How-To: Scope components to one or more applications
Dapr components are namespaced (separate from the Kubernetes namespace concept), meaning a Dapr runtime instance can only access components that have been deployed to the same namespace.
When Dapr runs, it matches it’s own configured namespace with the namespace of the components that it loads and initializes only the ones matching its namespaces. All other components in a different namespace are not loaded.
Namespaces can be used to limit component access to particular Dapr instances.
In self hosted mode, a developer can specify the namespace to a Dapr instance by setting the environment variable. If the NAMESPACE
environment variable is set, Dapr does not load any component that does not specify the same namespace in its metadata.
For example given this component in the production
namespace
MacOS/Linux:
Windows:
Let’s consider the following component in Kubernetes:
In this example, the Redis component is only accessible to Dapr instances running inside the namespace.
Note
The component YAML applied to namespace “A” can reference the implementation in namespace “B”. For example, a component YAML for Redis in namespace “production-A” can point the Redis host address to the Redis instance deployed in namespace “production-B”.
Developers and operators might want to limit access to one database from a certain application, or a specific set of applications. To achieve this, Dapr allows you to specify scopes
on the component YAML. Application scopes added to a component limit only the applications with specific IDs from using the component.
The following example shows how to give access to two Dapr enabled apps, with the app IDs of app1
and to the Redis component named statestore
which itself is in the production
namespace
Read Service invocation across namespaces for more information on using namespaces when calling between services.
Read Configure Pub/Sub components with multiple namespaces for more information on using namespaces with pub/sub.