Skip to main content

S3 backend for Python's keyring module

Project description

S3 backend for Python’s keyring

https://travis-ci.org/FindHotel/s3keyring.svg?branch=master

This module adds an AWS S3 backend to Python’s keyring module. The S3 backend will store the keyring credentials in an S3 bucket and use client and server side encryption to keep the credentials safe both during transit and at rest. This backend is quite handy when you want to distribute credentials across multiple machines. Access to the backend and to the encryption keys can be finely tuned using AWS IAM policies.

Installation

You can install a stable release from Pypi:

pip install s3keyring

Or you can choose to install the development version:

pip install git+https://github.com/InnovativeTravel/s3-keyring

For Admins: setting up the keyring

If you are just a user of the keyring and someone else has set up the keyring for you then you can skip this section and go directly to For Keyring Users: accessing the keyring at the end of this README. Note that you will need administrator privileges in your AWS account to be able to set up a new keyring as described below.

S3 bucket

The S3 keyring backend requires you to have read/write access to a S3 bucket. If you want to use bucket mysecretbucket to store your keyring, you will need to attach the following IAM policy to all the IAM user accounts or roles that will have read and write access to the keyring:

{
    "Version": "2012-10-17",
    "Statement": [
        {
            "Effect": "Allow",
            "Action": [
                "s3:ListBucket"
            ],
            "Resource": "arn:aws:s3:::mysecretbucket",
            "Condition": {}
        },
        {
            "Effect": "Allow",
            "Action": [
                "s3:DeleteObject",
                "s3:GetObject",
                "s3:PutObject"
            ],
            "Resource": "arn:aws:s3:::mysecretbucket/*"
        }
    ]
}

You can easily create a policy that grants read-only access to the keyring by removing the s3:PutObject and s3:DeleteObject actions from the policy above.

Encryption key

You need to create a KMS encryption key. Write down the ID of the KMS key that you create. You will need to communicate this KMS Key ID to the users of the keyring.

IMPORTANT: You will need to grant read access to the KMS key to every IAM user or role that needs to access the keyring.

For users: accessing the keyring

One-time configuration

If you haven’t done so already, you will need to configure your local installation of the AWS CLI by running:

aws configure

Then configure the S3 Keyring:

s3keyring configure

Your keyring administrator will provide you with the KMS Key ID, Bucket and Namespace configuration options. Option AWS profile allows you to specify the local AWS CLI profile you want to use to sign all requests sent to AWS when accessing the keyring. Most users will want to use the default profile.

IMPORTANT: when deploying the s3keyring in EC2 instances that are granted access to the keyring by means of an IAM role you should not specify a custom AWS profile when configuring s3keyring in the instances.

You can configure the s3keyring module without user input by setting the following environment variables: KEYRING_BUCKET, KEYRING_NAMESPACE, KEYRING_KMS_KEY_ID, KEYRING_AWS_PROFILE. If these environment variables are properly set then you can configure the s3keyring module with:

s3keyring configure --no-ask

Configuration profiles

You can use s3keyring to store (read) secrets in (from) more than one backend S3 keyring. A typical use case is creating different keyrings for different user groups that have different levels of trust. For instance your keyring administrator may have setup a S3 keyring that only IAM users with admin privileges can access. Using the bucket, KMS Key ID and namespace provided by your keyring admin you can configure a separate s3keyring profile to access that admins-only keyring:

s3keyring --profile administrators configure

Your keyring admin may have also setup a separate S3 keyring to store secrets that need to be accessed by EC2 instances that act as website workers in a project you are working on. To access that keyring you would configure a second s3keyring profile:

s3keyring --profile website-workers configure

Then, to store and retrieve secrets in the administrators keyring:

s3keyring --profile administrators set SERVICE ACCOUNT PASSWORD
s3keyring --profile administrators get SERVICE ACCOUNT

And you could do the same for the website-workers keyring using option --profile website-workers.

Configuration file

By default s3keyring reads configuration options from ~/.s3keyring.ini. You can also store the configuration in a .s3keyring.ini file stored in your current working directory by using:

s3keyring configure --local

s3keyring will always read the configuration first from a .s3keyring.ini file under your current work directory. If it is not found then it will read it from ~/.s3keyring.ini.

Usage

The s3keyring module provides the same API as Python’s keyring module. You can access your S3 keyring programmatically from your Python code like this:

from s3keyring.s3 import S3Keyring
kr = S3Keyring()
kr.set_password('service', 'username', '123456')
assert '123456' == kr.get_password('service', 'username')
kr.delete_password('service', 'username')
assert kr.get_password('service', 'username') is None

You can also use the keyring from the command line:

# Store a password
s3keyring set service username 123456
# Retrieve it
s3keyring get service username
# Delete it
s3keyring delete service username

Contact

If you have questions, bug reports, suggestions, etc. please create an issue on the GitHub project page.

License

This software is licensed under the MIT license

See License file

© 2016 German Gomez-Herrero, and FindHotel.

Authors

German Gomez-Herrero

original idea and implementation

These people have contributed to s3keyring, in alphabetical order:

Changelog

0.2.0

  • Don’t use the local keychain if the s3keyring config file says so

0.1.0

  • Doc fixes

  • New keyring method to list secrets associated to a service

0.0.12

  • Docs fixes

  • Fixes in the handling of project-specific configs

0.0.2

  • Minor fixes in docs and package data

0.0.1

  • Initial release (germangh)

Project details


Download files

Download the file for your platform. If you're not sure which to choose, learn more about installing packages.

Source Distribution

s3keyring-0.2.1.tar.gz (10.6 kB view hashes)

Uploaded Source

Supported by

AWS AWS Cloud computing and Security Sponsor Datadog Datadog Monitoring Fastly Fastly CDN Google Google Download Analytics Microsoft Microsoft PSF Sponsor Pingdom Pingdom Monitoring Sentry Sentry Error logging StatusPage StatusPage Status page