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amber

Rust

Manage secret values in-repo via public key cryptography. See the announcement blog post for more motivation.

Amber provides the ability to securely store secret data in a plain-text file. Secrets can be encrypted by anyone with access to the file, without the ability to read those files without a secret key. The file format is a plain text YAML file which minimizes diffs on value changes, making it amenable to tracking changes in version control.

The primary use case for Amber is storing secret values for Continuous Integration systems. In most CI secrets management systems, there is no way to track the changes in values over time. With Amber, the public key and encrypted values live inside the repo, ensuring future runs of the same commit will either fail (if you've misplaced/changed the key) or have identical inputs.

Install

See below for OS specific packages. Alternatively, you can install from source by installing Rust and running cargo install --git https://github.com/fpco/amber. Binaries are available on the release page. Place the executable on your PATH and ensure that the executable bit is set (for non-Windows platforms).

Arch Linux

There is a AUR package available for Amber. Install with makepkg or your preferred helper:

git clone https://aur.archlinux.org/amber-secrets.git
cd amber-secrets
makepkg -si

Nix/NixOS

Amber is available as part of nixpkgs under the name amber-secret.

GitHub actions

For installing and caching amber, in GitHub actions workflow you can use psibi/setup-amber.

Example usage:

- uses: psibi/[email protected]
  with:
    amber-version: 'v0.1.3' # Optional version, otherwise latest
  env:
    GITHUB_TOKEN: ${{ secrets.GITHUB_TOKEN }}

The GITHUB_TOKEN secret is optional, but is recommended to avoid rate limiting. You don't have to set up anything specific for it since for each workflow run, GitHub automatically populates that token for you.

The amber-demo repository has an example workflow showcasing the usage of this GitHub action.

Usage

Running amber --help will give you full, up to date set of instructions. The --amber-yaml option, or the AMBER_YAML environment variable, can be used to specify the location of the file containing your secret values. If unspecified, it will default to amber.yaml. The typical workflow is:

  • amber init to create a new secret key and amber.yaml file.
  • Securely store that secret key, such as in a password manager. Additionally, if desired, put that secret key in your CI system's secrets.
  • Add additional secrets with amber encrypt.
    • Use the "read from stdin" feature to encrypt whole files amber encrypt SECRET_SAUCE < my-secret-sauce.txt
  • Commit your amber.yaml file into your repository.
  • Within your CI scripts, or when using your secrets on your own system:
    • Set the AMBER_SECRET environment variable to your secret key.
    • Use amber print to see a list of your secrets.
    • Use amber exec ... to execute subcommands with the secrets available.
  • Over time, use amber encrypt to add new secrets or update existing secrets, and amber remove to remove a secret entirely.
  • By storing the secrets in Git, you'll always be able to recover old secret values.

Here's a sample shell session:

$ amber init
Your secret key is: 15aa07775395303732870cff2cc35c26f94af3344cf0f85d230aa004234d9764
Please save this key immediately! If you lose it, you will lose access to your secrets.
Recommendation: keep it in a password manager
If you're using this for CI, please update your CI configuration with a secret environment variable
export AMBER_SECRET=15aa07775395303732870cff2cc35c26f94af3344cf0f85d230aa004234d9764
$ amber encrypt PASSWORD deadbeef
$ amber print
Error: Error loading secret key from environment variable AMBER_SECRET

Caused by:
    environment variable not found
$ export AMBER_SECRET=15aa07775395303732870cff2cc35c26f94af3344cf0f85d230aa004234d9764
$ amber print
export PASSWORD="deadbeef"
$ amber exec -- sh -c 'echo $PASSWORD'
deadbeef
$ cat amber.yaml
---
file_format_version: 1
public_key: 9a4eb57571201fe413a5a9d583a070d180669928f0b98152ad93454cf5079860
secrets:
  - name: PASSWORD
    sha256: 2baf1f40105d9501fe319a8ec463fdf4325a2a5df445adf3f572f626253678c9
    cipher: c7f3d90e15b2d37801055d9773e6bd1e4b36120987bf31c6f111d5d69acb6d020a5f532ea035c272465f2a6e43c55fb009bf03a5c7a93581
$ amber encrypt PASSWORD deadbeef
[2021-08-13T10:45:13Z INFO  amber::config] New value matches old value, doing nothing
$ amber encrypt PASSWORD deadbeef2
[2021-08-13T10:45:16Z WARN  amber::config] Overwriting old secret value
$ amber print
export PASSWORD="deadbeef2"
$ amber remove PASSWORD
$ amber print
$ cat amber.yaml
---
file_format_version: 1
public_key: 9a4eb57571201fe413a5a9d583a070d180669928f0b98152ad93454cf5079860
secrets: []

Authors

This tool was written by the FP Complete engineering team. It was originally part of a deployment system for our Kube360 Kubernetes software collection. We decided to extract the generalizable parts to a standalone tool to improve Continuous Integration workflows.

If you have a use case outside of CI, or additional features you think would fit in well, please let us know in the issue tracker!