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Policies

Policies are a set of permissions granted to a resource (VRN)or a role that allows or forbids them to execute a given set of actions in an account, such as performing a request to the platform.

In VTEX IO, there are two kinds of policies, which are role-based and resource-based. Both of them are based on the AWS's IAM policies.

The role-based policies, as the name suggests, are policies associated with a role in the platform, such as an app. In this case, these policies must be declared in the policies.json file in the app's root folder. Resource-based policies, in turn, are policies assigned to a resource in the platform, such as an API endpoint. In this case, the resource itself must declare in which apps it trusts, as well as provide information about the context in which those roles should be trusted. Since an app declares its routes in a service.json file, this is also the file in which the resource-based policies must be declared.

Role-based policies

To create a role-based policy for an app, one may create a policies.json file in the app's root folder. The basic structure of this file is as the following:


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[
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{
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"name": "resolve-graphql",
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"description": "Allows access to resolve a graphql request",
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"statements": [
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{
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"effect": "allow",
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"actions": ["post", "get"],
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"resources": [
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"vrn:vtex.store-graphql:{{region}}:{{account}}:{{workspace}}:/_v/graphql"
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]
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}
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]
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}
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]

Notice that, in this example, a policy named resolve-graphql that allows access to an app to resolve a GraphQL request was declared.

Besides a name and a description, this policy contains the statements prop.

Statements are used in a way of stating: "allow/do not allow these actions to be performed on these resources under these conditions".

Therefore, considering the given example, the declared resolve-graphql policy allows POST and GET requests to be performed on the vrn:vtex.store-graphql:{{region}}:{{account}}:{{workspace}}:/_v/graphql resource.

The keys that compose a statement are:

  • effect - describes the effect of allowing (allow) or denying (deny) a resource to be accessed.
  • actions - describes the actions related to a given effect and resource.

Depending on the resource, there may exist different actions one could perform on it. For RESTful APIs, this could map to HTTP verbs. However, actions are not restricted to it and the service may accept any string as an action.

You can also optionally state conditions to designate that a given statement should only be considered if the context of the request satisfies the set of conditions that have been provided.

Conditions are built with condition operators. In addition to it, account (tenant of the call), workspace, and region can also be used as conditions values.

Resource-based policies

To create a resource-based policy, the resource itself must list who it trusts. Therefore, since the routes of a resource are declared in a service.json file, a resource-based policy must be declared in this file as a routes property.

One must have something similar to the following:


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{
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"routes": {
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"new-order": {
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"path": "/orders",
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"public": false,
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"policies": [{
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"effect": "allow",
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"actions": ["post"],
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"principals": [
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"vrn:apps:*:*:*:app/example.marketplace@*"
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]
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}]
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}
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}
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}

Notice that, in this example, a resource-based policy related to the /orders route was declared. The effect, actions and principals props under policies can be translated as: "allow/do not allow these actions to be performed by these principals in this route", where principals can be understood as the applications able to make requests to a given resource.

Hence, for the given example, a policy related to the /orders resource allows the example.marketplace app to perform a POST request in its route.

The keys that compose this kind of policy are:

  • effect - describes the effect of allowing (allow) or denying (deny) a principal to perform a set of actions on a route.
  • actions - describes the actions related to a given effect, principal, and route.
  • principals - contains the list of principals able to perform requests to a given route or not. Like resources, principals are also expressed by a VTEX Resource Name (VRN).
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