iMonitorSDK
Ory Oathkeeper
Our great sponsors
iMonitorSDK | Ory Oathkeeper | |
---|---|---|
1 | 4 | |
320 | 3,164 | |
- | 0.9% | |
4.5 | 7.1 | |
11 days ago | 11 days ago | |
C++ | Go | |
- | Apache License 2.0 |
Stars - the number of stars that a project has on GitHub. Growth - month over month growth in stars.
Activity is a relative number indicating how actively a project is being developed. Recent commits have higher weight than older ones.
For example, an activity of 9.0 indicates that a project is amongst the top 10% of the most actively developed projects that we are tracking.
iMonitorSDK
Ory Oathkeeper
- Launch HN: PropelAuth (YC W22) – End-to-end auth service for B2B products
-
oathkeeper alternatives - emissary, envoy, and Nginx
4 projects | 18 Jan 2022
- Launch YC S21: Meet the Batch, Thread #4
-
The reason okta spent $6.5B Auth0
Hydra feels mature. I think it's their longest-developed product so far. Besides breaking changes during big upgrades(v0 -> v1beta -> v1), everything has been painless:
- It runs anywhere with or without containers
- API makes sense, good SDKs are available in all my used languages
- RAM usage is surprisingly low compared to usage and has been great for resource-constrained environments
- Stateless means horizontal scaling is as easy as `replicas++`
- Sub-millisecond response times for some calls, much faster than our previous setup
With Hydra, I know it's the client's fault when OAuth calls fail and not just a buggy server implementation. This is reinforced in dev mode with great errors like:
- The authorization code has already been used
- The request is missing the response_type parameter
- Parameter "nonce" must be set when using the implicit flow
- Redirect URL "https://example.com/callback" does not match
On the flipside, Oathkeeper is not a mature product and has not yet reached v1. There are breaking changes planned [1]. It lacks support for at least one popular usecase (mine) out of the box [2]. Rules can be hard to create and debug. I wouldn't recommend Oathkeeper in its current state unless you're ready to dive in and fix things yourself. Once configured it sticks with the Ory trend: fast, lean, and stable.
Depending on your usecase, Oathkeeper could be swapped out with any IAP like Pomerium or just with your reverse proxy's auth request support + some small custom shim.
I haven't tried Keto (access control) or Kratos (user management) yet. Kratos is on my todo list.
[1] https://github.com/ory/oathkeeper/issues/441
What are some alternatives?
EDR-Testing-Script - Test the accuracy of Endpoint Detection and Response (EDR) software with simple script which executes various ATT&CK/LOLBAS/Invoke-CradleCrafter/Invoke-DOSfuscation payloads
Ory Keto - Open Source (Go) implementation of "Zanzibar: Google's Consistent, Global Authorization System". Ships gRPC, REST APIs, newSQL, and an easy and granular permission language. Supports ACL, RBAC, and other access models.
orbit - C/C++ Performance Profiler
fusionauth-issues - FusionAuth issue submission project
defender-control - An open-source windows defender manager. Now you can disable windows defender permanently.
emissary - open source Kubernetes-native API gateway for microservices built on the Envoy Proxy
DripLoader - Evasive shellcode loader for bypassing event-based injection detection (PoC)
warrant-demo-app-ts - Example demonstrating how to add end-to-end authorization & access control to an ExpressJS + React app using Warrant
BLUESPAWN - An Active Defense and EDR software to empower Blue Teams
OPA (Open Policy Agent) - Open Policy Agent (OPA) is an open source, general-purpose policy engine.
edge-agent - Warrant Edge agent
Nginx - An official read-only mirror of http://hg.nginx.org/nginx/ which is updated hourly. Pull requests on GitHub cannot be accepted and will be automatically closed. The proper way to submit changes to nginx is via the nginx development mailing list, see http://nginx.org/en/docs/contributing_changes.html