In my day to day work and evening and weekend side work, I do most almost all of my development working on remote systems. This has a number of advantages that are for another post, but this post is about one of the limitations.

Most developers have a tool belt that they’re continually improving, and as I work on mine I come across commands - like hub

  • that require1 putting a secret value into an environment variable, usually for authentication.

For instance, to use hub, I need to do something like this:

$ export GITHUB_TOKEN=ba92810bab08av0ab0157028bb
$ alias git=hub
$ git create username/repo
$ git pull-request -o

If I were only running git/hub commands on my local desktop, I could put the environment variable export into my shell and be done with it. But on any remote system, I only have these options:

  1. Run export GITHUB_TOKEN=.. in my shell before any command that requires it. This isn’t good because the token is now in my history, and any command that I run has access to the value.
  2. Run each command that needs the token like this: GITHUB_TOKEN=... git create .... This solves the access issue, but it still pollutes my history. It’s also cumbersome to deal with when running many commands.
  3. Add the export to my dotfiles. This solves the history problem (and the “remembering to enter the variable” problem), but then my token is available to anyone that I share my dotfiles with.

I wanted something that I could use to securely manage these kinds of environment variables while making it convenient to expose them to specific commands. So I wrote envbox.

Envbox is written in Go, primarily because the language is quite suitable for these sorts of problems, but also because there’s a NaCl secretbox implementation in the Go “Sub Repositories”, and I thought it was a good fit for this problem.

Usage

After installation (instructions in the README), the first step is to set up envbox by generating a key:

$ envbox key generate -s
c348603fe1a708277666222a1e549b7c02b22419b3cfe44d0dd5800b3da27b56

This key is used to encrypt each of the environment variables. Next up is to add a new environment variable:

$ envbox add -n GITHUB_TOKEN
value: aeijfalsjiegliasjefliajsefljaef
$ envbox list
GITHUB_TOKEN=aeijfalsjiegliasjefliajsefljaef

Then, when running a command that needs the variable:

$ envbox run -e GITHUB_TOKEN -- bash -c 'echo $GITHUB_TOKEN'
aeijfalsjiegliasjefliajsefljaef

Or, more apropos for the above example:

alias git='envbox run -e GITHUB_TOKEN -- hub'

Storage

Envbox stores each variable in its own file on disk:

$ hexdump -C ~/.local/share/envbox/7ebac232c337c78af91cc4341d650a90a9044d0b259059e8.envenc
00000000  79 80 8b 0d e2 9c c1 85  0c 36 1c bb 6c 94 f6 3c  |y........6..l..<|
00000010  25 55 fb c1 00 3a 6c 3e  e4 b7 ad c3 bc cf a5 75  |%U...:l>.......u|
00000020  76 57 cb 23 c2 91 13 20  79 df 9d d8 72 89 05 26  |vW.#... y...r..&|
00000030  90 d5 f1 9e 05 26 51 fb  f5 fd 3d d9 65 fa 3d b9  |.....&Q...=.e.=.|
00000040  79 ee 35 7e 6a 83 8e fd  32 56 9e f1 f7 1d ef 23  |y.5~j...2V.....#|
00000050  05 03 a2 3c cc f0 6b 8d  cc 08 31 8c f2 d2 c1 a1  |...<..k...1.....|
00000060  72 33 6e 48 59 87 b5 8b  82 b3 1a b3 e3 d7 98 8c  |r3nHY...........|
00000070  d8 a3 c0 04 f0 f5 c1 53  06 84 14 b7 ee 45 c0 de  |.......S.....E..|
00000080  82 a2                                             |..|
00000082

Currently, the key is stored in a permission-restricted file in your home directory so that envbox can decrypt the files, but the plan is to move to a credential cache system like the one git uses, so that the key is only held in memory for a configurable time. This makes a better tradeoff between security and convenience. Update: Now envbox can use your OS’s native store, see here.

Summary

There are a few other things that envbox can do, such as accepting multi-line variables and differentiating the envbox name from the variable name, so that several of the same variable (e.g. two different GITHUB_TOKENs) can be tracked.

I’ve found it to be incredibly useful, allowing me to version and distribute my secret variables while keeping them secure.

Enjoy.


  1. hub doesn’t actually require the environment variable, but logging in for every push and pull seems a bit inefficient. ↩︎