Frontier is an identity and access management tool designed to help organizations secure their systems and data. With Frontier, you can manage user authentication and authorization across all your applications and services, ensuring that only authorized users have access to your valuable resources.
Discover why users choose Frontier as their authorization server
- User management Create and manage user accounts for all your applications and services.
- Organization management Manage multiple tenants, each with their own set of users, applications, and services.
- Project management Organize your resources into projects and manage access permissions for each project.
- Group management Create and manage groups of users with different access levels across projects and applications.
- Authentication Multiple authentication strategies like Email OTP, Social Login for human users and API keys, RSA JWT based for machine users.
- Authorization Role based access control with policies to bind a user to its access level.
- Billing management Manage billing and subscriptions for your users.
- Audit Audit all user activity and access related logs.
- Reporting Generate reports on user activity and access levels.
- Introduction provide guidance on how to use Frontier and configure it to your needs
- Concepts descibe the primary concepts and architecture behind Frontier
- Reference contains the list of all the APIs that Frontier exposes
- Contributing contains resources for anyone who wants to contribute to Frontier
Install Frontier on macOS, Windows, Linux, OpenBSD, FreeBSD, and on any machine. Refer this for installations.
Download the appropriate version for your platform from releases page. Once downloaded, the binary can be run from anywhere.
You don’t need to install it into a global location. This works well for shared hosts and other systems where you don’t have a privileged account.
Ideally, you should install it somewhere in your PATH for easy use. /usr/local/bin
is the most probable location.
frontier
is available via a Homebrew Tap, and as downloadable binary from the releases page:
brew install raystack/tap/frontier
To upgrade to the latest version:
brew upgrade frontier
frontier
is available as downloadable binaries from the releases page. Download the .deb
or .rpm
from the releases page and install with sudo dpkg -i
and sudo rpm -i
respectively.
frontier
is available via scoop, and as a downloadable binary from the releases page:
scoop bucket add frontier https://github.com/raystack/scoop-bucket.git
To upgrade to the latest version:
scoop update frontier
We provide ready to use Docker container images. To pull the latest image:
docker pull raystack/frontier:latest
To pull a specific version:
docker pull raystack/frontier:0.11.3
Frontier is purely API-driven. It is very easy to get started with Frontier. It provides CLI, HTTP and GRPC APIs for simpler developer experience.
Frontier CLI is fully featured and simple to use, even for those who have very limited experience working from the command line. Run frontier --help
to see list of all available commands and instructions to use.
List of commands
frontier --help
Print command reference
frontier reference
Frontier provides a fully-featured GRPC and HTTP API to interact with Frontier server. Both APIs adheres to a set of standards that are rigidly followed. Please refer to proton for GRPC API definitions.
Development of Frontier happens on GitHub, and we are grateful to the community for contributing bugfixes and improvements.
Read our contribution guide to learn about our development process, how to propose bugfixes and improvements, and how to build and test your changes to Frontier.
To help you get your feet wet and get you familiar with our contribution process, we have a list of good first issues that contain bugs which have a relatively limited scope. This is a great place to get started.
This project exists thanks to all the contributors.
Frontier is Apache 2.0 licensed.