[[_policy_js]] = JavaScript-Based Policy You can use this type of policy to define conditions for your permissions using JavaScript. It is one of the rule-based policy types supported by {project_name}, and provides flexibility to write any policy based on the <<_policy_evaluation_api, Evaluation API>>. To create a new JavaScript-based policy, select *JavaScript* in the dropdown list in the upper right corner of the policy listing. .Add JavaScript Policy image:{project_images}/policy/create-js.png[alt="Add JavaScript Policy"] == Configuration * *Name* + A human-readable and unique string describing the policy. A best practice is to use names that are closely related to your business and security requirements, so you can identify them more easily. + * *Description* + A string containing details about this policy. + * *Code* + The JavaScript code providing the conditions for this policy. + * *Logic* + The <<_policy_logic, Logic>> of this policy to apply after the other conditions have been evaluated. == Examples Here is a simple example of a JavaScript-based policy that uses attribute-based access control (ABAC) to define a condition based on an attribute obtained from the execution context: ```javascript var context = $evaluation.getContext(); var contextAttributes = context.getAttributes(); if (contextAttributes.containsValue('kc.client.network.ip_address', '127.0.0.1')) { $evaluation.grant(); } ``` You can also use Role-Based Access Control (RBAC) in your policies. In the example below, we check if a user is granted with a `keycloak_user` *realm* role: ```javascript var context = $evaluation.getContext(); var identity = context.getIdentity(); if (identity.hasRealmRole('keycloak_user')) { $evaluation.grant(); } ``` Or you can check if a user is granted with a `my-client-role` *client* role, where `my-client` is the client id of the client application: ```javascript var context = $evaluation.getContext(); var identity = context.getIdentity(); if (identity.hasClientRole('my-client', 'my-client-role')) { $evaluation.grant(); } ``` You can also use a combination of several access control mechanisms. The example below shows how roles(RBAC) and claims/attributes(ABAC) checks can be used within the same policy. In this case we check if user is granted with `admin` role or has an e-mail from `keycloak.org` domain: ```javascript var context = $evaluation.getContext(); var identity = context.getIdentity(); var attributes = identity.getAttributes(); var email = attributes.getValue('email').asString(0); if (identity.hasRealmRole('admin') || email.endsWith('@keycloak.org')) { $evaluation.grant(); } ``` NOTE: When writing your own rules, keep in mind that the *$evaluation* object is an object implementing *org.keycloak.authorization.policy.evaluation.Evaluation*. For more information about what you can access from this interface, see the <<_policy_evaluation_api, Evaluation API>>.