OPA Control Plane (OCP) simplifies how you manage policies for your OPA deployments. It provides a centralized management system to control how OPAs receive the policies and data they need to make decisions. OCP provides:
- Git-based Policy Management. Build bundles based on Rego from multiple Git repositories and implement environment promotion strategies natively with Git.
- External Datasources. Fetch and bundle external data required by your policies build-time using HTTP push and pull datasources.
- Highly-Available & Scalable Bundle Serving. Distribute bundles to cloud object storage like AWS S3, Google Cloud Storage, or Azure Blob Storage and ensure your OPAs can quickly and reliably serve policy decisions.
- Global and hierarchical policies. Enforce organization-wide rules by defining global policies that get injected into bundles at build-time based on label selectors. Global policies can override other policies based on custom conflict resolution logic written in Rego.
- Deploy as a service - Run OCP as a standalone service in Kubernetes
- Concepts - Learn how OCP works
- Configuration - Learn how to configure the server
- API Reference - Learn about the OCP REST API
- Authentication - Learn how to secure the server API
- OCP on GitHub - explore OCP the code, contribute and file issues.
Follow this section to get a quick example running on your laptop. By following these instructions, you will be able to:
- Install OCP on your local machine.
- Define a basic bundle with a test policy.
- Use OCP to build the bundle
- Configure OPA to use the OCP build bundle
- Test the policy's enforcement and observe its effects.
This example is designed for rapid iteration and learning, making it ideal for new users who want to understand OCP's fundamental concepts and operational flow in a controlled, personal setting. We'll focus on simplicity and clarity, ensuring that each step is easy to follow and the outcomes are immediately visible.
Install the opactl tool using one of the installation methods listed below.
The bundle is defined by a configuration file normally in the config.d
directory. More details can be found in the Concepts section, but for now lets use this configuration. In your working directory add the following to ./config.d/hello.yaml
bundles:
hello-world:
object_storage:
filesystem:
path: bundles/hello-world/bundle.tar.gz
requirements:
- source: hello-world
sources:
hello-world:
directory: files/sources/hello-world
paths:
- rules/rules.rego
We also will want to define a simple policy for this bundle. Add the following to ./files/sources/hello-world/rules/rules.rego
package rules
import rego.v1
default allow := false
allow if {
input.user == "alice"
}
In your working directory run the build
command:
opactl build
You could set up a simple server to serve up the bundle, but for now we can just use OPA to watch the bundle. Run this in your working directory:
opa run -s -b -w ./bundles/hello-world/bundle.tar.gz
You should now be able to test the policy running in OPA. Using the following curl:
curl localhost:8181/v1/data/rules/allow -d \
'{"input":{"user":"alice"}}'
You can also try changing the policy in ./files/sources/hello-world/rules/rules.rego
. After you make the change, rerun the build command from above to see the changes reflected in OPA.
If you start OCP outside of Docker without any arguments, it prints a list of available commands. By default, the official
OCP Docker image executes the run
command. Some of the arguments for OCP's run
command are:
--addr
to set the listening address (default:localhost:8282
).--log-level
to set the log level (default:"info"
).
OCP Docker images are available on Docker Hub for the edge releases (ie. tip of main
branch). To get more information
on the other run
command arguments:
docker run openpolicyagent/opa-control-plane:edge run --help
To build the OCP binary, locally run the following command from the root folder. You will need to have a recent version of Go installed.
make build
The binary will be created in the form opactl_<OS>_<ARCH>
(e.g., opactl_darwin_arm64
, opactl_linux_amd64
).
Verify the build:
# Example for macOS/Linux (adjust filename for your platform)
chmod +x ./opactl_darwin_amd64
./opactl_darwin_amd64 version