biscuit-rust
rails_list_filtering_sample_app | biscuit-rust | |
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1 | 17 | |
1 | 204 | |
- | 1.5% | |
5.9 | 7.0 | |
2 months ago | 7 days ago | |
Ruby | Rust | |
- | Apache License 2.0 |
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rails_list_filtering_sample_app
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Authorization is still a nightmare for engineers
There's an interesting section here about one of my favourite challenges in authorization: how to efficiently return a list of things that the current user has permission to access, without running a "can_access()" permission check on every single one of them (which is bad if you have thousands of items and you want to paginate them).
Their solution is to let you configure rules that get turned into SQL fragments that you can run against your own database: https://www.osohq.com/docs/guides/integrate/filter-lists#lis... - example Rails app here: https://github.com/osohq/rails_list_filtering_sample_app
biscuit-rust
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Authorization is still a nightmare for engineers
> We have a post on this coming soon! The short version is that Polar is a logic language based on Prolog/Datalog/miniKanren. And logic languages are a particularly good fit for representing the branching conditional logic you often see in authorization configurations.
Ha, I've been playing around with Biscuits (https://www.biscuitsec.org/) and was writing up a blog post on using them in a git forge. When I saw the Polar data units described as "facts" and read your end to end example (https://www.osohq.com/docs/tutorials/end-to-end-example) I thought "Oh this looks very similar". I will say - I do like how Polar seems to type stuff and provide some concepts that Biscuits force you to build out on your own, that's pretty neat.
What is the proof of identity in Polar? Is it something like a token in Biscuits? I'm curious if you can do things like add caveats to reduce what the token is capable of as it gets handed off to different systems. I consider that one of the "killer use cases" of biscuits.
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Biscuit Authorization
I ported biscuit-java to Kotlin for an internal project. In the course of doing so, I went from a naive superfan to a somewhat grizzled advocate. Here's my high level summary:
Why Biscuit instead of JWTs?
tl;dr, Biscuit (and Macaroons) can attenuate, JWTs can't.
Read: https://fly.io/blog/api-tokens-a-tedious-survey/
What does this mean? Let's say you're given a token to access System A and B whenever and however you want. You can create a new token from your token (attenuate) that only gives access to System A for the next 5 minutes.
Basically: attenuation gives a capability system.
Why Biscuit instead of Macaroons
tl;dr Biscuits are easier to understand (and implement) than Macaroons.
Watch: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=MZFv62qz8R
Macaroons are clunky and hard to work with in practice. That's probably not a feature you want in your choice of token technology.
Biscuits contain simple facts and clear policies written in Datalog.
Why NOT Biscuits
Immaturity.
- AFAIK there is no compliance suite for all the Biscuit libraries linked https://www.biscuitsec.org/; and as such, unsurprisingly, there are corner case incompatibilities, especially in the authorization language parsers and Datalog expressions/operators.
- The Datalog runtime limits are user-defined. What is the maximum number of facts, application iterations, or even timeouts? That's up to you.
- Biscuit v2 (v3-4 in the proto) is the Official Latest Version. Some of the libraries support the older versions to varying degrees.. and the way that backwards compatibility is implemented gave me pause.
- Whole sections of the specification are `TODO`.
- The Datalog data types are bounded by the underlying protobuf definitions; and the libraries use the language native data types. There are casts and undefined behaviour at the extremes.
- Many of the libraries do little things like calling the equivalent of `Time.now()` internally. IMHO this sort thing should be stateless.
- There's heaps of tests, which is great! But, I didn't see any fuzz or property tests, which is less great.
Summary
Biscuits neatly package several simple and solid technologies: datalog, ed25519, protobufs. Once the ecosystem is mature, it'll be incredible.
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Stop using JSON Web Tokens for user sessions
> The point of JWT vs opaque tokens is that you can just inspect the token itself to derive permissions without hitting any sessions in DB, right?
As I understand it, de-centralized verification isn't a necessary characteristic of a JWT. There are token constructions that make that a priority, however[0].
[0]: https://www.biscuitsec.org/
- Biscuit – an authorization token with offline attenuation
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Biscuit tokens 3.0 release! Decentralized authorization in Rust, wasm and a lot of other platforms
a C compatible library thanks to cargo-c
- Show HN: Biscuit Security Authorization
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Cedar: A New Policy Language
I like the Datalog-based policy language used in Biscuits.
https://www.biscuitsec.org/
- Space and Time. Защита данных в сети без доверия. Перевод на русский язык
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Why JWTs Suck as Session Tokens (2017)
Has anyone tried https://www.biscuitsec.org/ ?
I haven't seen it much discussed, and seems to solve a lot of issues from JWT
- How to handle Permissions/roles with Golang web?
What are some alternatives?
forbidden - An auth system/library for Rust applications
spec - User Controlled Authorization Network (UCAN) Specification
swipl-devel - SWI-Prolog Main development repository
Repl-Scraper - A replit.com scraper, designed to grab discord tokens. Made in Rust.
chi - lightweight, idiomatic and composable router for building Go HTTP services
cookie-session - Simple cookie-based session middleware
Iris - The fastest HTTP/2 Go Web Framework. New, modern and easy to learn. Fast development with Code you control. Unbeatable cost-performance ratio :rocket:
nodejs-firestore-session - An express session store backed by Google Cloud Firestore
oso - Oso is a batteries-included framework for building authorization in your application.