A script for calling the aws-cli using IAM Access Keys from a GPG encrypted credentials file.
The script is inspired by the various aws-profile wrappers found on GitHub, plus a desire to keep credentials encrypted at rest.
1. Your secret access keys are encrypted at rest on disk so if someone gains access to your machine, they still won't have access to your AWS credentials
2. You can safely store your encrypted credentials in Dropbox or on a server so you can access the same config and credentials files from multiple machines
3. Since the script works by decrypting the credentials file and adding AWS_ACCESS_KEY_ID
and AWS_SECRET_ACCESS_KEY
to the processes environment, you can use it with other apps the use these environment variables, e.g. Terraform
4. If you use an OpenGPG card such as a Yubikey as a private key, it will effectively act as a hardware MFA device for your access keys
Details and use cases are outlined in Usage below.
This guide assumes you are familiar GPG and are able to encrypt your credentials file. If you are not familiar with GPG, there are a number of good tutorials online.
brew bundle
or
brew tap jefforulez/jefforulez
brew install aws-profile-gpg
pip install aws-profile-gpg
Basic usage
usage: aws-profile-gpg [-h] [-v] command [command ...]
positional arguments:
command command passed to aws cli
optional arguments:
-h, --help show this help message and exit
-v, --verbose verbose output
Using the default configuration
aws-profile-gpg aws s3 ls
Specifying an aws profile
AWS_PROFILE=iam_leet \
aws-profile-gpg aws s3 ls
Specifying an alternative credentials file
AWS_ENCRYPTED_CREDENTIALS_FILE=/path/to/shared/aws/credentials.asc \
aws-profile-gpg aws s3 ls
Specifying an alternative config file
AWS_CONFIG_FILE=/path/to/shared/aws/config \
aws-profile-gpg aws s3 ls
Storing config and credentials files in Dropbox
AWS_CONFIG_FILE=${HOME}/Dropbox/etc/aws/config \
AWS_ENCRYPTED_CREDENTIALS_FILE=${HOME}/Dropbox/aws/credentials.gpg \
aws-profile-gpg aws s3 ls
Using with terraform
AWS_PROFILE=terraform \
aws-profile-gpg terraform -plan
-
AWS_PROFILE_GPG_HOME
- Path to
aws-profile-gpg
directory; Used to locate virtualenv and python script - Defaults to
/usr/local/opt/aws-profile-gpg
- Path to
-
AWS_ENCRYPTED_CREDENTIALS_FILE
- Path to GPG encrypted credentials file
- Supports both plain
.gpg
and ascii-armored.asc
files - Defaults to
~/.aws/credentials.gpg
-
AWS_CONFIG_FILE
- See AWS Command Line Interface
- Defaults to
~/.aws/config
- Note: If you change this, you must define all profiles in the custom config file
-
AWS_DEFAULT_PROFILE
- See AWS Command Line Interface
- Defaults to
default
Creating bash functions is helpful for quickly invoking different profiles:
$ vim ~/.bash_profile
# optional
export AWS_ENCRYPTED_CREDENTIALS_FILE="${HOME}/Dropbox/aws/credentials.gpg"
export AWS_CONFIG_FILE="${HOME}/Dropbox/aws/config"
function aws-leet {
AWS_PROFILE=iam_leet \
aws-profile-gpg \
aws \
$@
}
function aws-terraform {
AWS_PROFILE=terraform \
aws-profile-gpg \
aws \
$@
}
You can then run:
$ source ~/.bash_profile
$ aws-leet iam get-user
{
"User": {
"Path": "/",
"UserName": "iam.leet",
"UserId": "AID35DF67GHFEK3",
"Arn": "arn:aws:iam::737415635305:user/iam.leet",
"CreateDate": "1970-01-01T00:00:00Z",
"PasswordLastUsed": "2000-01-01T00:00:01Z"
}
}
The AWS_PROFILE
you use must be defined in your AWS_CONFIG_FILE
file, e.g.
$ cat ~/.aws/config
[profile default]
region=us-east-1
[profile iam_leet]
region=us-east-1
This applies to the default
profile too.
If you try to use an undefined profile, you will see this error:
Profile not found in config; profile=iam_leet
-
Various version of
aws-profile
on GitHub -
GNU Privacy Guard (GPG)
-
PyGPGME
-
Botocore