permify
Nodemon.io
permify | Nodemon.io | |
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39 | 137 | |
2,504 | 26,009 | |
3.9% | - | |
9.8 | 7.8 | |
4 days ago | 13 days ago | |
Go | JavaScript | |
Apache License 2.0 | MIT License |
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.
permify
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Policy-Based Access Control (PBAC): A Comprehensive Overview
However, in this piece we're focusing on the PBAC model also known as Policy-Based Access Control and how it differentiates itself these from traditional access control models in terms of scalability, flexibility and security.
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Show HN: AI assistant powered by Groq to generate authorization models
Hi I'm Karan, one of the maintainers of Permify (https://github.com/Permify/permify), an open source authorization service to build scalable authorization systems.
I want to share with you that we've built an AI assistant to help modeling your desired authorization logic! You can basically describe your authorization logic in Permify AI and it will generate the respective model and semantics accordingly. Think of it like ChatGPT for authorization modeling/policy generation.
Here's the project if you would like to play with it: https://ai.permify.co/.
Brief backstory:
Since authorization is generally a domain specific issue use cases vary widely - roles, relationships, attributes, hierarchies between business units, contextual permissions, etc.
To address this, we're offering a domain specific language that we built purely using golang to help model authorization logic programmatically. You can see what it looks like with sample examples in our playground: https://play.permify.co/
Although our domain specific language helps our users significantly, the general idea of policy generation is hard challenging if you have complex authorization logic and versatile permission requirements. Additionally, the flexibility of our modeling language allows for achieving the same policy/permissions through various approaches. But creating the best possible policy is crucial for several reasons including the performance of access checks, the readability of the authorization logic, visibility, and achieving least privilege, etc.
When we tallied up all those reasons, it hit us: using AI could really smooth out the policy generation process. It could not only reduce the engineering effort but also yield the best possible results. That's why we integrated Groq to make to create Permify AI!
Would love to get your feedback on this!
- OAuth 2.0 implementation in Node.js
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Implementing JWT Authentication in a Golang Application
At that point consider exploring our solution, Permify. It's a Google Zanzibar-based open-source authorization service that helps to build scalable authorization systems.
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Relationship Based Access Control (ReBAC): When To Use It
Additional to shifts from large tech companies, ReBAC based solutions increased over the time. We're also one of them, building an open source authorization service that builds its core on top of ReBAC and Google Zanzibar.
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5 Open Source tools written in Golang that you should know about
Permify is an open-source service for creating and managing complex permissions in applications, inspired by Google Zanzibar. It offers a flexible authorization language compatible with various models like RBAC, ReBAC, and ABAC, and allows for efficient authorization data management in preferred databases. Permify's API facilitates access checks, resource filtering, and bulk permission analyses. It also includes comprehensive testing tools for authorization logic, including scenario-based testing and policy coverage analysis. Additionally, Permify supports multi-tenancy, enabling distinct authorization models for different applications within a single instance.
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Authentication vs Authorization: Exploring The Difference
As Permify we're building open source authorization infrastructure to build fine grained authorization systems at scale. Would love to learn your use case and help you to build robust authorization systems. Don't hesitate to reach us from our Discord Channel!
- Permify: Open-Source Authorization Service For Building Fine Grained Authorization Systems At Scale!
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Open-Source Authorization Service for Building Scalable Authorization Systems
I’m one of the maintainers of the OSS project Permify (https://github.com/Permify/permify), an open-source authorization service inspired by Google Zanzibar, which is the global authorization system used at Google to handle authorization for hundreds of its services and products, including YouTube, Drive, Calendar, Cloud, and Maps.
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Show HN: Blending Go and WebAssembly to Build Authorization Playground
Hi folks,
I’m one of the maintainers and co-founder of the Go OSS project Permify (https://github.com/Permify/permify), an open-source authorization infrastructure inspired by Google Zanzibar.
I would like to share a post where we aimed to provide a brief overview of how we integrated WASM with Golang to provide a richer user experience in our open-source playground. You can use the playground to create and test any authorization logic in a browser.
The playground has three main sections:
Schema: to model your authorization logic through our domanin specific language we built.
Data: to create sample authorization data according to the model for use in tests.
Enforcement: to test your authorization structure bt access check scenarios.
Here's the post if you're interested: https://www.permify.co/post/wasm-go/
And here's the playground: https://play.permify.co/
Appreciate your time!
Nodemon.io
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Full Stack Web Development Concept map
nodemon - enables automatic reload of your server after code change docs
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Devlog Week 3: 4 - 10 December 2023
Then, install nodemon (in the VSCode terminal also), which, to my understanding, automatically refreshes the server you'll be sending requests to, whenever you make a change. Using plain node.js, you'd have to manually stop and restart the server after every change.
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Say Goodbye to Docker Volumes 👋
That's already pretty good, but as you already know it's a PITA to work with this during development. You will have to rebuild your Docker images whenever you change your code, even though your apps will probably support hot-reloading out of the box (or with something like Nodemon if not).
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Set up Hot Reload for Typescript ESM projects
Are you moving your projects to use ES Modules but you are facing some unexpected issues? You are not alone in this fight. In this tutorial, you will learn how to set up nodemon along with ts-node.
- Guia para Iniciantes: Criando uma API com Node.js, PostgreSQL e Padrão MVC
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Building a React/Express Stripe Donation Form
We can now use npm run dev to start the server using nodemon, which enables hot refreshing on changes.
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Best ways to fix Nodemon error- nodemon.ps1 cannot be loaded because running scripts is disabled on this system.
Welcome to my blog, where we dive into the intriguing world of Node.js development and tackle one of the common stumbling blocks many developers encounter: the "Nodemon Error - nodemon.ps1 cannot be loaded because running scripts is disabled on this system." If you've ever come across this error while working with Nodemon, fear not! In this article, we will explore the causes behind this issue, understand why scripts are disabled on certain systems and most importantly, provide you with practical solutions to overcome this obstacle and keep your development workflow seamless. So, let's embark on this troubleshooting journey together and empower ourselves to conquer the Nodemon Error!
- Nodemon not watching for file changes
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Setting Up Recurring Charges with the Rapyd Collect API
You’ll need to restart the server using node index.js whenever you change any project file. You can also use Nodemon to automate this.
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Add payments feature in your application using Node.js/Express and Stripe
nodemon will be required to monitor for any changes in our source code and automatically restart our server.
What are some alternatives?
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.
PM2 - Node.js Production Process Manager with a built-in Load Balancer.
openfga - A high performance and flexible authorization/permission engine built for developers and inspired by Google Zanzibar
supervisor
spicedb - Open Source, Google Zanzibar-inspired permissions database to enable fine-grained access control for customer applications
forever - A simple CLI tool for ensuring that a given script runs continuously (i.e. forever)
topaz - Cloud-native authorization for modern applications and APIs
chokidar - Minimal and efficient cross-platform file watching library
kala-go - An authorization framework written in Go based on Google's Zanzibar.
supervisor - Supervisor process control system for Unix (supervisord)
OPA (Open Policy Agent) - Open Policy Agent (OPA) is an open source, general-purpose policy engine.
Phusion Passenger - A fast and robust web server and application server for Ruby, Python and Node.js