Variables
This documentation is for a previous version of Cerbos. Choose 0.40.0 from the version picker at the top right or navigate to https://docs.cerbos.dev for the latest version. |
You can use variables to reduce duplication in policy condition expressions. Variables may either be defined locally within a policy, or in a standalone exportVariables
policy file that can be imported by other policies.
Defining local variables
Local variables are only accessible from the policy they are defined. In particular, local variables defined for derived roles can’t be used in resource policies that import the derived roles.
---
apiVersion: api.cerbos.dev/v1
resourcePolicy:
variables:
local: (1)
flagged_resource: request.resource.attr.flagged
# ...
1 | Map of variable name to expression. |
Defining and importing exported variables
To reuse variables between policies, they can be exported from a separate file.
---
apiVersion: api.cerbos.dev/v1
description: Common variables used within the Apatr app
exportVariables:
name: apatr_common_variables (1)
definitions: (2)
flagged_resource: request.resource.attr.flagged
1 | Name to use when importing this set of variables. |
2 | Map of variable name to expression. |
Other policies can then import the variables by name.
---
apiVersion: api.cerbos.dev/v1
resourcePolicy:
variables:
import: (1)
- apatr_common_variables
# ...
1 | List of names of variable sets to import. |
Using variables in policy conditions
Variables can be referenced via the variables
(aliased to V
) special variable in policy condition expressions.
---
condition:
match:
expr: variables.flagged_resource
Local and imported variable definitions are merged, and each variable is evaluated before any rule condition. If a variable is defined in more than one location, the policy will fail to compile.
Top-level variables field
In earlier versions of Cerbos, local variables were defined in a top-level variables
field in the policy file. This field is deprecated in favour of the variables.local
section within the policy body. For backwards compatibility, the deprecated top-level field is merged with the variables.local
section in derived roles, resource, and principal policies.