/opa

Open Policy Agent (OPA) is an open source, general-purpose policy engine.

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Open Policy Agent (OPA) is an open source, general-purpose policy engine that enables unified, context-aware policy enforcement across the entire stack.

OPA is proud to be a graduated project in the Cloud Native Computing Foundation (CNCF) landscape. For details read the CNCF announcement.

Want to connect with the community or get support for OPA?

Want to learn more about OPA?

  • Go to openpolicyagent.org to get started with documentation and tutorials.
  • Browse blog.openpolicyagent.org for news about OPA, community, policy and authorization.
  • Watch OPA's YouTube channel for videos about OPA.
  • Try OPA with the Rego Playground to experiment with policies and share your work.
  • View the OPA Roadmap to see a high-level snapshot of OPA features in-progress and planned.
  • Check out the ADOPTERS.md file for a list of production adopters. Does your organization use OPA in production? Support the OPA project by submitting a PR to add your organization to the list with a short description of your OPA use cases!

Want to download OPA?

Want to integrate OPA?

  • See the high-level Go SDK or the low-level Go API GoDoc to integrate OPA with services written in Go.
  • See REST API to integrate OPA with services written in other languages.
  • See the integration docs for more options.

Want to contribute to OPA?

How does OPA work?

OPA gives you a high-level declarative language to author and enforce policies across your stack.

With OPA, you define rules that govern how your system should behave. These rules exist to answer questions like:

  • Can user X call operation Y on resource Z?
  • What clusters should workload W be deployed to?
  • What tags must be set on resource R before it's created?

You integrate services with OPA so that these kinds of policy decisions do not have to be hardcoded in your service. Services integrate with OPA by executing queries when policy decisions are needed.

When you query OPA for a policy decision, OPA evaluates the rules and data (which you give it) to produce an answer. The policy decision is sent back as the result of the query.

For example, in a simple API authorization use case:

  • You write rules that allow (or deny) access to your service APIs.
  • Your service queries OPA when it receives API requests.
  • OPA returns allow (or deny) decisions to your service.
  • Your service enforces the decisions by accepting or rejecting requests accordingly.

For concrete examples of how to integrate OPA with systems like Kubernetes, Terraform, Docker, SSH, and more, see openpolicyagent.org.

Presentations

  • OPA maintainers talk @ Kubecon NA 2022: video
  • Open Policy Agent (OPA) Intro & Deep Dive @ Kubecon EU 2022: video
  • Open Policy Agent Intro @ KubeCon EU 2021: Video
  • Using Open Policy Agent to Meet Evolving Policy Requirements @ KubeCon NA 2020: video
  • Applying Policy Throughout The Application Lifecycle with Open Policy Agent @ CloudNativeCon 2019: video
  • Open Policy Agent Introduction @ CloudNativeCon EU 2018: video, slides
  • Rego Deep Dive @ CloudNativeCon EU 2018: video, slides
  • How Netflix Is Solving Authorization Across Their Cloud @ CloudNativeCon US 2017: video, slides.
  • Policy-based Resource Placement in Kubernetes Federation @ LinuxCon Beijing 2017: slides, screencast
  • Enforcing Bespoke Policies In Kubernetes @ KubeCon US 2017: video, slides
  • Istio's Mixer: Policy Enforcement with Custom Adapters @ CloudNativeCon US 2017: video, slides

Security Audit

A third party security audit was performed by Cure53, you can see the full report here

Reporting Security Vulnerabilities

Please report vulnerabilities by email to open-policy-agent-security. We will send a confirmation message to acknowledge that we have received the report and then we will send additional messages to follow up once the issue has been investigated.