[JIRA] (OVIRT-1867) Allow embedded secrets inside the source repo for CI
by Roman Mohr (oVirt JIRA)
[ https://ovirt-jira.atlassian.net/browse/OVIRT-1867?page=com.atlassian.jir... ]
Roman Mohr commented on OVIRT-1867:
-----------------------------------
In my opinion, having the secrets encrypted in the code is better, since you don't need accounts for engineers on CI to do that. A public rsa key can be made accessible for the whole world. With other words, the issue is exactly about the self-service and not about how to bind existing secrets. It is also related to OVIRT-1868. In combination with a Jenkinsfile, pretty much the whole yaml/script/chroot can be made obsolete, however that is a different story.
> Allow embedded secrets inside the source repo for CI
> ----------------------------------------------------
>
> Key: OVIRT-1867
> URL: https://ovirt-jira.atlassian.net/browse/OVIRT-1867
> Project: oVirt - virtualization made easy
> Issue Type: By-EMAIL
> Components: Standard CI (Pipelines), STDCI DSL
> Reporter: Roman Mohr
> Assignee: infra
>
> In order to improve the self-service capabilities of standard-ci it is
> important for projects, that they can add their own secrets to projects (to
> reach external services, e.g. docker hub, ...).
> Travis has a very nice system which helps engineers there:
> https://docs.travis-ci.com/user/encryption-keys/
> Basically the CI system needs to generate a public/private key pair for
> every enabled git repo. The engineer simply fetches the public key via a
> well know URL and encrypts the secrets. Then the encrypted secret can be
> made part of the source repo. Before the tests are run the CI system
> decrypts the secrets. Than can play together pretty well with Jenkinsfiles
> too.
> Benefit:
> * Less manual intervention from CI team to add secrets to jobs
> * Strengthen the config-in-code thinking
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6 years, 10 months
[JIRA] (OVIRT-1867) Allow embedded secrets inside the source repo for CI
by Daniel Belenky (oVirt JIRA)
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[ https://ovirt-jira.atlassian.net/browse/OVIRT-1867?page=com.atlassian.jir... ]
Daniel Belenky updated OVIRT-1867:
----------------------------------
Component/s: STDCI DSL
Standard CI (Pipelines)
> Allow embedded secrets inside the source repo for CI
> ----------------------------------------------------
>
> Key: OVIRT-1867
> URL: https://ovirt-jira.atlassian.net/browse/OVIRT-1867
> Project: oVirt - virtualization made easy
> Issue Type: By-EMAIL
> Components: Standard CI (Pipelines), STDCI DSL
> Reporter: Roman Mohr
> Assignee: infra
>
> In order to improve the self-service capabilities of standard-ci it is
> important for projects, that they can add their own secrets to projects (to
> reach external services, e.g. docker hub, ...).
> Travis has a very nice system which helps engineers there:
> https://docs.travis-ci.com/user/encryption-keys/
> Basically the CI system needs to generate a public/private key pair for
> every enabled git repo. The engineer simply fetches the public key via a
> well know URL and encrypts the secrets. Then the encrypted secret can be
> made part of the source repo. Before the tests are run the CI system
> decrypts the secrets. Than can play together pretty well with Jenkinsfiles
> too.
> Benefit:
> * Less manual intervention from CI team to add secrets to jobs
> * Strengthen the config-in-code thinking
--
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<pre>[ https://ovirt-jira.atlassian.net/browse/OVIRT-1867?page=com.atlassian.jir... ]</pre>
<h3>Daniel Belenky updated OVIRT-1867:</h3>
<pre> Component/s: STDCI DSL
Standard CI (Pipelines)</pre>
<blockquote><h3>Allow embedded secrets inside the source repo for CI</h3>
<pre> Key: OVIRT-1867
URL: https://ovirt-jira.atlassian.net/browse/OVIRT-1867
Project: oVirt - virtualization made easy
Issue Type: By-EMAIL
Components: Standard CI (Pipelines), STDCI DSL
Reporter: Roman Mohr
Assignee: infra</pre>
<p>In order to improve the self-service capabilities of standard-ci it is important for projects, that they can add their own secrets to projects (to reach external services, e.g. docker hub, …). Travis has a very nice system which helps engineers there: <a href="https://docs.travis-ci.com/user/encryption-keys/">https://docs.travis-ci.com/user/encryption-keys/</a> Basically the CI system needs to generate a public/private key pair for every enabled git repo. The engineer simply fetches the public key via a well know URL and encrypts the secrets. Then the encrypted secret can be made part of the source repo. Before the tests are run the CI system decrypts the secrets. Than can play together pretty well with Jenkinsfiles too. Benefit:</p>
<pre>* Less manual intervention from CI team to add secrets to jobs
* Strengthen the config-in-code thinking</pre></blockquote>
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6 years, 10 months
[JIRA] (OVIRT-1867) Allow embedded secrets inside the source repo for CI
by Daniel Belenky (oVirt JIRA)
[ https://ovirt-jira.atlassian.net/browse/OVIRT-1867?page=com.atlassian.jir... ]
Daniel Belenky commented on OVIRT-1867:
---------------------------------------
We actually have a mechanism for secrets as environmental variables in stdci. Currently, we hold the secrets in a single secret file on our Jenkins master, and engineers can request those secrets as environmental variables via *.environment.yaml. The syntax is the same as for Kubernetes:
{code:java}
---
- name: MY_VAR
valueFrom:
secretKeyRef:
name: MySecret1
value: password
{code}
The example above will bind the password field from MySecret1 to $MY_VAR inside the chroot created by STDCI.
The one part which is still missing though is a common interface to allow projects to add the secrets to this file automatically.
> Allow embedded secrets inside the source repo for CI
> ----------------------------------------------------
>
> Key: OVIRT-1867
> URL: https://ovirt-jira.atlassian.net/browse/OVIRT-1867
> Project: oVirt - virtualization made easy
> Issue Type: By-EMAIL
> Reporter: Roman Mohr
> Assignee: infra
>
> In order to improve the self-service capabilities of standard-ci it is
> important for projects, that they can add their own secrets to projects (to
> reach external services, e.g. docker hub, ...).
> Travis has a very nice system which helps engineers there:
> https://docs.travis-ci.com/user/encryption-keys/
> Basically the CI system needs to generate a public/private key pair for
> every enabled git repo. The engineer simply fetches the public key via a
> well know URL and encrypts the secrets. Then the encrypted secret can be
> made part of the source repo. Before the tests are run the CI system
> decrypts the secrets. Than can play together pretty well with Jenkinsfiles
> too.
> Benefit:
> * Less manual intervention from CI team to add secrets to jobs
> * Strengthen the config-in-code thinking
--
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6 years, 10 months
[JIRA] (OVIRT-1868) Allow engineers to write Jenkinsfiles
by Roman Mohr (oVirt JIRA)
[ https://ovirt-jira.atlassian.net/browse/OVIRT-1868?page=com.atlassian.jir... ]
Roman Mohr updated OVIRT-1868:
------------------------------
Description:
Looks like standard-ci switched internally to use Jenkinsfiles. However it
would be very valuable for engineers, if they could just write their
Jenkinsfile, instead of all the usual standard-ci yamls/scripts.
With the Jenkinsfile the chroot based approach seems to be pretty obsolete,
if you allow people to use the docker agent for the Jenkinsfile. For
KubeVirt it would make standard-ci finally really valuable.
was:
Looks like standard-ci switched internally to use Jenkinsfiles. However it
would be very valuable for engineers, if they could just write their
Jenkinsfile, instead of all the usual standard-ci yamls/scripts.
With the Jenkinsfile the chroot based approach seems to be pretty obsolate,
if you allow people to use the docker agent for the Jenkinsfile. For
KubeVirt it would make standard-ci finally really valuable.
> Allow engineers to write Jenkinsfiles
> -------------------------------------
>
> Key: OVIRT-1868
> URL: https://ovirt-jira.atlassian.net/browse/OVIRT-1868
> Project: oVirt - virtualization made easy
> Issue Type: By-EMAIL
> Reporter: Roman Mohr
> Assignee: infra
>
> Looks like standard-ci switched internally to use Jenkinsfiles. However it
> would be very valuable for engineers, if they could just write their
> Jenkinsfile, instead of all the usual standard-ci yamls/scripts.
> With the Jenkinsfile the chroot based approach seems to be pretty obsolete,
> if you allow people to use the docker agent for the Jenkinsfile. For
> KubeVirt it would make standard-ci finally really valuable.
--
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[JIRA] (OVIRT-1868) Allow engineers to write Jenkinsfiles
by Roman Mohr (oVirt JIRA)
Roman Mohr created OVIRT-1868:
---------------------------------
Summary: Allow engineers to write Jenkinsfiles
Key: OVIRT-1868
URL: https://ovirt-jira.atlassian.net/browse/OVIRT-1868
Project: oVirt - virtualization made easy
Issue Type: By-EMAIL
Reporter: Roman Mohr
Assignee: infra
Looks like standard-ci switched internally to use Jenkinsfiles. However it
would be very valuable for engineers, if they could just write their
Jenkinsfile, instead of all the usual standard-ci yamls/scripts.
With the Jenkinsfile the chroot based approach seems to be pretty obsolate,
if you allow people to use the docker agent for the Jenkinsfile. For
KubeVirt it would make standard-ci finally really valuable.
--
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6 years, 10 months
[JIRA] (OVIRT-1867) Allow embedded secrets inside the source repo for CI
by Roman Mohr (oVirt JIRA)
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Roman Mohr created OVIRT-1867:
---------------------------------
Summary: Allow embedded secrets inside the source repo for CI
Key: OVIRT-1867
URL: https://ovirt-jira.atlassian.net/browse/OVIRT-1867
Project: oVirt - virtualization made easy
Issue Type: By-EMAIL
Reporter: Roman Mohr
Assignee: infra
In order to improve the self-service capabilities of standard-ci it is
important for projects, that they can add their own secrets to projects (to
reach external services, e.g. docker hub, ...).
Travis has a very nice system which helps engineers there:
https://docs.travis-ci.com/user/encryption-keys/
Basically the CI system needs to generate a public/private key pair for
every enabled git repo. The engineer simply fetches the public key via a
well know URL and encrypts the secrets. Then the encrypted secret can be
made part of the source repo. Before the tests are run the CI system
decrypts the secrets. Than can play together pretty well with Jenkinsfiles
too.
Benefit:
* Less manual intervention from CI team to add secrets to jobs
* Strengthen the config-in-code thinking
--
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<h3>Roman Mohr created OVIRT-1867:</h3>
<pre> Summary: Allow embedded secrets inside the source repo for CI
Key: OVIRT-1867
URL: https://ovirt-jira.atlassian.net/browse/OVIRT-1867
Project: oVirt - virtualization made easy
Issue Type: By-EMAIL
Reporter: Roman Mohr
Assignee: infra</pre>
<p>In order to improve the self-service capabilities of standard-ci it is important for projects, that they can add their own secrets to projects (to reach external services, e.g. docker hub, …).</p>
<p>Travis has a very nice system which helps engineers there: <a href="https://docs.travis-ci.com/user/encryption-keys/">https://docs.travis-ci.com/user/encryption-keys/</a></p>
<p>Basically the CI system needs to generate a public/private key pair for every enabled git repo. The engineer simply fetches the public key via a well know URL and encrypts the secrets. Then the encrypted secret can be made part of the source repo. Before the tests are run the CI system decrypts the secrets. Than can play together pretty well with Jenkinsfiles too.</p>
<p>Benefit:</p>
<pre>* Less manual intervention from CI team to add secrets to jobs
* Strengthen the config-in-code thinking</pre>
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6 years, 10 months