ejson
is a utility for managing a collection of secrets in source control. The
secrets are encrypted using public
key, elliptic
curve cryptography
(NaCl Box:
Curve25519 +
Salsa20 +
Poly1305-AES). Secrets are
collected in a JSON file, in which all the string values are encrypted. Public
keys are embedded in the file, and the decrypter looks up the corresponding
private key from its local filesystem.
The main benefits provided by ejson
are:
- Secrets can be safely stored in a git repo.
- Changes to secrets are auditable on a line-by-line basis with
git blame
. - Anyone with git commit access has access to write new secrets.
- Decryption access can easily be locked down to production servers only.
- Secrets change synchronously with application source (as opposed to secrets provisioned by Configuration Management).
- Simple, well-tested, easily-auditable source.
See the manpages for more technical documentation.
You can download the .deb
package from Github Releases.
On development machines (64-bit linux or OS X), the recommended installation method is via rubygems:
gem install ejson
By default, EJSON looks for keys in /opt/ejson/keys
. You can change this by
setting EJSON_KEYDIR
or passing the -keydir
option.
$ mkdir -p /opt/ejson/keys
When called with -w
, ejson keygen
will write the keypair into the keydir
and print the public key. Without -w
, it will print both keys to stdout. This
is useful if you have to distribute the key to multiple servers via
configuration management, etc.
$ ejson keygen
Public Key:
63ccf05a9492e68e12eeb1c705888aebdcc0080af7e594fc402beb24cce9d14f
Private Key:
75b80b4a693156eb435f4ed2fe397e583f461f09fd99ec2bd1bdef0a56cf6e64
$ ./ejson keygen -w
53393332c6c7c474af603c078f5696c8fe16677a09a711bba299a6c1c1676a59
$ cat /opt/ejson/keys/5339*
888a4291bef9135729357b8c70e5a62b0bbe104a679d829cdbe56d46a4481aaf
The format is described in more detail later on. For now, create a
file that looks something like this. Fill in the <key>
with whatever you got
back in step 2.
Create this file as test.ejson
:
{
"_public_key": "<key>",
"database_password": "1234password"
}
Running ejson encrypt test.ejson
will encrypt any new plaintext keys in the
file, and leave any existing encrypted keys untouched:
{
"_public_key": "63ccf05a9492e68e12eeb1c705888aebdcc0080af7e594fc402beb24cce9d14f",
"database_password": "EJ[1:WGj2t4znULHT1IRveMEdvvNXqZzNBNMsJ5iZVy6Dvxs=:kA6ekF8ViYR5ZLeSmMXWsdLfWr7wn9qS:fcHQtdt6nqcNOXa97/M278RX6w==]"
}
Try adding another plaintext secret to the file and run ejson encrypt test.ejson
again. The database_password
field will not be changed, but the
new secret will be encrypted.
To decrypt the file, you must have a file present in the keydir
whose name is
the 64-byte hex-encoded public key exactly as embedded in the ejson
document.
The contents of that file must be the similarly-encoded private key. If you used
ejson keygen -w
, you've already got this covered.
Unlike ejson encrypt
, which overwrites the specified files, ejson decrypt
only takes one file parameter, and prints the output to stdout
:
$ ejson decrypt foo.ejson
{
"_public_key": "63ccf05a9492e68e12eeb1c705888aebdcc0080af7e594fc402beb24cce9d14f",
"database_password": "1234password"
}
The ejson
document format is simple, but there are a few points to be aware
of:
- It's just JSON.
- There must be a key at the top level named
_public_key
, whose value is a 32-byte hex-encoded (i.e. 64 ASCII byte) public key as generated byejson keygen
. - Any string literal that isn't an object key will be encrypted by default (ie.
in
{"a": "b"}
,"b"
will be encrypted, but"a"
will not. - Numbers, booleans, and nulls aren't encrypted.
- If a key begins with an underscore, its corresponding value will not be
encrypted. This is used to prevent the
_public_key
field from being encrypted, and is useful for implementing metadata schemes. - Underscores do not propagate downward. For example, in
{"_a": {"b": "c"}}
,"c"
will be encrypted.
- If you use Capistrano for deployment you can use capistrano-ejson to automatically decrypt the secrets on deploy.