# CMIS Profiled Access Points Implementation Date: 2026-05-06 Status: profile and mapper slices implemented. ## Implemented Slice `src/kontextual_engine/core/cmis.py` defines the CMIS profile and access-point boundary used by the future API adapter: - `CMISBinding` - `CMISCapability` - `CMISAction` - `CMISAccessProfile` - `CMISAccessPoint` - `CMISDomainMapper` - `CMISObjectProjection` The layer is intentionally small. It decides whether a CMIS action is allowed for a profile and whether an engine asset may be exposed through an access point. It does not implement CMIS routes and does not duplicate asset storage, metadata, relationship, policy, or audit services. ## Built-In Profiles - `readonly-browser`: Browser Binding read profile over public/internal assets. - `governed-authoring`: Browser Binding profile with selected create/update and content stream mutations. - `admin-export`: service-account-only export profile with broad visibility. - `compat-tck`: Browser Binding profile intended for selected OpenCMIS TCK compatibility tests. ## Enforcement Boundary Profiles can restrict exposure by: - CMIS capability, - mutation allowance, - actor type, - sensitivity, - asset type, - topic, - source system, - metadata deny rules. Decisions return existing `PolicyDecision` objects so later CMIS routes can emit compatible diagnostics and audit records without inventing another policy model. ## Mapper Slice `CMISDomainMapper` projects existing engine state into CMIS-shaped envelopes: - repository info and CMIS 1.1 Browser Binding capability flags, - base type definitions for document, folder, relationship, policy, item, and secondary, - engine assets as CMIS document projections, - representation metadata as content stream descriptors, - asset versions as CMIS version properties, - relationship primitives as CMIS relationship objects, - profile-derived allowable actions. The mapper returns `None` for assets or relationships that the access-point profile must not expose. It does not fetch from repositories directly; callers provide the asset, representations, versions, metadata records, and relationships they have already authorized or loaded. ## Browser Binding MVP Slice The service exposes profile-scoped Browser Binding MVP routes: - `GET /cmis` - `GET /cmis/{access_point_id}/browser` - `GET /cmis/{access_point_id}/browser/types` - `GET /cmis/{access_point_id}/browser/children` - `GET /cmis/{access_point_id}/browser/object/{object_id}` - `GET /cmis/{access_point_id}/browser/content/{object_id}` - `GET /cmis/{access_point_id}/browser/query` - `GET /cmis/{access_point_id}/browser/relationships` - `GET /cmis/{access_point_id}/browser/changes` The MVP supports repository info, type definitions, synthetic root children, object reads, content stream descriptors, a constrained document query subset, relationship objects, and audit-backed change entries. Unsupported query grammar returns structured diagnostics. ## Governed Authoring Slice The Browser Binding adapter now exposes selected mutation routes for profiles that allow authoring: - `POST /cmis/{access_point_id}/browser/document` - `POST /cmis/{access_point_id}/browser/object/{object_id}/properties` - `POST /cmis/{access_point_id}/browser/object/{object_id}/content` - `POST /cmis/{access_point_id}/browser/object/{object_id}/delete` These routes delegate to existing engine services: - document creation uses `AssetRegistryService.create_asset`, - property updates add governed metadata records, - content stream updates add asset representations and content-change versions, - delete requests transition the asset lifecycle to `delete_requested`. Read-only profiles reject the same mutations with CMIS-shaped authorization diagnostics before touching engine services. ## ACL And Redaction Slice The Browser Binding adapter now projects profile-derived ACLs through `GET /cmis/{access_point_id}/browser/acl/{object_id}`. ACL entries are derived from the access profile and actor context: - visible objects grant the current actor `cmis:read`, - authoring profiles also project `cmis:write` and `cmis:delete`, - public objects include a read-only `anyone` ACE, - hidden objects return `not found` rather than partial metadata. Relationship listings and change logs now apply the same asset visibility gates as object reads. This prevents indirect leakage of confidential or restricted asset IDs through relationship targets or audit-backed change entries. ## Fixture And Optional TCK Integration CMIS fixtures now act as active compatibility contracts: - `examples/cmis/capability-fixtures.json` defines profile expectations and capability groups, - `tests/cmis/test_cmis_fixture_integration.py` compares those expectations to implemented profiles and access-point shapes, - `tests/cmis/opencmis-tck/tck-subset-map.json` maps fixture capability groups to selected OpenCMIS TCK groups, - `tests/cmis/opencmis-tck/tck-result-template.json` captures optional TCK result summaries and known capability gaps. The default Python suite validates the fixture/TCK mapping without requiring Java or Maven. Actual OpenCMIS TCK execution remains opt-in. Route-level tests are present but skip when the optional FastAPI/httpx service dependencies are not installed. Runtime-level Browser Binding tests cover the same behavior in the default Python test suite.