Vault
OPA (Open Policy Agent)
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Vault | OPA (Open Policy Agent) | |
---|---|---|
160 | 90 | |
29,610 | 9,104 | |
0.8% | 2.0% | |
10.0 | 9.6 | |
1 day ago | 7 days ago | |
Go | Go | |
GNU General Public License v3.0 or later | 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.
Vault
- Terraform & HashiCorp Vault Integration: Seamless Secrets Management
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Top Secrets Management Tools for 2024
HashiCorp Vault
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Keep it cool and secure: do's and don'ts for managing Web App secrets
For a more comprehensive and robust secret management solution, get your hands on tools like GCP Secret Manager, or HashiCorp Vault. They're like the security guards of your secrets, providing a safe house, access control, and keeping logs of who’s been snooping around.
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Kubernetes Secret Management
HashiCorp Vault is a popular tool for managing secrets in Kubernetes clusters. It offers advanced features such as secure storage, encryption, dynamic secrets generation, and integration with Kubernetes through its Kubernetes authentication method.
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Champion Building - How to successfully adopt a developer tool
So you've just bought a new platform tool? Maybe it's Hashicorp Vault? Snyk? Backstage? You’re excited about all of the developer experience, security and other benefits you're about to unleash on your company—right? But wait…
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AWS Secrets Manager for on-premise and other cloud accounts scaled architecture
You seem to be looking for a cross-platform solution, and https://www.vaultproject.io/ provides just that. If everything was in AWS, AWS Secret Manager might be great, but imo Vault provides much better platform-agnostic capabilities.
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Show HN: Anchor – developer-friendly private CAs for internal TLS
https://github.com/openwrt/luci/blob/master/applications/luc...
https://developer.hashicorp.com/vault/tutorials/secrets-mana... https://github.com/hashicorp/vault :
> Refer to Build Certificate Authority (CA) in Vault with an offline Root for an example of using a root CA external to Vault.
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The Complete Microservices Guide
Secret Management: Securely stores sensitive configuration data and secrets using tools like AWS Secrets Manager or HashiCorp Vault. Avoid hardcoding secrets in code or configuration files.
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Horcrux: Split your file into encrypted fragments
The author of this tool basically took the Shamir code from Hashicorp Vault, which is pretty mainstream. If you're looking for a solid implementation, I would start there[0]. I wouldn't use the Shamir code from this repo, as it's an old version of the vault code using field arithmetic that doesn't run in constant time.
[0]: https://github.com/hashicorp/vault/blob/main/shamir/shamir.g...
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OpenTF Announces Fork of Terraform
Out of curiosity, what do you mean by this? cross-cluster? they already have HA: https://github.com/hashicorp/vault/blob/v1.14.1/website/cont...
while digging up that link, I also saw one named replication: https://github.com/hashicorp/vault/blob/v1.14.1/website/cont...
OPA (Open Policy Agent)
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SAP BTP, Terraform and Open Policy Agent
How can we handle this? Are there any mechanisms to prevent or at least to some extent safeguard this kind of issues without falling back to a manual workflow? There is. One huge advantage of sticking to (de-facto) standards like Terraform is that first we are probably not the first ones to come up with this question and second there is a huge ecosystem around Terraform that might help us with such challenges. And for this specific scenario the solution is the Open Policy Agent. Let us take a closer look how the solution could look like.
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Top Terraform Tools to Know in 2024
A popular Policy-as-Code tool for Terraform is OPA, everyone's favorite versatile open-source policy engine that enforces security and compliance policies across your cloud-native stack, making it easier to manage and maintain consistent policy enforcement in complex, multi-service environments.
- Open Policy Agent
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Build and Push to GAR and Deploy to GKE - End-to-End CI/CD Pipeline
Harness Policy As Code uses Open Policy Agent (OPA) as the central service to store and enforce policies for the different entities and processes across the Harness platform. In this section, you will define a policy that will deny a pipeline execution if there is no approval step defined in a deployment stage.
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10 Ways for Kubernetes Declarative Configuration Management
OPA: While OPA is an open-source, general-purpose policy engine capable of enforcing unified and context-aware policies throughout the stack, it can also accept and output data in formats such as JSON, effectively functioning as a tool for generating or modifying configurations. Although it does not provide out-of-the-box schema definition support, it allows the integration of JsonSchema definitions.
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Securing CI/CD Images with Cosign and OPA
In essence, container image signing involves adding a digital stamp to an image, affirming its authenticity. This digital assurance guarantees that the image is unchanged from creation to deployment. In this blog, I'll explain how to sign container images for Kubernetes using Cosign and the Open Policy Agent. I will also share a tutorial that demonstrates these concepts.
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OPA vs. Google Zanzibar: A Brief Comparison
In this post we will explores two powerful solutions for addressing this issue: the Open Policy Language (OPA) and Google’s Zanzibar.
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Rego for beginners: Introduction to Rego
Rego is a declarative query language from the makers of the Open Policy Agent (OPA) framework. The Cloud Native Computing Foundation (CNCF) accepted OPA as an incubation-level hosted project in April 2019, and OPA graduated from incubating status in 2021.
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Are "Infrastructure as Code" limited to "Infrastructure" only?
Now there are more subdivided practice: * Policy as Code: Sentinel, OPA * Database as Code: bytebase * AppConfiguration as Code: KusionStack, Acorn * ...... (Welcome to add more)
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OPA (Open Policy Agent) VS topaz - a user suggested alternative
2 projects | 25 Jul 2023
What are some alternatives?
Keycloak - Open Source Identity and Access Management For Modern Applications and Services
casbin - An authorization library that supports access control models like ACL, RBAC, ABAC in Golang: https://discord.gg/S5UjpzGZjN
sealed-secrets - A Kubernetes controller and tool for one-way encrypted Secrets
sops - Simple and flexible tool for managing secrets
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.
etcd - Distributed reliable key-value store for the most critical data of a distributed system
cerbos - Cerbos is the open core, language-agnostic, scalable authorization solution that makes user permissions and authorization simple to implement and manage by writing context-aware access control policies for your application resources.
bitwarden_rs - Unofficial Bitwarden compatible server written in Rust, formerly known as bitwarden_rs [Moved to: https://github.com/dani-garcia/vaultwarden]
checkov - Prevent cloud misconfigurations and find vulnerabilities during build-time in infrastructure as code, container images and open source packages with Checkov by Bridgecrew.
Ory Kratos - Next-gen identity server replacing your Auth0, Okta, Firebase with hardened security and PassKeys, SMS, OIDC, Social Sign In, MFA, FIDO, TOTP and OTP, WebAuthn, passwordless and much more. Golang, headless, API-first. Available as a worry-free SaaS with the fairest pricing on the market!
spicedb - Open Source, Google Zanzibar-inspired permissions database to enable fine-grained access control for customer applications