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Rucredstash is a Rust port of CredStash
It uses a combination of AWS Key Management Service (KMS) and DynamoDB to store secrets. This is needed when you want to store and retrieve your credentials (like database password, API Keys etc) securely. A more detailed tutorial is here.
This package offers the interface via both CLI and an library way of accessing it. The CLI is meant as a drop in replacement of the original credstash program and therefore it tries to have the exact interface as the original program.
rucredstash 0.8.0
Sibi Prabakaran
A credential/secret storage system
USAGE:
rucredstash [OPTIONS] [SUBCOMMAND]
FLAGS:
-h, --help Prints help information
-V, --version Prints version information
OPTIONS:
-a, --arn <ARN> AWS IAM ARN for AssumeRole
-m, --mfa_serial <MFA_SERIAL> Optional MFA hardware device serial number or virtual device ARN
-p, --profile <PROFILE> Boto config profile to use when connecting to AWS
-r, --region <REGION> the AWS region in which to operate. If a region is not specified, credstash will
use the value of the AWS_DEFAULT_REGION env variable, or if that is not set, the
value in `~/.aws/config`. As a last resort, it will use us-east-1
-t, --table <TABLE> DynamoDB table to use for credential storage. If not specified, credstash will use
the value of the CREDSTASH_DEFAULT_TABLE env variable, or if that is not set, the
value `credential-store` will be used
SUBCOMMANDS:
delete Delete a credential from the store
get Get a credential from the store
getall Get all credentials from the store
help Prints this message or the help of the given subcommand(s)
keys List all keys in the store
list List credentials and their versions
put Put a credential into the store
putall Put credentials from json or file into the store
setup setup the credential store
See Github releases: https://github.com/psibi/rucredstash/releases
Executables are available for all the three major platforms: Linux, Windows and MacOS.
For rucredstash
to work, you need to setup the following AWS
infrastrucutre:
- Create Customer manged keys (CMK) key
- Services => KMS => Create Key => Input "credstash" for Key Alias
- Create DynamoDB table
- rucredstash setup
The most simple case is to export the proper environment variable and use it:
$ export AWS_ACCESS_KEY_ID=xxxx
$ export AWS_SECRET_ACCESS_KEY=xxxx
$ rucredstash list
hello -- version 0000000000000000001 --comment
hellehllobyegood -- version 0000000000000000001 --comment
hello1 -- version 0000000000000000001 --comment
Note that rucredstash
by default uses
DefaultCredentialsProvider,
so your credentials will be based on that. But it even allows other
complex usage scenarios:
$ export AWS_ACCESS_KEY_ID=xxxx
$ export AWS_SECRET_ACCESS_KEY=xxxx
$ rucredstash --arn arn:aws:iam::786946123934:role/admin --mfa_serial arn:aws:iam::786946123934:mfa/sibi --region us-west-2 list
Enter MFA Code: xxxxx
hello -- version 0000000000000000001 --comment
hellehllobyegood -- version 0000000000000000001 --comment
hello1 -- version 0000000000000000001 --comment
Note that the MFA functionality isn't present in the original credstash program (the Python program). You can also use programs like aws-env and use this tool. Example:
$ aws-env rucredstash list
hello -- version 0000000000000000001 --comment
hellehllobyegood -- version 0000000000000000001 --comment
hello1 -- version 0000000000000000001 --comment
$ rucredstash put hello world
hello has been stored
You can also use the encryption context associated with the credential:
$ rucredstash put nasdaq nifty500 market=world
nasdaq has been stored
Or even multiple encryption contexts:
$ rucredstash put vanguard vanguardsecret market=world indexfunds=us
vanguard has been stored
$ rucredstash get hello1
world1
Now let's also try to retrieve using the encryption context:
$ rucredstash get nasdaq market=world
nifty500
And using multiple encryption context:
$ rucredstash get vanguard market=world indexfunds=us
vanguardsecret
$ rucredstash getall
{
"hellehllobyegood": "dam",
"hello": "world",
"hello1": "world1"
}
You can get that in other formats too:
$ rucredstash getall --format yaml
hello: world
hellehllobyegood: dam
hello1: world1
$ rucredstash list
hello -- version 0000000000000000001 --comment
hellehllobyegood -- version 0000000000000000001 --comment
hello1 -- version 0000000000000000001 --comment
$ rucredstash keys
hello
hellehllobyegood
hello1
$ rucredstash delete hello
Deleting hello --version 0000000000000000001
You can pass the input from a file using the special symbol @
to
indicate that the data is fed from the file:
$ bat secrets.json
───────┬────────────────────────────────────────
│ File: secrets.json
───────┼────────────────────────────────────────
1 │ {
2 │ "hello": "world",
3 │ "hi": "bye"
4 │ }
───────┴────────────────────────────────────────
$ rucredstash putall @secrets.json
hello has been stored
hi has been stored
You can also pass the data via stdin using the special operator -
:
$ rucredstash putall -
{ "hello": "world" }
hello has been stored
Note that the passed data should be in json format. You press the Enter key to indicate that you have finished passing the data.
Also, you can also pass the data directly to it:
$ rucredstash putall '{"hello":"world","hi":"bye"}'
hello has been stored
hi has been stored