gullerya / npm-opa-wasm

Open Policy Agent WebAssembly NPM module (opa-wasm)

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Work in Progress -- Contributions welcome!!

Open Policy Agent WebAssemby NPM Module

This is the source for the @open-policy-agent/opa-wasm NPM module which is a small SDK for using WebAssembly (wasm) compiled Open Policy Agent Rego policies.

Getting Started

Install the module

npm install @open-policy-agent/opa-wasm

Usage

There are only a couple of steps required to start evaluating the policy.

Import the module

const { loadPolicy } = require("@open-policy-agent/opa-wasm");

Load the policy

loadPolicy(policyWasm);

The loadPolicy function returns a Promise with the loaded policy. Typically this means loading it in an async function like:

const policy = await loadPolicy(policyWasm);

Or something like:

loadPolicy(policyWasm).then((policy) => {
  // evaluate or save the policy
}, (error) => {
  console.error("Failed to load policy: " + error);
});

The policyWasm needs to be either the raw byte array of the compiled policy Wasm file, or a WebAssembly module.

For example:

const fs = require("fs");

const policyWasm = fs.readFileSync("policy.wasm");

Alternatively the bytes can be pulled in remotely from a fetch or in some cases (like CloudFlare Workers) the Wasm binary can be loaded directly into the javascript context through external APIs.

Evaluate the Policy

The loaded policy object returned from loadPolicy() has a couple of important APIs for policy evaluation:

setData(data) -- Provide an external data document for policy evaluation.

  • data MUST be a serializable object or ArrayBuffer, which assumed to be a well-formed stringified JSON

evaluate(input) -- Evaluates the policy using any loaded data and the supplied input document.

  • input parameter MAY be an object, primitive literal or ArrayBuffer, which assumed to be a well-formed stringified JSON

ArrayBuffer supported in the APIs above as a performance optimisation feature, given that either network or file system provided contents can easily be represented as ArrayBuffer in a very performant way.

Example:

input = '{"path": "/", "role": "admin"}';

loadPolicy(policyWasm).then((policy) => {
  resultSet = policy.evaluate(input);
  if (resultSet == null) {
    console.error("evaluation error");
  }
  if (resultSet.length == 0) {
    console.log("undefined");
  }
  console.log("allowed = " + allowed[0].result);
}).catch((error) => {
  console.error("Failed to load policy: ", error);
});

For any opa build created WASM binaries the result set, when defined, will contain a result key with the value of the compiled entrypoint. See https://www.openpolicyagent.org/docs/latest/wasm/ for more details.

Writing the policy

See https://www.openpolicyagent.org/docs/latest/how-do-i-write-policies/

Compiling the policy

Either use the Compile REST API or opa build CLI tool.

For example, with OPA v0.20.5+:

opa build -t wasm -e 'example/allow' example.rego

Which is compiling the example.rego policy file with the result set to data.example.allow. The result will be an OPA bundle with the policy.wasm binary included. See ./examples for a more comprehensive example.

See opa build --help for more details.

Development

Lint and Format checks

This project is using Deno's lint and formatter tools in CI. With deno installed locally, the same checks can be invoked using npm:

  • npm run lint
  • npm run fmt -- this will fix the formatting
  • npm run fmt:check -- this happens in CI

All of these operate on git-tracked files, so make sure you've committed the code you'd like to see checked. Alternatively, you can invoke deno lint my_new_file.js directly, too.

About

Open Policy Agent WebAssembly NPM module (opa-wasm)

License:Apache License 2.0


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