Open Source, Google Zanzibar-inspired permissions database to enable fine-grained access control for customer applications
What is SpiceDB?
SpiceDB is a graph database purpose-built for storing and evaluating access control data.
As of 2021, broken access control became the #1 threat to the web¹. With SpiceDB, developers finally have the solution to stopping this threat the same way as the hyperscalers.
Why SpiceDB?
World-class engineering²: painstakingly built by experts that pioneered the cloud-native ecosystem
Authentic design³: mature and feature-complete implementation of Google's Zanzibar paper
Proven in production⁴: 5ms p95 when scaled to millions of queries/s, billions of relationships
Global consistency⁵: consistency configured per-request unlocks correctness while maintaining performance
Multi-paradigm⁶: caveated relationships combine the best concepts in authorization: ABAC & ReBAC
Safety in tooling⁷: designs schemas with real-time validation or validate in your CI/CD workflow
Reverse Indexes⁸: queries for "What can subject do?", "Who can access resource?"
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Enable snapd
Snap can be installed from the command line on openSUSE Leap 15.x and Tumbleweed.
You need first add the snappy repository from the terminal. Leap 15.5 users, for example, can do this with the following command:
Swap out openSUSE_Leap_15.5 for openSUSE_Leap_15.4 or openSUSE_Tumbleweed if you’re using a different version of openSUSE.
With the repository added, import its GPG key:
sudo zypper --gpg-auto-import-keys refresh
Finally, upgrade the package cache to include the new snappy repository:
sudo zypper dup --from snappy
Snap can now be installed with the following:
sudo zypper install snapd
You then need to either reboot, logout/login or source /etc/profile to have /snap/bin added to PATH.
Additionally, enable and start both the snapd and the snapd.apparmor services with the following commands: