5

the docs show how to set a file to a secret envvar http://readme.drone.io/0.5/secrets/

is there a convenient way to do the opposite? e.g. have this ssh key be available in .ssh/id_rsa with all the correct permissions.

And by "convienient" I obviously mean without having to type mkdir, > or chmod

3 Answers 3

7

If you want to use an ssh key as part of your build, you can add the ssh key to the secret store using the following command:

drone secrets add --image=<image> <repo> SSH_KEY @/path/to/.ssh/id_rsa

Note that the @ notation is similar to curl. The reason this feature exists is because creating the secret using cat (or some other sort of pipe) seems to cause a malformed file to upload.

Once the file is added, you can reference in your Yaml:

pipeline:
  image: busybox
  environment:
    - SSH_KEY: ${SSH_KEY}
  commands:
    - mkdir /root/.ssh && echo "$SSH_KEY" > /root/.ssh/id_rsa && chmod 0600 /root/.ssh/id_rsa

Note that it is important to cat SSH_KEY inside quotes in order to preserve new lines.

You may also need to add the host to known_hosts in order to prevent host key issues; change bitbucket.org to whatever host you're pulling from in the following, and add it to commands (after the command shown above, to ensure that the /root/.ssh directory exists):

ssh-keyscan -H bitbucket.org >> /root/.ssh/known_hosts

(You'll also need to install openssh-client or equivalent, if it's not already available in your build image.)

And by "convienient" I obviously mean without having to type mkdir, > or chmod

nope

5
  • 1
    yup, that's basically exactly what I was doing. Since you're saying it can't be done any other way, it's good to get confirmation.
    – fommil
    Dec 26, 2016 at 16:53
  • Drone does have an init script (of sorts) that performs environment setup. I will definitely consider looking for SSH_KEY and automatically creating the .ssh directory and id_rsa file in the future. Dec 28, 2016 at 3:08
  • ohh, this quotes around the SSH_KEY. Thank you for this answer! Jan 4, 2017 at 19:55
  • This does not work for me - getting "Cannot unmarshal 'map[SSH_KEY:<nil>]' of type map[interface {}]interface {} into a string value". My indentation is exactly as your answer
    – GrayedFox
    Sep 11, 2018 at 16:40
  • This answer is outdated. Drone no longer supports string substitution with secrets. Instead you need to declare secrets in the secrets block. See docs.drone.io/manage-secrets Sep 11, 2018 at 20:19
1

In Drone 0.7+ when using Github oAuth2 to authenticate into Drone it automatically adds the Github username and password to the builds .netrc.

The password is actually a token instead of a password. The .netrc will look as such:

machine github.com
  login <SOME_SECRET>
  password x-oauth-basic

This means you can clone private Github repos over HTTPS without having to specify the username/password, i.e. git clone https://github.com/USER/REPO/git.

You can also get the same effect locally by adding a ~/.netrc file and adding something like:

machine github.com
  login <GITHUB_USERNAME>
  password <GITHUB_PERSONAL_TOKEN>

machine api.github.com
  login <GITHUB_USERNAME>
  password <GITHUB_PERSONAL_TOKEN>

You will have to generate a personal token.

For example, if using the Ruby package manger bundler, you can add the following to the Gemfile:

gem 'documas', git: 'https://github.com/Propheris/documas-core.git'

The build can do bundle install successfully since it will clone the above repo via HTTPS using the Github token. The only issue is that when you do bundle install locally it will ask for a username/password. To overcome this add a ~/.netrc file to your development machine as per the above example.

0

In drone 0.8+

First, you need to encode base64 if its a binary.

base64 -i yourfile.bin -o base64file.bin

Then add the secret to drone:

drone secret add --repository <repo> --name yourname_keys --value @base64file.bin

Once in the pipeline something like this:

command:
 - echo "$YOURNAME_KEYS" > some/path/afilebase64
 - base64 -D -i some/path/afilebase64 -o some/path/afilebinary

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