Skip to content
New issue

Have a question about this project? Sign up for a free GitHub account to open an issue and contact its maintainers and the community.

By clicking “Sign up for GitHub”, you agree to our terms of service and privacy statement. We’ll occasionally send you account related emails.

Already on GitHub? Sign in to your account

Bump github.com/open-policy-agent/opa from 0.22.0 to 0.25.2 #2

Conversation

dependabot[bot]
Copy link

@dependabot dependabot bot commented on behalf of github Jan 8, 2021

Bumps github.com/open-policy-agent/opa from 0.22.0 to 0.25.2.

Release notes

Sourced from github.com/open-policy-agent/opa's releases.

v0.25.2

This release extends the HTTP server authorizer (--authorization=basic) to supply the HTTP message body in the input document. See the Authentication and Authorization section in the security documentation for details.

v0.25.1

This release contains a fix for running OPA under Docker with a non-default working directory (#2974):

/opa: error while loading shared libraries: libwasmer.so: cannot open shared object file: No such file or directory

v0.25.0

This release contains a number of improvements and fixes. Importantly, this release includes a notable change to built-in function error handling. See the section below for details.

Built-in Function Error Handling

Previously, built-in function errors would cause policy evaluation to halt immediately. Going forward, by default, built-in function errors no longer halt evaluation. Instead, expressions are treated as false/undefined if any of the invoked built-in functions return errors.

This change resolves a common issue people face when passing unsanitized input values to built-in functions. For example, prior to this change the expression io.jwt.decode("GARBAGE") would halt evaluation of the entire policy because the string is not a valid encoding of a JSON Web Token (JWT). If the expression was io.jwt.decode(input.token) and the user passed an invalid string value for input.token the same error would occur. With this change, the same expression is simply undefined, i.e., there is no result. This means policies can use negation to test for invalid values. For example:

decision := {"allowed": allow, "denial_reason": reason}
default allow = false
allow {
io.jwt.verify_hs256(input.token, "secret")
[_, payload, _] := io.jwt.decode(input.token)
payload.role == "admin"
}
reason["invalid JWT supplied as input"] {
not io.jwt.decode(input.token)
}

If you require the old behaviour, enable "strict" built-in errors on the query:

Caller Example
HTTP POST /v1/data/example/allow?strict-builtin-errors
Go (Library) rego.New(rego.Query("data.example.allow"), rego.StrictBuiltinErrors(true))
CLI opa eval --strict-builtin-errors 'data.example.allow'

If you have implemented custom built-in functions and require policy evaluation to halt on error in those built-in functions, modify your built-in functions to return the topdown.Halt error type.

Built-in Functions

This release includes a few new built-in functions:

  • base64url.encode_no_pad, hex.encode, and hex.decode for dealing with encoded data (#2849) authored by @johanneslarsson

... (truncated)

Changelog

Sourced from github.com/open-policy-agent/opa's changelog.

0.25.2

This release extends the HTTP server authorizer (--authorization=basic) to supply the HTTP message body in the input document. See the Authentication and Authorization section in the security documentation for details.

0.25.1

This release contains a fix for running OPA under Docker with a non-default working directory (#2974).

0.25.0

This release contains a number of improvements and fixes. Importantly, this release includes a notable change to built-in function error handling. See the section below for details.

Built-in Function Error Handling

Previously, built-in function errors would cause policy evaluation to halt immediately. Going forward, by default, built-in function errors no longer halt evaluation. Instead, expressions are treated as false/undefined if any of the invoked built-in functions return errors.

This change resolves a common issue people face when passing unsanitized input values to built-in functions. For example, prior to this change the expression io.jwt.decode("GARBAGE") would halt evaluation of the entire policy because the string is not a valid encoding of a JSON Web Token (JWT). If the expression was io.jwt.decode(input.token) and the user passed an invalid string value for input.token the same error would occur. With this change, the same expression is simply undefined, i.e., there is no result. This means policies can use negation to test for invalid values. For example:

decision := {"allowed": allow, "denial_reason": reason}
default allow = false
allow {
io.jwt.verify_hs256(input.token, "secret")
[_, payload, _] := io.jwt.decode(input.token)
payload.role == "admin"
}
reason["invalid JWT supplied as input"] {
not io.jwt.decode(input.token)
}

If you require the old behaviour, enable "strict" built-in errors on the query:

Caller Example
HTTP POST /v1/data/example/allow?strict-builtin-errors
Go (Library) rego.New(rego.Query("data.example.allow"), rego.StrictBuiltinErrors(true))
CLI opa eval --strict-builtin-errors 'data.example.allow'

If you have implemented custom built-in functions and require policy evaluation to halt on error in those built-in functions, modify your built-in functions to return the topdown.Halt error type.

Built-in Functions

This release includes a few new built-in functions:

  • base64url.encode_no_pad, hex.encode, and hex.decode for dealing with encoded data (#2849) authored by @johanneslarsson
  • json.patch for applying JSON patches to values inside of policies (#2839) authored by @jaspervdj-luminal

... (truncated)

Commits

Dependabot compatibility score

Dependabot will resolve any conflicts with this PR as long as you don't alter it yourself. You can also trigger a rebase manually by commenting @dependabot rebase.


Dependabot commands and options

You can trigger Dependabot actions by commenting on this PR:

  • @dependabot rebase will rebase this PR
  • @dependabot recreate will recreate this PR, overwriting any edits that have been made to it
  • @dependabot merge will merge this PR after your CI passes on it
  • @dependabot squash and merge will squash and merge this PR after your CI passes on it
  • @dependabot cancel merge will cancel a previously requested merge and block automerging
  • @dependabot reopen will reopen this PR if it is closed
  • @dependabot close will close this PR and stop Dependabot recreating it. You can achieve the same result by closing it manually
  • @dependabot ignore this major version will close this PR and stop Dependabot creating any more for this major version (unless you reopen the PR or upgrade to it yourself)
  • @dependabot ignore this minor version will close this PR and stop Dependabot creating any more for this minor version (unless you reopen the PR or upgrade to it yourself)
  • @dependabot ignore this dependency will close this PR and stop Dependabot creating any more for this dependency (unless you reopen the PR or upgrade to it yourself)

@dependabot dependabot bot added dependencies Pull requests that update a dependency file go Pull requests that update Go code labels Jan 8, 2021
@dependabot @github
Copy link
Author

dependabot bot commented on behalf of github Jan 22, 2021

Superseded by #9.

@dependabot dependabot bot closed this Jan 22, 2021
@dependabot dependabot bot deleted the dependabot/go_modules/github.com/open-policy-agent/opa-0.25.2 branch January 22, 2021 00:50
Sign up for free to join this conversation on GitHub. Already have an account? Sign in to comment
Labels
dependencies Pull requests that update a dependency file go Pull requests that update Go code
Projects
None yet
Development

Successfully merging this pull request may close these issues.

0 participants