Congress consists of the Congress policy engine and a driver for any number of other cloud services that act as sources of information about the cloud:
Policy Engine
|
------------------+------------------
| | |
Nova Driver Neutron Driver Keystone Driver
| | | ....
Nova Neutron Keystone
A service is anything that manages cloud state. For example, OpenStack components like Nova, Neutron, Cinder, Swift, Heat, and Keystone are all services. Software like ActiveDirectory, inventory management systems, anti-virus scanners, intrusion detection systems, and relational databases are also services.
Congress uses a driver to connect each service to the policy engine. A driver fetches cloud state from its respective cloud service, and then feeds that state to the policy engine in the form of tables. A table is a collection of rows; each row is a collection of columns; each row-column entry stores simple data like numbers or strings.
For example, the Nova driver periodically makes API calls to Nova to fetch the list of virtual machines in the cloud, and the properties associated with each VM. The Nova driver then populates a table in the policy engine with the Nova state. For example, the Nova driver populates a table like this::
---------------------------------------------
| VM id | Name | Status | Power State | ... |
---------------------------------------------
| 12345 | foo | ACTIVE | Running | ... |
| ... | | | | |
---------------------------------------------
The state for each service will be unique to that service. For Neutron, the existing logical networks, subnets, and ports make up that state. For Nova, the existing VMs along with their disk and memory space make up that state. For an anti-virus scanner, the results of all its most recent scans are the state. The Services section describes services and drivers in more detail.
A Congress policy defines all those states of the cloud that are permitted: all those combinations of service tables that are possible when the cloud is behaving as intended. Since listing the permitted states explicitly is an insurmountable task, policy authors describe the permitted states implicitly by writing a collection of if-then statements that are always true when the cloud is behaving as intended.
More precisely, Congress uses Datalog as its policy language. Datalog is a declarative language and is similar in many ways to SQL, Prolog, and first-order logic. Datalog has been the subject of research and development for the past 50 years, which means there is a wealth of tools, algorithms, and deployment experience surrounding it. The Policy section describes policies in more detail.
Once Congress is given a policy, it has three capabilities:
In the future, Congress will also record the history of policy and its violations for the purpose of audit. The Monitoring and Enforcement section describes these capabilities in more detail.
Congress runs as a standalone server process and presents a RESTful API for clients; drivers run as part of the server. Instructions for installing and starting the Congress server can be found in the Readme file.
The API allows clients to perform the following operations:
The API section describes the API in more detail.
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