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Chainguard Image for openfga

A high performance and flexible authorization/permission engine built for developers and inspired by Google Zanzibar

Chainguard Images are regularly-updated, minimal container images with low-to-zero CVEs.

Download this Image

This image is available on cgr.dev:

docker pull cgr.dev/ORGANIZATION/openfga:latest

Be sure to replace the ORGANIZATION placeholder with the name used for your organization's private repository within the Chainguard registry.

Compatibility Notes

This image is comparable to the OpenFGA image available from Docker Hub. Switching to Chainguard image should not require any changes to your existing setup.

Getting Started

Helm Chart

You can use the official Helm chart and replace the image in values.yaml with the Chainguard image.

Use the following values.yaml file to configure the Helm chart:

image:
  repository: cgr.dev/ORGANIZATION/openfga
  tag: latest

Run the following commands to install and run Chainguard's OpenFGA image using Helm:

helm repo add openfga https://openfga.github.io/helm-charts
"openfga" has been added to your repositories
helm repo update
...Successfully got an update from the "openfga" chart repository
Update Complete. ⎈Happy Helming!⎈
helm install openfga openfga/openfga --values values.yaml
NAME: openfga
LAST DEPLOYED:
NAMESPACE: default
STATUS: deployed
REVISION: 1
NOTES:
1. Get the application URL by running these commands:
  export POD_NAME=$(kubectl get pods --namespace default -l "app.kubernetes.io/name=openfga,app.kubernetes.io/instance=openfga" -o jsonpath="{.items[0].metadata.name}")
  export CONTAINER_PORT=$(kubectl get pod --namespace default $POD_NAME -o jsonpath="{.spec.containers[0].ports[1].containerPort}")
  echo "Visit http://127.0.0.1:8080 to use your application"
  kubectl --namespace default port-forward $POD_NAME 8080:$CONTAINER_PORT

Docker

You can run the following command to run Chainguard's OpenFGA image:

docker run -d --name openfga -p 8080:8080 cgr.dev/ORGANIZATION/openfga:latest run

With the container running in the background, you can send a GET request to the /stores endpoint:

curl -X GET localhost:8080/stores
{"stores":[],"continuation_token":""}

Documentation and Resources

Contact Support

If you have a Zendesk account (typically set up for you by your Customer Success Manager) you can reach out to Chainguard's Customer Success team through our Zendesk portal.

What are Chainguard Images?

Chainguard Images are a collection of container images designed for security and minimalism.

Many Chainguard Images are distroless; they contain only an open-source application and its runtime dependencies. These images do not even contain a shell or package manager. Chainguard Images are built with Wolfi, our Linux undistro designed to produce container images that meet the requirements of a secure software supply chain.

The main features of Chainguard Images include:

-dev Variants

As mentioned previously, Chainguard’s distroless Images have no shell or package manager by default. This is great for security, but sometimes you need these things, especially in builder images. For those cases, most (but not all) Chainguard Images come paired with a -dev variant which does include a shell and package manager.

Although the -dev image variants have similar security features as their distroless versions, such as complete SBOMs and signatures, they feature additional software that is typically not necessary in production environments. The general recommendation is to use the -dev variants only to build the application and then copy all application artifacts into a distroless image, which will result in a final container image that has a minimal attack surface and won’t allow package installations or logins.

That being said, it’s worth noting that -dev variants of Chainguard Images are completely fine to run in production environments. After all, the -dev variants are still more secure than many popular container images based on fully-featured operating systems such as Debian and Ubuntu since they carry less software, follow a more frequent patch cadence, and offer attestations for what they include.

Learn More

To better understand how to work with Chainguard Images, we encourage you to visit Chainguard Academy, our documentation and education platform.

Licenses

Chainguard Images contain software packages that are direct or transitive dependencies. The following licenses were found in the "latest" version of this image:

  • Apache-2.0

  • LGPL-2.1-or-later

  • MIT

  • MPL-2.0

For a complete list of licenses, please refer to this Image's SBOM.

Software license agreement

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