Skip to content
forked from busser/murmur

Pass secrets as environment variables to a process

License

Notifications You must be signed in to change notification settings

zachequi/murmur

Β 
Β 

Folders and files

NameName
Last commit message
Last commit date

Latest commit

Β 
Β 
Β 
Β 
Β 
Β 
Β 
Β 
Β 
Β 
Β 
Β 
Β 
Β 
Β 
Β 
Β 
Β 
Β 
Β 
Β 
Β 
Β 
Β 
Β 
Β 
Β 

Repository files navigation

🀫 Murmur

License Go Report Card tests-passing

Plug-and-play executable to pass secrets as environment variables to a process.

Murmur is a small binary that reads its environment variables, replaces references to secrets with the secrets' values, and passes the resulting variables to your application. Variables that do not reference secrets are passed as-is.

Several tools like Murmur exist, each supporting a different secret provider. Murmur aims to support as many providers as possible, so you can use Murmur no matter which provider you use.

Scaleway AWS Azure GCP Vault 1Password Doppler
🀫 Murmur βœ… βœ… βœ… βœ… ❌ ❌ ❌
Berglas ❌ ❌ ❌ βœ… ❌ ❌ ❌
Bank Vaults ❌ ❌ ❌ ❌ βœ… ❌ ❌
1Password CLI ❌ ❌ ❌ ❌ ❌ βœ… ❌
Doppler CLI ❌ ❌ ❌ ❌ ❌ ❌ βœ…

If you know of a similar tool that is not listed here, please open an issue so that we can add it to the list.

If you use a secret provider that is not supported by Murmur, please open an issue so that we can track demand for it.

Fetching a database password

Murmur runs as a wrapper around any command. For example, if you want to connect to a PostgreSQL database, instead of running this command:

export PGPASSWORD="Q-gVzyDPmvsX6rRAPVjVjvfvR@KGzPJzCEg2"
psql -h 10.1.12.34 -U my-user -d my-database

You run this instead:

export PGPASSWORD="scwsm:database-password"
murmur run -- psql -h 10.1.12.34 -U my-user -d my-database

Murmur will fetch the value of the database-password secret from Scaleway Secret Manager, set the PGPASSWORD environment variable to that value, and then run psql.

Adding Murmur to a container image

Murmur is a static binary, so you can simply copy it into your container image and use it as your entrypoint. For convenience, the murmur binary is released as a container image you can copy from in your Dockerfile:

COPY --from=ghcr.io/busser/murmur:latest /murmur /bin/murmur

Then you can change your image's entrypoint:

# from this:
ENTRYPOINT ["/bin/run-my-app"]
# to this:
ENTRYPOINT ["/bin/murmur", "run", "--", "/bin/run-my-app"]

Adding Murmur to a Kubernetes pod

You can use Murmur in a Kubernetes pod even if your application's container image does not include Murmur. To do so, you can use an init container that copies Murmur into an emptyDir volume, and then use that volume in your application's container.

Here is an example:

apiVersion: v1
kind: Pod
metadata:
  name: my-app
spec:
  initContainers:
    - name: copy-murmur
      image: ghcr.io/busser/murmur:latest
      command: ["cp", "/murmur", "/shared/murmur"]
      volumeMounts:
        - name: shared
          mountPath: /shared
  containers:
    - name: my-app
      image: my-app:latest
      command: ["/shared/murmur", "run", "--", "/bin/run-my-app"]
      volumeMounts:
        - name: shared
          mountPath: /shared
  volumes:
    - name: shared
      emptyDir: {}

Parsing JSON secrets

Storing secrets as JSON is a common pattern. For example, a secret might contain a JSON object with multiple fields:

{
  "host": "10.1.12.34",
  "port": 5432,
  "database": "my-database",
  "username": "my-user",
  "password": "Q-gVzyDPmvsX6rRAPVjVjvfvR@KGzPJzCEg2"
}

Murmur can parse that JSON and set environment variables for each field by using the jsonpath filter:

export PGHOST="scwsm:database-credentials|jsonpath:{.host}"
export PGPORT="scwsm:database-credentials|jsonpath:{.port}"
export PGDATABASE="scwsm:database-credentials|jsonpath:{.database}"
export PGUSER="scwsm:database-credentials|jsonpath:{.username}"
export PGPASSWORD="scwsm:database-credentials|jsonpath:{.password}"
murmur run -- psql

If you have multiple references to the same secret, Murmur will fetch the secret only once to avoid unnecessary API calls.

Alternatively, you can use the json filter to set a single environment variable with the entire JSON object:

# psql supports connection strings, so we can use a single variable
export PGDATABASE="scwsm:database-credentials|jsonpath:postgres://{.username}:{password}@{.host}:{.port}/{.database}"
murmur run -- psql

Murmur uses the Kubernetes JSONPath syntax for the jsonpath filter. See the Kubernetes documentation for a full list of capabilities.

Providers and filters

Murmur's architecture is built around providers and filters. Providers fetch secrets from a secret manager, and filters parse and transform the secrets.

Murmur only edits environment variables which contain valid queries. A valid query is structured as follows:

provider_id:secret_ref|filter_id:filter_rule

Using a filter is optional, so this is also a valid query:

provider_id:secret_ref

Murmur does not support chaining multiple filters yet.

scwsm provider: Scaleway Secret Manager

To fetch a secret from Scaleway Secret Manager, the query must be structured as follows:

scwsm:[region/]{name|id}[#version]

If region is not specified, Murmur will delegate region selection to the Scaleway SDK. The SDK determines the region based on the environment, by looking at environment variables and configuration files.

One of name or id must be specified. Murmur guesses whether the string is a name or an ID depending on whether it is a valid UUID. UUIDs are treated as IDs, and other strings are treated as names.

The version must either be a positive integer or the "latest" string. If version is not specified, Murmur defaults to "latest".

Examples:

scwsm:my-secret
scwsm:my-secret#123
scwsm:my-secret#latest

scwsm:fr-par/my-secret
scwsm:fr-par/my-secret#123
scwsm:fr-par/my-secret#latest

scwsm:3f34b83f-47a6-4344-bcd4-b63721481cd3
scwsm:3f34b83f-47a6-4344-bcd4-b63721481cd3#123
scwsm:3f34b83f-47a6-4344-bcd4-b63721481cd3#latest

scwsm:fr-par/3f34b83f-47a6-4344-bcd4-b63721481cd3
scwsm:fr-par/3f34b83f-47a6-4344-bcd4-b63721481cd3#123
scwsm:fr-par/3f34b83f-47a6-4344-bcd4-b63721481cd3#latest

Murmur uses the environment's default credentials to authenticate to Scaleway. You can configure Murmur the same way you can configure the scw CLI.

awssm provider: AWS Secrets Manager

To fetch a secret from AWS Secrets Manager, the query must be structured as follows:

awssm:{name|arn}[#{version_id|version_stage}]

One of name or arn must be specified. You can use a full or partial ARN. However, if your secret's name ends with a hyphen followed by six characters, you should not use a partial ARN. See these AWS docs for more information.

You can optionally specify one of version_id or version_stage. Murmur guesses whether the string is an ID or a stage depending on whether it is a valid UUID. UUIDs are treated as version IDs, and other strings are treated as version stages. If neither version_id or version_stage are specified, Murmur defaults to "AWSCURRENT".

Examples:

awssm:my-secret
awssm:my-secret#MY_VERSION_STAGE
awssm:my-secret#9517cc59-646a-4393-81d7-5e6f2d43cbe7

awssm:arn:aws:secretsmanager:us-east-1:123456789012:secret:my-secret
awssm:arn:aws:secretsmanager:us-east-1:123456789012:secret:my-secret#MY_VERSION_STAGE
awssm:arn:aws:secretsmanager:us-east-1:123456789012:secret:my-secret#9517cc59-646a-4393-81d7-5e6f2d43cbe7

Murmur uses the environment's default credentials to authenticate to AWS. You can configure Murmur the same way you can configure the aws CLI.

azkv provider: Azure Key Vault

To fetch a secret from Azure Key Vault, the query must be structured as follows:

azkv:keyvault_hostname/name[#version]

The keyvault_hostname must be the fully qualified domain name of the Key Vault. For example, if your Key Vault's URL is https://example.vault.azure.net/, then the keyvault_hostname is example.vault.azure.net.

The name is the name of the secret.

The version must be a valid version ID. If version is not specified, Murmur defaults to the latest version of the secret.

Examples:

azkv:example.vault.azure.net/my-secret
azkv:example.vault.azure.net/my-secret#5ddc29704c1c4429a4c53605b7949100

Murmur uses the environment's default credentials to authenticate to Azure. You can set these credentials with the environment variables listed here, or with workload identity.

gcpsm provider: GCP Secret Manager

To fetch a secret from GCP Secret Manager, the query must be structured as follows:

gcpsm:project/name[#version]

The project must be either a project ID or a project number.

The name is the name of the secret.

The version must be a valid version number. If version is not specified, Murmur defaults to the latest version of the secret.

passthrough provider: no-op

This provider is meant for demo and testing purposes. It does not fetch any secrets and simply returns the secret reference as the secret's value.

This provider, like all other providers, is fully tested. It is safe to use in production, although why would you?

Examples:

passthrough:my-not-so-secret-value

jsonpath filter: JSON parsing and templating

To parse a JSON secret and extract a value from it, or to use a secret value in a template, the query must be stuctured as follows:

provider_id:secret_ref|jsonpath:template

The provider_id and secret_ref can be any valid secret reference.

The template is a JSONPath template. Murmur uses the Kubernetes JSONPath implementation, so you can use any feature described in the Kubernetes docs.

If the secret's value is not valid JSON, Murmur will treat it as a string and execute the template anyway. This means that you can use JSONPath templates with non-JSON secrets.

Examples:

scwsm:my-secret|jsonpath:{.password}
scwsm:my-secret|jsonpath:postgres://{.username}:{.password}@{.hostname}:{.port}/{.database}
scwsm:my-secret|jsonpath:the secret is {@}

Changes from v0.4 to v0.5

Following community feedback, we have made two significant changes in v0.5:

  1. We have renamed the project from "Whisper" to "Murmur", to make the project documentation easier to find on search engines.
  2. We have renamed the exec command to run, to make it clear that we are not executing the command directly, but rather running it as a subprocess.

We have made it so that none of these changes are breaking. You can upgrade to v0.5 without changing anything in how you use Whisper/Murmur.

We now publish binaries and container images with both names. The exec command is still available, but it will log a warning message telling you to use the new run command instead.

We recommend that you update your scripts to use the new name and command, but you have all the time you need to do so.

About

Pass secrets as environment variables to a process

Resources

License

Stars

Watchers

Forks

Releases

No releases published

Packages

No packages published

Languages

  • Go 71.5%
  • HCL 26.1%
  • Makefile 2.2%
  • Dockerfile 0.2%