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CredHubble ๐ŸŒ๐Ÿ”ญ๐ŸŒ

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Unofficial Ruby client for storing and fetching credentials from a Cloud Foundry CredHub credential store. The goal of this gem is to make it easier for Ruby apps (Rails, Sinatra, etc.) deployed on Cloud Foundry to store and retrieve secrets (e.g. Rails session_token_base, database credentials, AWS keys, etc.). For a more concrete example of usage, I've written a blog post on how one might use CredHubble with a Rails app.

CredHubble is just something I work on in my spare time for fun and is not feature-complete, but it should get the job mostly done. If you do end up using it and find any bugs or would like to see more functionality, feel free to submit a PR or log an issue.

View the usage section to see what CredHub endpoints the gem currently supports.

Installation

To install the latest release, add this line to your application's Gemfile:

gem 'cred_hubble', '~> 0.1.0'

And then execute:

$ bundle

Or install it yourself as:

$ gem install cred_hubble

Usage

CredHubble currently supports the following CredHub endpoints:

Client Creation and Authentication

To call endpoints that require authentication, you will need to authenticate with either an oAuth2 bearer token 'Authorization' header or with certificate-based mutual TLS (mTLS). Here are some examples:

Authenticating with an oAuth2 header

> auth_header    = 'eyJhbGc.....OiJSUzI1NiIsI' # omit any 'bearer' portion
> credhub_client = CredHubble::Client.new_from_token_auth(
                     host: 'credhub.your-cloud-foundry.com',
                     port: '8844',
                     auth_header_token: auth_header
                   )
           
> credential = credhub_client.credential_by_id('f8d5a201-c3b9-48ae-8bc4-3b86b42210a1')
  => #<CredHubble::Resources::ValueCredential:0x0055f3811a5958 ...

Authenticating with a client cert and key over mutual TLS

A typical Cloud Foundry application using CredHub will have access to two environment variables that contain these paths:

  • ENV['CF_INSTANCE_CERT']
  • ENV['CF_INSTANCE_KEY']

CredHub's CA certificate should already have been placed in the app instance's trusted cert store by Diego.

> client_cert_path = '/etc/cf-instance-credentials/instance.crt' # ENV['CF_INSTANCE_CERT']
> client_key_path  = '/etc/cf-instance-credentials/instance.key' # ENV['CF_INSTANCE_KEY']
> credhub_client   = CredHubble::Client.new_from_mtls_auth(
                       host: 'credhub.your-cloud-foundry.com',
                       port: '8844',
                       client_cert_path: client_cert_path,
                       client_key_path: client_key_path
                     )
           
> credential = credhub_client.credential_by_id('f8d5a201-c3b9-48ae-8bc4-3b86b42210a1')
  => #<CredHubble::Resources::ValueCredential:0x0055f3811a5958 ...

Specifying the CredHub CA certificate

If your CredHub server is using a self-signed (or otherwise non-trusted by your system) certificate you can supply CredHubble with the path to a local copy of the signing CA certificate.

> auth_header     = 'eyJhbGc.....OiJSUzI1NiIsI' # omit any 'bearer' portion
> credhub_ca_path = '/some/path/certs/credhub_ca.crt'
> credhub_client  = CredHubble::Client.new_from_token_auth(
                      host: 'credhub.your-cloud-foundry.com',
                      port: '8844',
                      auth_header_token: auth_header,
                      ca_path: credhub_ca_path
                    )

> credential = credhub_client.credential_by_id('f8d5a201-c3b9-48ae-8bc4-3b86b42210a1')
  => #<CredHubble::Resources::ValueCredential:0x0055f3811a5958 ...

Supported Actions

GET Info and GET Health

To try out the unauthenticated info and health endpoints, just do the following in your Ruby console:

> credhub_client = CredHubble::Client.new(host: 'credhub.your-cloud-foundry.com', port: '8844')
           
> info = credhub_client.info
  => #<CredHubble::Resources::Info:0x00007fb36497a490 ...
  
> info.auth_server.url
  => "https://uaa.service.cf.internal:8443"
  
> health = credhub_client.health
  => #<CredHubble::Resources::Health:0x00007fb3648f0218 ...
  
> health.status
  => "UP"

For accessing endpoints that require authentication, simply create an authenticated client using one of the authentication methods above.

GET Credential by ID

The credential_by_id method retrieves a single Credential resource from CredHub by ID.

> credhub_client.credential_by_id('f297f736-dad2-4450-a7da-d3ff99f2030d')
  => #<CredHubble::Resources::ValueCredential:0x0055f3811a5958 ...

GET Credentials by Name

Retrieves a collection of Credentials from CredHub for the given name. The credentials_by_name method will return all stored versions of the credential by default. You can retrieve only the most recent version of the credential using the current option, or specify the number of versions to fetch with the versions option.

> credentials = credhub_client.credentials_by_name('/admin-user-password')
  => #<CredHubble::Resources::CredentialCollection:0x00007f @data=[#<CredHubble::Resources::PasswordCredential:0x00004a ...
> credentials.count
  => 3
> credentials.map(&:id)
  => ["5298e0e4-c3f5-4c73-a156-9ffce4c137f5", "6980ec59-c7e6-449a-b525-298648cfe6a7", "3e709d6e-585c-4526-ac0d-fe99316f2255"]
  
> credentials = credhub_client.credentials_by_name('/admin-user-password', versions: 2)  
> credentials.count
  => 2
> credentials.map(&:id)
  => ["5298e0e4-c3f5-4c73-a156-9ffce4c137f5", "6980ec59-c7e6-449a-b525-298648cfe6a7"]
  
> credentials = credhub_client.credentials_by_name('/admin-user-password', current: true)
  => #<CredHubble::Resources::CredentialCollection:0x00007f @data=[#<CredHubble::Resources::PasswordCredential:0x00004a ...
> credentials.count
  => 1
> credentials.map(&:id)
  => ["5298e0e4-c3f5-4c73-a156-9ffce4c137f5"]

Most times, though, you'll just want to grab the value of the most current version of a credential. This is where the current_credential_value method comes in. Here's what that might look like for the example above:

> credhub_client.current_credential_value('/admin-user-password')
  => "8mn6LSLzJqhVxnqYCCXUxUADdj8XneYP"

PUT Credential

You can create new Credentials using the put_credential method. If you wish to replace an already existing Credential, simply pass overwrite: true to the method and CredHub will create a new version of the Credential. Previous versions can be retrieved by using the credentials_by_name method.

> credential = CredHubble::Resources::UserCredential.new(
                    name: '/foundry-fred-user',
                    value: {username: 'foundy_fred', password: 's3cr3t'}
               )   
  => #<CredHubble::Resources::UserCredential:0x00007fb322caf3f0 @name="/foundry-fred-user", @value=#<CredHubble::Resources::UserValue ...
  
> credhub_client.put_credential(credential)
  => #<CredHubble::Resources::UserCredential:0x00007fb322d676d0
        @name="/foundry-fred-user",
        @value=#<CredHubble::Resources::UserValue:0x00007fb322d67478
                  @username="foundy_fred",
                  @password="s3cr3t",
                  @password_hash="$6$WwMLCRDr$Br54U0EnWD.A5i1EV9Cc7P16ZdjIBk0fFiYKghfOjW1MvL.vaXhWua.eGIbe0ziQIEP4s2OcGQpEEsc9ClFuA0">,
                  @id="92775889-71e0-41d1-a44c-93eb8fc5161a",
                  @type="user",
                  @version_created_at="2017-10-06T05:10:57Z">
             
> credential.value.password = 'foo bar'
  => "foo bar"
  
> credhub_client.put_credential(credential, overwrite: true)
  => #<CredHubble::Resources::UserCredential:0x00007fb322d676d0
        @name="/foundry-fred-user",
        @value=#<CredHubble::Resources::UserValue:0x00007fb322d67478
                  @username="foundy_fred",
                  @password="foo bar",
                  @password_hash="$6$WNAIgDrf$/.DxIfIg.8W6ZaIRjrjlOWS8FenigeWtswWr/D9edMbmSReYCzgG6VVdcdaftenq5VED3C8MJNVtDnNLF86SD.">,
                  @id="292ae24c-d7a3-4d8b-86a2-43630b83bafb",
                  @type="user",
                  @version_created_at="2017-10-06T05:11:43Z">

By default, only the creator of a Credential has access to read, write, delete, view its ACL, or updates its ACL. If you wish to grant other parties various permissions for a given Credential, the put_credential method takes an optional additional_permissions array.

> credential = CredHubble::Resources::UserCredential.new(
                    name: '/foundry-fred-user',
                    value: {username: 'foundy_fred', password: 's3cr3t'}
               )   
  => #<CredHubble::Resources::UserCredential:0x00007fb322caf3f0 @name="/foundry-fred-user", @value=#<CredHubble::Resources::UserValue ...
  
> permission = CredHubble::Resources::Permission.new(
                 actor: 'uaa-user:82f8ff1a-fcf8-4221-8d6b-0a1d579b6e47',
                 operations: ['write', 'read']
               )
  => #<CredHubble::Resources::Permission:0x00007f @actor="uaa-user:82f8ff1a-fcf8-4221-8d6b-0a1d579b6e47", @operations=["write", "read"]>
  
> credhub_client.put_credential(credential, additional_permissions: [permission])
  => #<CredHubble::Resources::UserCredential:0x00007fb322d676d0 ...

DELETE Credential by Name

The delete_credential_by_name method allows you to delete all versions of a Credential for the given name.

> credentials = credhub_client.credentials_by_name('/admin-user-password')
  => #<CredHubble::Resources::CredentialCollection:0x00007f @data=[#<CredHubble::Resources::PasswordCredential:0x00004a ...
> credentials.count
  => 3
  
> credhub_client.delete_credential_by_name('/admin-user-password')  
  => true
> credhub_client.credentials_by_name('/admin-user-password')
  => CredHubble::Http::NotFoundError: status: 404, body: {"error":"The request could not be completed ...

POST Interpolate Credentials

Cloud Foundry applications traditionally access the credentials for any bound service instances through a VCAP_SERVICES environment variable. Nowadays, however, some Service Brokers are CredHub aware and may choose to store service instance credentials in CredHub. Apps bound to said services would only see "credhub-ref" key in place of actual credentials for that service instance. Here's an example VCAP_SERVICES:

{
  "grid-config":[
    {
      "credentials":{
        "credhub-ref":"/grid-config/users/kflynn"
      },
      "label":"grid-config",
      "name":"config-server",
      "plan":"digital-frontier",
      "provider":null,
      "syslog_drain_url":null,
      "tags":[
        "configuration",
        "biodigital-jazz"
      ],
      "volume_mounts":[]
    }
  ],
  "encomSQL":[
    {
      "credentials":{
        "credhub-ref":"/encomSQL/db/users/63f7b900-982f-4f20-9213-6d270c3c58ea"
      },
        "label":"encom-db",
      "name":"encom-enterprise-db",
      "plan":"enterprise",
      "provider":null,
      "syslog_drain_url":null,
      "tags":[
        "database",
        "sql"
      ],
      "volume_mounts":[]
    }
  ]
}

Fortunately, CredHub supports an "interpolate" endpoint which allows an app to populate these values wholesale. Here's how a CF application might use CredHubble's interpolate_credentials method to do that via mTLS authentication:

> client_cert_path = ENV['CF_INSTANCE_CERT']
> client_key_path  = ENV['CF_INSTANCE_KEY']
> credhub_client   = CredHubble::Client.new_from_mtls_auth(
                       host: 'credhub.your-cloud-foundry.com',
                       port: '8844',
                       client_cert_path: client_cert_path,
                       client_key_path: client_key_path
                     )
           
> interpolated_services_json = credhub_client.interpolate_credentials(ENV['VCAP_SERVICES'])
  => '{
       "grid-config":[
         {
           "credentials":{
             "username":"kflynn",
             "password":"FlynnLives"
           },
           "label":"grid-config",
           "name":"config-server",
           "plan":"digital-frontier",
           "provider":null,
           "syslog_drain_url":null,
           "tags":[
             "configuration",
             "biodigital-jazz"
           ],
           "volume_mounts":[]
         }
       ],
       "encomSQL":[
         {
           "credentials":{
             "username":"grid-db-user",
             "password":"p4ssw0rd"
           },
           ... abridged ...
         }
       ]
     }'

GET Permissions by Credential Name

You can use the permissions_by_credential_name method to view the list of permissions for a given Credential.

> credhub_client.permissions_by_credential_name('/credential-name')
  => #<CredHubble::Resources::PermissionCollection:0x00007fa231c12020
        @credential_name="/credential-name",
        @permissions=[
          #<CredHubble::Resources::Permission:0x00007fa231c11f08
              @actor="uaa-user:82f8ff1a-fcf8-4221-8d6b-0a1d579b6e47",
              @operations=["read", "write", "delete"]>,
          #<CredHubble::Resources::Permission:0x00007fa231c11e18
              @actor="mtls-app:18f64563-bcfe-4c88-bf73-05c9ad3654c8",
              @operations=["read"]>,
          #<CredHubble::Resources::Permission:0x00007fa231c11d00
              @actor="uaa-client:some_uaa_client",
              @operations=["read", "write", "delete", "read_acl", "write_acl"]>
        ]>

POST Add Permissions

You can use the add_permissions method to add additional permissions to an existing Credential.

> credhub_client.permissions_by_credential_name('/my-awesome-credential').count
  => 2
  
> new_permission = CredHubble::Resources::Permission.new(actor: 'uaa-user:b2449249', operations: ['read'])
> new_permission_collection = CredHubble::Resources::PermissionCollection.new(
                                credential_name: '/my-awesome-credential',
                                permissions: [new_permission]
                              )
                       
> credhub_client.add_permissions(new_permission_collection)
  => #<CredHubble::Resources::PermissionCollection:0x00007fa231c12020
        @credential_name="/my-awesome-credential",
        @permissions=[
          #<CredHubble::Resources::Permission:0x00007fa231c11f08
              @actor="uaa-user:82f8ff1a-fcf8-4221-8d6b-0a1d579b6e47",
              @operations=["read", "write", "delete"]>,
          #<CredHubble::Resources::Permission:0x00007fa231c11e18
              @actor="mtls-app:18f64563-bcfe-4c88-bf73-05c9ad3654c8",
              @operations=["read"]>,
          #<CredHubble::Resources::Permission:0x00007fa231c11d00
              @actor="uaa-user:b2449249",
              @operations=["read"]>
        ]>
        
> credhub_client.permissions_by_credential_name('/my-awesome-credential').count
  => 3

DELETE Delete Permissions

You can remove any permissions for a given actor from a credential with the delete_permissions method which takes a credential_name and actor.

> credhub_client.permissions_by_credential_name('/my-awesome-credential').count
  => 3
  
> credhub_client.delete_permissions('/my-awesome-credential', 'uaa-user:b2449249')
  => true
        
> credhub_client.permissions_by_credential_name('/my-awesome-credential').count
  => 2

GET Encryption Key Usage

You can fetch information about how many credentials are encrypted for the active (and inactive) encryption key using the key_usage method. For more information, check out the official CredHub docs for this endpoint.

> encryption_key_usage = credhub_client.key_usage
  => #<CredHubble::Resources::KeyUsage:0x00007f8 ...>
  
> encryption_key_usage.active_key
  => 9000
        
> encryption_key_usage.inactive_keys
  => 20
  
> encryption_key_usage.unknown_keys
  => 0

Development

After checking out the repo, run bin/setup to install dependencies. Then, run rake spec to run the tests. You can also run bin/console for an interactive prompt that will allow you to experiment.

To install this gem onto your local machine, run bundle exec rake install. To release a new version, update the version number in version.rb, and then run bundle exec rake release, which will create a git tag for the version, push git commits and tags, and push the .gem file to rubygems.org.

Contributing

Bug reports and pull requests are welcome on GitHub at https://github.com/tcdowney/cred_hubble.

License

The gem is available as open source under the terms of the MIT License.

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