[this announcement is available online at https://s.apache.org/23CB ]


Big Data security management framework for the Apache Hadoop ecosystem in use 
at ING, Protegrity, and Sprint, among other organizations.

Forest Hill, MD —8 February 2017— The Apache Software Foundation (ASF), the 
all-volunteer developers, stewards, and incubators of more than 350 Open Source 
projects and initiatives, announced today that Apache® Ranger™ has graduated 
from the Apache Incubator to become a Top-Level Project (TLP), signifying that 
the project's community and products have been well-governed under the ASF's 
meritocratic process and principles.

The latest addition to the ASF’s more than three dozen projects in Big Data, 
Apache Ranger is a centralized framework used to define, administer and manage 
security policies consistently across Apache Hadoop components. Ranger also 
offers the most comprehensive security coverage, with native support for 
numerous Apache projects, including Atlas (incubating), HBase, HDFS, Hive, 
Kafka, Knox, NiFi, Solr, Storm, and YARN. 

"Graduating to a Top-Level Project reflects the maturity and growth of the 
Ranger Community," said Selvamohan Neethiraj, Vice President of Apache Ranger. 
"We are pleased to celebrate a great milestone and officially play an integral 
role in the Apache Big Data ecosystem."

Apache Ranger provides a simple and effective way to set access control 
policies and audit the data access across the entire Hadoop stack by following 
industry best practices. One of the key benefits of Ranger is that access 
control policies can be managed by security administrators from a single place 
and consistently across hadoop ecosystem. Ranger also enables the community to 
add new systems for authorization even outside Hadoop ecosystem, with a robust 
plugin architecture, that can be extended with minimal effort. In addition, 
Apache Ranger provides many advanced features, such as:

 - Ranger Key Management Service (compatible with Hadoop’s native KMS API to 
store and manage encryption keys for HDFS Transparent Data Encryption);
 - Dynamic column masking and row filtering;
 - Dynamic policy conditions (such as prohibition of toxic joins);
 - User context enrichers (such as geo-location and time of day mappings); and
 - Classification or tag based policies for Hadoop ecosystem components via 
integration with Apache Atlas.

"As early adopters of Apache Ranger and having contributed to Apache Ranger, we 
have come to rely upon Apache Ranger as a key part of our security 
infrastructure for data," said Ferd Scheepers, Chief Information Architect at 
ING. "We are therefore pleased to learn that the project has now graduated to a 
TLP project through the efforts of the Apache community. We believe that Apache 
Ranger represents the best-in-class Open Source security framework for 
authorization, encryption management, and auditing across Hadoop ecosystem. We 
laud the community's efforts in building an extensible and enterprise grade 
architecture for Apache Ranger, and for innovative features such as tag or 
classification based security (built in conjunction with Apache Atlas). We 
congratulate the Apache Ranger community on achieving this significant 
milestone and are confident Apache Ranger will evolve into the de-facto 
standard for security stack across the Hadoop ecosystem."

"As heavy users of Apache Ranger in production, we are pleased to see the 
project become a TLP through validation across community efforts," said Timothy 
R. Connor, Big Data & Advanced Analytics Manager at Sprint. "Apache Ranger has 
built a next generation ABAC model for authorization along with a robust 
data-centric Open Source security framework supporting advanced security 
capabilities such as dynamic row filtering and column masking. All of these 
point to Apache Ranger maturing into a robust and comprehensive security 
product for authorization, encryption management and auditing through the 
Apache community."

"It's great to see Apache Ranger become a TLP," said Dominic Sartorio, Senior 
Vice President of Products & Development at Protegrity. "Apache Ranger's 
comprehensive auditing and broad authorization coverage across the Hadoop 
ecosystem, along with its highly scalable and extensible architecture and rich 
set of APIs, integrates very well with Protegrity's fine grained data 
protection capabilities. Our continued collaboration with the Apache Ranger 
community will help meet the data security requirements of the next generation 
of enterprise-grade production Hadoop deployments."

"As organizations entrust their enterprise data to Open Source data platforms 
such as Apache Hadoop, there is a critical need to use the most innovative 
techniques to safeguard this data," said Alan Gates, Co-Founder of HortonWorks 
and Apache Ranger incubation mentor. "Apache Ranger community has taken the 
original, proprietary code base and used it to build a new and successful 
Apache project that employs an attribute-based approach to define and enforce 
authorization policies. This modern approach is a combination of subject, 
action, resource, and environment and goes beyond role-based access control 
techniques exclusively based on organizational roles - permissions mapping. It 
has been a pleasure to be their mentor in this process and help them learn the 
Apache way."

"More and more users are adopting Apache Ranger to secure data in the Hadoop 
ecosystem," added Neethiraj. "We look forward to welcoming new Ranger users to 
our mailing lists and community events."

Availability and Oversight
Apache Ranger software is released under the Apache License v2.0 and is 
overseen by a self-selected team of active contributors to the project. A 
Project Management Committee (PMC) guides the Project's day-to-day operations, 
including community development and product releases. For project updates, 
downloads, documentation, and ways to become involved with Apache Ranger, visit 
https://ranger.apache.org/ and @ApacheRanger.

About the Apache Incubator
The Apache Incubator is the entry path for projects and codebases wishing to 
become part of the efforts at The Apache Software Foundation. All code 
donations from external organizations and existing external projects wishing to 
join the ASF enter through the Incubator to: 1) ensure all donations are in 
accordance with the ASF legal standards; and 2) develop new communities that 
adhere to our guiding principles. Incubation is required of all newly accepted 
projects until a further review indicates that the infrastructure, 
communications, and decision making process have stabilized in a manner 
consistent with other successful ASF projects. While incubation status is not 
necessarily a reflection of the completeness or stability of the code, it does 
indicate that the project has yet to be fully endorsed by the ASF. For more 
information, visit http://incubator.apache.org/

About The Apache Software Foundation (ASF)
Established in 1999, the all-volunteer Foundation oversees more than 350 
leading Open Source projects, including Apache HTTP Server --the world's most 
popular Web server software. Through the ASF's meritocratic process known as 
"The Apache Way," more than 620 individual Members and 5,900 Committers 
successfully collaborate to develop freely available enterprise-grade software, 
benefiting millions of users worldwide: thousands of software solutions are 
distributed under the Apache License; and the community actively participates 
in ASF mailing lists, mentoring initiatives, and ApacheCon, the Foundation's 
official user conference, trainings, and expo. The ASF is a US 501(c)(3) 
charitable organization, funded by individual donations and corporate sponsors 
including Alibaba Cloud Computing, ARM, Bloomberg, Budget Direct, Capital One, 
Cash Store, Cerner, Cloudera, Comcast, Confluent, Facebook, Google, 
Hortonworks, HP, Huawei, IBM, InMotion Hosting, iSigma, LeaseWeb, Microsoft, 
OPDi, PhoenixNAP, Pivotal, Private Internet Access, Produban, Red Hat, Serenata 
Flowers, Target, WANdisco, and Yahoo. For more information, visit 
http://www.apache.org/ and https://twitter.com/TheASF

© The Apache Software Foundation. "Apache", "Ranger", "Apache Ranger", "HBase", 
"Apache HBase", "HDFS", "Apache HDFS", "Hive", "Apache Hive", "Kafka", "Apache 
Kafka", "Knox", "Apache Knox", "NiFi", "Apache NiFi", "Solr", "Apache Solr", 
"Storm", "Apache Storm", "YARN", "Apache YARN", and "ApacheCon" are registered 
trademarks or trademarks of the Apache Software Foundation in the United States 
and/or other countries. All other brands and trademarks are the property of 
their respective owners.

# # #

NOTE: you are receiving this message because you are subscribed to the 
announce@apache.org distribution list. To unsubscribe, send email from the 
recipient account to announce-unsubscr...@apache.org with the word 
"Unsubscribe" in the subject line.

Reply via email to