From 45df4d0d9b577fecee798d672695fe24ff57fb1b Mon Sep 17 00:00:00 2001 From: mo khan Date: Tue, 15 Jul 2025 16:37:08 -0600 Subject: feat: migrate from Cedar to SpiceDB authorization system This is a major architectural change that replaces the Cedar policy-based authorization system with SpiceDB's relation-based authorization. Key changes: - Migrate from Rust to Go implementation - Replace Cedar policies with SpiceDB schema and relationships - Switch from envoy `ext_authz` with Cedar to SpiceDB permission checks - Update build system and dependencies for Go ecosystem - Maintain Envoy integration for external authorization This change enables more flexible permission modeling through SpiceDB's Google Zanzibar inspired relation-based system, supporting complex hierarchical permissions that were difficult to express in Cedar. Breaking change: Existing Cedar policies and Rust-based configuration will no longer work and need to be migrated to SpiceDB schema. --- vendor/hyper/src/service/mod.rs | 30 ------------------------------ 1 file changed, 30 deletions(-) delete mode 100644 vendor/hyper/src/service/mod.rs (limited to 'vendor/hyper/src/service/mod.rs') diff --git a/vendor/hyper/src/service/mod.rs b/vendor/hyper/src/service/mod.rs deleted file mode 100644 index 28ffaddb..00000000 --- a/vendor/hyper/src/service/mod.rs +++ /dev/null @@ -1,30 +0,0 @@ -//! Asynchronous Services -//! -//! A [`Service`] is a trait representing an asynchronous -//! function of a request to a response. It's similar to -//! `async fn(Request) -> Result`. -//! -//! The argument and return value isn't strictly required to be for HTTP. -//! Therefore, hyper uses several "trait aliases" to reduce clutter around -//! bounds. These are: -//! -//! - `HttpService`: This is blanketly implemented for all types that -//! implement `Service, Response = http::Response>`. -//! -//! # HttpService -//! -//! In hyper, especially in the server setting, a `Service` is usually bound -//! to a single connection. It defines how to respond to **all** requests that -//! connection will receive. -//! -//! The helper [`service_fn`] should be sufficient for most cases, but -//! if you need to implement `Service` for a type manually, you can follow the example -//! in `service_struct_impl.rs`. - -mod http; -mod service; -mod util; - -pub use self::http::HttpService; -pub use self::service::Service; -pub use self::util::service_fn; -- cgit v1.2.3