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    # Policy Service
    
    
    The policy service provides HTTP API to evaluate/execute 
    [OPA](https://www.openpolicyagent.org/) policies.
    
    It is developed using the [Goa v3](https://goa.design/) framework
    and uses the [Go OPA framework](https://github.com/open-policy-agent/opa) 
    as a library.
    
    While the service is up and running, you can see a live Swagger API 
    description at `servicehost:serviceport/swagger-ui`. In the local docker-compose 
    environment, the Swagger URL is available at http://localhost:8081/swagger-ui/ 
    
    ### High-level Overview
    
    ```mermaid
    flowchart LR
    	A([client]) -- HTTP --> B[Policy API]
    	subgraph policy
    		B --> C[(policies DB)]
    	end
    	C --sync--- D[Git Server]
    ```
    
    ### Policy Evaluation
    
    The policy service exposes HTTP endpoints to evaluate/execute policies.
    The endpoint interface is conformant to the TSA requirements document.
    
    
    To evaluate a policy a GET or POST request is sent to the evaluation URL.
    
    The example URL below is given for the local docker-compose environment. 
    The `host` and `port` parts will be different for the different environments.
    
    ```
    # URL with example policy group, name and version
    http://localhost:8081/policy/gaiax/didresolve/1.0/evaluation
    
    # URL with parameter placeholders
    http://localhost:8081/policy/{group}/{policy}/{version}/evaluation
    ```
    
    There are three parameters in the URL specifying which exact policy 
    should be evaluated - `group`, `policy` and `version`. These parameters 
    are also important during policy development (see below) as `group` 
    and `policy` **must** be used as package name inside the policy 
    source code file.
    
    
    The body of the POST request can be empty, but if it's not empty, it 
    **must** be JSON. It is passed directly to the policy execution runtime. 
    Inside the policy it is accessed with the global variable name `input`. 
    For example, if you pass to the evaluation endpoint the following JSON, 
    it will be accessible by `input.message`:
    
    ```json
    {
      "message": "hello world"
    }
    ```
    
    Here is a complete example CURL request:
    ```shell
    curl -X POST http://localhost:8081/policy/gaiax/didresolve/1.0/evaluation -d '{"message":"hello world"}'
    ```
    
    ### Policy Locking
    
    The service exposes HTTP endpoints to lock and unlock policies. Locking a policy
    means that it's not allowed for evaluation (execution). Unlocking a policy allows
    its evaluation/execution to proceed normally.
    
    Lock a policy with POST request:
    ```shell
    curl -X POST http://localhost:8081/policy/gaiax/didresolve/1.0/lock
    ```
    
    Unlock a policy with DELETE request:
    ```shell
    curl -X DELETE http://localhost:8081/policy/gaiax/didresolve/1.0/lock
    ```
    
    ### Policy Storage
    
    Policies (rego source code and metadata) are stored in a MongoDB collection `policies`,
    with one collection document representing one policy. A document contains additional 
    policy state un-related to OPA and Rego, but necessary for implementing the TSA 
    requirements (e.g. policy lock/unlock).
    
    The database is used as read-only source of truth for the current policy state when
    policies need to be evaluated. Policy storage is updated externally from a separate
    component. The update process is automatically triggered by updating policy source 
    code files in an external Git server.
    
    ```mermaid
    flowchart LR
    	A[Policy\nDeveloper] --git push/merge--> B[Git branch]
    	subgraph Git Server
    
    		B --> C[example/1.0/policy.rego]
    		B --> D[example/2.0/policy.rego]
    		B --> G[example/3.0/policy.rego]
    
    	end
    	C --> E[Sync]
    	D --> E[Sync]
    	G --> E[Sync]
    	E --update--> F
    	subgraph policy service
    		F[(policies DB)]
    	end
    ```
    
    ### Policy Development
    
    Policies are written in the [Rego](https://www.openpolicyagent.org/docs/latest/policy-language/) 
    language. Please refer to the [OPA documentation](https://www.openpolicyagent.org/docs/latest/)
    for detailed overview of Rego and OPA capabilities.
    
    **Some conventions *must* be followed when writing policies.**
    
    1. The filename of the policy *must* follow rules for the naming and directory structure:
    
    the `group`, `policy name` and `version` are directories inside the Git repo and policy file *must* be named
    `policy.rego`.  For example: `/gaiax/example/1.0/policy.rego`.
    2. In the same directory there could be a data file containing static json, which is later passed to the
    policy evaluation runtime. The file *must* be named `data.json`. Example: `/gaiax/example/1.0/data.json`
    3. The policy package name inside the policy source code file *must* exactly match
    
    the `group` and `policy` (name) of the policy.
    
    *What does all this mean?*
    
    Let's see an example for the 1st convention.
    ```
    package gaiax.example
    
    allow {
        input.message == "hello world"
    }
    ```
    
    
    Next, the filename must be `/gaiax/example/1.0/policy.rego`. When such file is synchronized
    
    with the policy service (storage), the naming convention allows the service to understand
    which part is the policy group, which part is policy name and which part is version.
    
    
    If we create the above policy and store it in the Git repo as `/gaiax/example/1.0/policy.rego`,
    
    after the Git server is synchronized with the Policy Storage, the policy service will
    automatically expose URLs for working with the policy at:
    ```
    http://localhost:8081/policy/gaiax/example/1.0/evaluation
    http://localhost:8081/policy/gaiax/example/1.0/lock
    ```
    
    The 2nd rule for static data file naming is to make sure that file `/gaiax/example/1.0/data.json`
    is passed and is available to the evaluation runtime when a policy is evaluated at URL:
    ```
    http://localhost:8081/policy/gaiax/example/1.0/evaluation
    ```
    Static data is accessed within the Rego policy with `data.someKey`.
    Example: If the `/gaiax/example/1.0/data.json` file is:
    ```json
    {
      "name": "some name"
    }
    ```
    one could access the data using `data.name` within the Rego source code.
    
    The 3rd rule for package naming is needed so that a generic evaluation function
    
    can be mapped and used for evaluating all kinds of different policies. Without a 
    package naming rule, there's no way the service can automatically generate HTTP 
    endpoints for working with arbitrary dynamically uploaded policies.
    
    
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    ## GDPR
    
    [GDPR](GDPR.md)
    
    
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    ## Dependencies
    
    [Dependencies](go.mod)
    
    
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    ## License
    
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    [Apache 2.0 license](LICENSE)