Model and services spam protection and CAPTCHA support

Before adding any spam or CAPTCHA support to the REST API, GraphQL API, or Web UI, you must first add the necessary support to:

  1. The backend ActiveRecord models.
  2. The services layer.

All or most of the following changes are required, regardless of the type of spam or CAPTCHA request implementation you are supporting. Some newer features which are completely based on the GraphQL API may not have any controllers, and don’t require you to add the mark_as_spam action to the controller.

To do this:

  1. Add Spammable support to the ActiveRecord model.
  2. Add support for the mark_as_spam action to the controller.
  3. Add a call to SpamActionService to the execute method of services.

Add Spammable support to the ActiveRecord model

  1. Include the Spammable module in the model class:

    include Spammable
    
  2. Add: attr_spammable to indicate which fields can be checked for spam. Up to two fields per model are supported: a “title” and a “description”. You can designate which fields to consider the “title” or “description”. For example, this line designates the content field as the description:

     attr_spammable :content, spam_description: true
    
  3. Add a #check_for_spam? method implementation:

    def check_for_spam?(user:)
      # Return a boolean result based on various applicable checks, which may include
      # which attributes have changed, the type of user, whether the data is publicly
      # visible, and other criteria. This may vary based on the type of model, and
      # may change over time as spam checking requirements evolve.
    end
    

    Refer to other existing Spammable models’ implementations of this method for examples of the required logic checks.

Add support for the mark_as_spam action to the controller

The SpammableActions::AkismetMarkAsSpamAction module adds support for a #mark_as_spam action to a controller. This controller allows administrators to manage spam for the associated Spammable model in the Spam Log section of the Admin Area page.

  1. Include the SpammableActions::AkismetMarkAsSpamAction module in the controller.

    include SpammableActions::AkismetMarkAsSpamAction
    
  2. Add a #spammable_path method implementation. The spam administration page redirects to this page after edits. Refer to other existing controllers’ implementations of this method for examples of the type of path logic required. In general, it should be the #show action for the Spammable model’s controller.

    def spammable_path
      widget_path(widget)
    end
    
note
There may be other changes needed to controllers, depending on how the feature is implemented. See Web UI for more details.

Add a call to SpamActionService to the execute method of services

This approach applies to any service which can persist spammable attributes:

  1. In the relevant Create or Update service under app/services, pass in a populated Spam::SpamParams instance. (Refer to instructions later on in this page.)
  2. Use it and the Spammable model instance to execute a Spam::SpamActionService instance.
  3. If the spam check fails:
    • An error is added to the model, which causes it to be invalid and prevents it from being saved.
    • The needs_recaptcha property is set to true.

    These changes to the model enable it for handling by the subsequent backend and frontend CAPTCHA logic.

Make these changes to each relevant service:

  1. Change the constructor to take a spam_params: argument as a required named argument.

    Using named arguments for the constructor helps you identify all the calls to the constructor that need changing. It’s less risky because the interpreter raises type errors unless the caller is changed to pass the spam_params argument. If you use an IDE (such as RubyMine) which supports this, your IDE flags it as an error in the editor.

  2. In the constructor, set the @spam_params instance variable from the spam_params constructor argument. Add an attr_reader: :spam_params in the private section of the class.

  3. In the execute method, add a call to execute the Spam::SpamActionService. (You can also use before_create or before_update, if the service uses that pattern.) This method uses named arguments, so its usage is clear if you refer to existing examples. However, two important considerations exist:

    1. The SpamActionService must be executed after all necessary changes are made to the unsaved (and dirty) Spammable model instance. This ordering ensures spammable attributes exist to be spam-checked.
    2. The SpamActionService must be executed before the model is checked for errors and attempting a save. If potential spam is detected in the model’s changed attributes, we must prevent a save.
module Widget
  class CreateService < ::Widget::BaseService
    # NOTE: We require the spam_params and do not default it to nil, because
    # spam_checking is likely to be necessary.  However, if there is not a request available in scope
    # in the caller (for example, a note created via email) and the required arguments to the
    # SpamParams constructor are not otherwise available, spam_params: must be explicitly passed as nil.
    def initialize(project:, current_user: nil, params: {}, spam_params:)
      super(project: project, current_user: current_user, params: params)

      @spam_params = spam_params
    end

    def execute
      widget = Widget::BuildService.new(project, current_user, params).execute

      # More code that may manipulate dirty model before it is spam checked.

      # NOTE: do this AFTER the spammable model is instantiated, but BEFORE
      # it is validated or saved.
      Spam::SpamActionService.new(
        spammable: widget,
        spam_params: spam_params,
        user: current_user,
        # Or `action: :update` for a UpdateService or service for an existing model.
        action: :create
      ).execute

      # Possibly more code related to saving model, but should not change any attributes.

      widget.save
    end

    private

    attr_reader :spam_params