 'no' as strings. If 
    omitted neither will receive focus.
:   Configuration of the Consent storage backend. The store option is given in 
    the format <module>:<class> and refers to the class 
    \SimpleSAML\Module\<module>\Consent\Store\<class>. The consent module comes with two 
    built in storage backends: 'consent:Cookie' and 'consent:Database'. See 
    the separate section on setting up consent using different storage methods. 
    This option is optional. If the option is not set, then the user is asked to 
    consent, but the consent is not saved.

`hiddenAttributes`
:   Whether the value of the attributes should be hidden. Set to an array of
    the attributes that should have their value hidden. Default behaviour is that 
    all attribute values are shown.
`attributes.exclude`
:   Allows certain attributes to be excluded from the attribute hash when
    `includeValues` is `true` (and as a side effect, to be hidden from display
    as `hiddenAttributes` does). Set to an array of the attributes that should
    be excluded. Default behaviour is to include all values in the hash.

`showNoConsentAboutService`
:   Whether we will show a link to more information about the service from the
    no consent page. Defaults to `true`.

External options
----------------
The following options can be set in other places in SimpleSAMLphp:
:   This is an absolute URL for where a user can find a privacy policy for the SP.
    If set, this will be shown on the consent page. %SPENTITYID% in the URL 
    will be replaced with the entityID of the service provider.
    This option can be set in 
    [SP-remote metadata](./simplesamlphp-reference-sp-remote) and in 
    [IdP-hosted metadata](./simplesamlphp-reference-idp-hosted). The entry in 
    the SP-remote metadata overrides the option in the IdP-hosted metadata.
:   Disable consent for a set of services. See section `Disabling consent`.

`userid.attribute`
:   Unique identifier that is released for all users. See section `Configure
Consent can be disabled either in the IdP metadata or in the SP metadata.
To disable consent for one or more SPs for a given IdP, add the
`consent.disable`-option to the IdP metadata. To disable consent for one or
more IdPs for a given SP, add the `consent.disable`-option to the SP metadata.
### Examples ###

Disable consent for a given IdP:

    $metadata['https://idp.example.org/'] = array(
        [...],
        'consent.disable' => TRUE,
    );

Disable consent for some SPs connected to a given IdP:
    $metadata['https://idp.example.org/'] = array(
        [...],
        'consent.disable' => array(
            'https://sp1.example.org/',
            'https://sp2.example.org/',
        ),
    );


Disable consent for a given SP:

    $metadata['https://sp.example.org'] = array(
        [...]
        'consent.disable' => TRUE,
Disable consent for some IdPs for a given SP:
    $metadata['https://sp.example.org'] = array(
        [...]
        'consent.disable' => array(
            'https://idp1.example.org/',
            'https://idp2.example.org/',
        ),
    ),
### Regular expression support ###

You can use regular expressions to evaluate the entityId of either the IdP
or the SP.  It makes it possible to disable consent for an entire domain or
for a range of specific entityIds.  Just use an array instead of a flat string
with the following format (note that flat string and array entries are allowed
at the same time) :

    $metadata['https://sp.example.org'] = array(
        [...]
        'consent.disable' => array(
            'https://idp1.example.org/',
            array('type'=>'regex', 'pattern'=>'/.*\.mycompany\.com.*/i'),
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Attribute presentation
----------------------
 
It is possible to change the way the attributes are represented in the consent
page. This is done by implementing an attribute array reordering function.

To create this function, you have to create a file named

    hook_attributepresentation.php 

and place it under the
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    <module_name>/hooks 

directory. To be found and called, the function must be named 

    <module_name>_hook_attributepresentation(&$para).

The parameter `$para` is a reference to the attribute array. By manipulating 
this array you can change the way the attributes are presented to the user on 
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the consent and status page. 

If you want the attributes to be listed in more than one level, you can make 
the function add a `child_` prefix to the root node attribute name in a recursive 
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attribute tree.

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### Examples ###

These values will be listed as an bullet list
    
    Array (
        [objectClass] => Array (
            [0] => top
            [1] => person
        )
    )

This array has two child arrays. These will be listed in two separate sub
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tables.

    Array (
        [child_eduPersonOrgUnitDN] => Array (
            [0] => Array (
                [ou] => Array (
                    [0] => ET
                )
                [cn] => Array (
                    [0] => Eksterne tjenester
                )
            )
            [1] => Array (
                [ou] => Array (
                    [0] => TA
                )
                [cn] => Array (
                    [0] => Tjenesteavdeling
                )
            )
        )
    )