OPAL is an administration layer for Policy Engines such as Open Policy Agent (OPA), and AWS' Cedar Agent detecting changes to both policy and policy data in realtime and pushing live updates to your agents. OPAL brings open-policy up to the speed needed by live applications.
As your application state changes (whether it's via your APIs, DBs, git, S3 or 3rd-party SaaS services), OPAL will make sure your services are always in sync with the authorization data and policy they need (and only those they need).
Check out our main site at OPAL.ac, this video briefly explaining OPAL and how it works with OPA, and a deeper dive into it at this OWASP DevSlop talk.
OPAL is the easiest way to keep your solution's authorization layer up-to-date in realtime. It aggregates policy and data from across the field and integrates them seamlessly into the authorization layer, and is microservices and cloud-native.
While OPA (Open Policy Agent) decouples policy from code in a highly-performant and elegant way, the challenge of keeping policy agents up-to-date remains. This is especially true in applications, where each user interaction or API call may affect access-control decisions. OPAL runs in the background, supercharging policy-agents, keeping them in sync with events in realtime.
Cedar is a very powerful policy language, which powers AWS' AVP (Amazon Verified Permissions) - but what if you want to enjoy the power of Cedar on another cloud, locally, or on premise? This is where Cedar-Agent and OPAL come in.
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🚀 Getting Started:
OPAL is available both as python packages with a built-in CLI as well as pre-built docker images ready-to-go.
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A video demo of OPAL is available here
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You can also check out this webinar and Q&A about OPAL on our YouTube channel
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💪 TL;DR - This one command will download and run a working configuration of OPAL server and OPAL client on your machine:
curl -L https://raw.githubusercontent.com/permitio/opal/master/docker/docker-compose-example.yml \
> docker-compose.yml && docker-compose up
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🧠 "How-To"s
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🏗️ Architecture
OPAL uses a client-server stateless architecture. OPAL-Servers publish policy and data updates over a lightweight (websocket) PubSub Channel, which OPAL-clients subscribe to via topics. Upon updates each client fetches data directly (from source) to load it in to its managed OPA instance.
- 📖 For further reading check out our Blog.
Come talk to us about OPAL, or authorization in general - we would love to hear from you ❤️
You can raise questions and ask for features to be added to the road-map in our Github discussions, report issues in Github issues, follow us on Twitter to get the latest OPAL updates, and join our Slack community to chat about authorization, open-source, realtime communication, tech, or anything else!
If you are using our project, please consider giving us a ⭐️
- Pull requests are welcome! (please make sure to include passing tests and docs)
- Prior to submitting a PR - open an issue on GitHub, or make sure your PR addresses an existing issue well.
- Check out OPToggles, which enables you to create user targeted feature flags/toggles based on Open Policy managed authorization rules!
- Check out Cedar-Agent, the easiest way to deploy & run AWS Cedar.