Please note: We take OpenBao's security and our users' trust very seriously. If you believe you have found a security issue in OpenBao, please responsibly disclose by contacting us at [email protected].
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OpenBao exists to provide a software solution to manage, store, and distribute sensitive data including secrets, certificates, and keys. The OpenBao community intends to provide this software under an OSI-approved open-source license, led by a community run under open governance principles.
A modern system requires access to a multitude of secrets: database credentials, API keys for external services, credentials for service-oriented architecture communication, etc. Understanding who is accessing what secrets is already very difficult and platform-specific. Adding on key rolling, secure storage, and detailed audit logs is almost impossible without a custom solution. This is where OpenBao steps in.
The key features of OpenBao are:
-
Secure Secret Storage: Arbitrary key/value secrets can be stored in OpenBao. OpenBao encrypts these secrets prior to writing them to persistent storage, so gaining access to the raw storage isn't enough to access your secrets. OpenBao can write to disk, Consul, and more.
-
Dynamic Secrets: OpenBao can generate secrets on-demand for some systems, such as AWS or SQL databases. For example, when an application needs to access an S3 bucket, it asks OpenBao for credentials, and OpenBao will generate an AWS keypair with valid permissions on demand. After creating these dynamic secrets, OpenBao will also automatically revoke them after the lease is up.
-
Data Encryption: OpenBao can encrypt and decrypt data without storing it. This allows security teams to define encryption parameters and developers to store encrypted data in a location such as a SQL database without having to design their own encryption methods.
-
Leasing and Renewal: All secrets in OpenBao have a lease associated with them. At the end of the lease, OpenBao will automatically revoke that secret. Clients are able to renew leases via built-in renew APIs.
-
Revocation: OpenBao has built-in support for secret revocation. OpenBao can revoke not only single secrets, but a tree of secrets, for example, all secrets read by a specific user, or all secrets of a particular type. Revocation assists in key rolling as well as locking down systems in the case of an intrusion.
If you wish to work on OpenBao itself or any of its built-in systems, you'll first need Go installed on your machine.
For local dev first make sure Go is properly installed, including setting up a
GOPATH. Ensure that $GOPATH/bin
is in
your path as some distributions bundle the old version of build tools. Next, clone this
repository. OpenBao uses Go Modules,
so it is recommended that you clone the repository outside of the GOPATH.
You can then download any required build tools by bootstrapping your environment:
$ make bootstrap
...
To compile a development version of OpenBao, run make
or make dev
. This will
put the OpenBao binary in the bin
and $GOPATH/bin
folders:
$ make dev
...
$ bin/bao
...
To compile a development version of OpenBao with the UI, run make static-dist dev-ui
. This will
put the OpenBao binary in the bin
and $GOPATH/bin
folders:
$ make static-dist dev-ui
...
$ bin/bao
...
To run tests, type make test
. Note: this requires Docker to be installed. If
this exits with exit status 0, then everything is working!
$ make test
...
If you're developing a specific package, you can run tests for just that
package by specifying the TEST
variable. For example below, only
vault
package tests will be run.
$ make test TEST=./vault
...
This repository publishes two libraries that may be imported by other projects:
github.com/openbao/openbao/api
and github.com/openbao/openbao/sdk
.
Note that this repository also contains OpenBao (the product), and as with most Go
projects, OpenBao uses Go modules to manage its dependencies. The mechanism to do
that is the go.mod file. As it happens, the presence of that file
also makes it theoretically possible to import OpenBao as a dependency into other
projects. Some other projects have made a practice of doing so in order to take
advantage of testing tooling that was developed for testing OpenBao itself. This
is not, and has never been, a supported way to use the OpenBao project. We aren't
likely to fix bugs relating to failure to import github.com/openbao/openbao
into your project.
See also the section "Docker-based tests" below.
OpenBao has comprehensive acceptance tests covering most of the features of the secret and auth methods.
If you're working on a feature of a secret or auth method and want to verify it is functioning (and also hasn't broken anything else), we recommend running the acceptance tests.
Warning: The acceptance tests create/destroy/modify real resources, which may incur real costs in some cases. In the presence of a bug, it is technically possible that broken backends could leave dangling data behind. Therefore, please run the acceptance tests at your own risk. At the very least, we recommend running them in their own private account for whatever backend you're testing.
To run the acceptance tests, invoke make testacc
:
$ make testacc TEST=./builtin/logical/consul
...
The TEST
variable is required, and you should specify the folder where the
backend is. The TESTARGS
variable is recommended to filter down to a specific
resource to test, since testing all of them at once can sometimes take a very
long time.
Acceptance tests typically require other environment variables to be set for things such as access keys. The test itself should error early and tell you what to set, so it is not documented here.
We have created an experimental new testing mechanism inspired by NewTestCluster. An example of how to use it:
import (
"testing"
"github.com/openbao/openbao/sdk/helper/testcluster/docker"
)
func Test_Something_With_Docker(t *testing.T) {
opts := &docker.DockerClusterOptions{
ImageRepo: "openbao/openbao",
ImageTag: "latest",
}
cluster := docker.NewTestDockerCluster(t, opts)
defer cluster.Cleanup()
client := cluster.Nodes()[0].APIClient()
_, err := client.Logical().Read("sys/storage/raft/configuration")
if err != nil {
t.Fatal(err)
}
}
Here is a more realistic example of how we use it in practice. DefaultOptions uses
hashicorp/vault:latest
as the repo and tag, but it also looks at the environment
variable OPENBAO_BINARY. If populated, it will copy the local file referenced by
OPENBAO_BINARY into the container. This is useful when testing local changes.
Optionally you can set COMMIT_SHA, which will be appended to the image name we build as a debugging convenience.
func Test_Custom_Build_With_Docker(t *testing.T) {
opts := docker.DefaultOptions(t)
cluster := docker.NewTestDockerCluster(t, opts)
defer cluster.Cleanup()
}
Finally, here's an example of running an existing OSS docker test with a custom binary:
$ GOOS=linux make dev
$ VAULT_BINARY=$(pwd)/bin/bao go test -run 'TestRaft_Configuration_Docker' ./vault/external_tests/raft/raft_binary
ok github.com/openbao/openbao/vault/external_tests/raft/raft_binary 20.960s