+1 This is the way used by Ubuntu One if I am not wrong.
-- Amedeo On Mon, Feb 14, 2011 at 00:06, Janez Štupar <[email protected]> wrote: > +1 > > this is the Couch way > > On Sun, Feb 13, 2011 at 11:44 PM, Jonathan Stott > <[email protected]>wrote: > > > Hi Jonathan > > > > One way to accomplish this is to give each user their own database. > > They (and only they + admin) can both read and write from this > > database. For operations that need to be performed on the whole > > database, the admin can replicate each of the individual databases to > > a 'master' database only they can read. > > > > Regards > > Jon > > > > On 13 February 2011 21:52, Jonathan Geddes <[email protected]> > > wrote: > > > couchdb users, > > > > > > I'm thinking of using a couchapp for an upcoming project, but there is > > > one capability that I'm unsure of. > > > > > > I need a database that anyone can post to, but only admin can read > > > from. The requirement is to allow users to post personal information > > > that other users cannot see. If I understand the couchdb permissions > > > model correctly, for a given db, anyone who can create documents can > > > also read documents. > > > > > > Is there a way to do this with a couchapp? It seems a shame to have to > > > add "middleware" just to get this one capability. > > > > > > thanks, > > > > > > --Jonathan > > > > > >
