tfsec
aws-vault
Our great sponsors
tfsec | aws-vault | |
---|---|---|
7 | 49 | |
2,991 | 8,141 | |
- | 1.2% | |
9.4 | 1.7 | |
almost 3 years ago | about 2 months ago | |
Go | Go | |
MIT License | MIT License |
Stars - the number of stars that a project has on GitHub. Growth - month over month growth in stars.
Activity is a relative number indicating how actively a project is being developed. Recent commits have higher weight than older ones.
For example, an activity of 9.0 indicates that a project is amongst the top 10% of the most actively developed projects that we are tracking.
tfsec
-
Terraform in AWS
Using pre-commit framework with terraform repository, will help your code to be kept clean, formated, updated document and checked for tf security issues (optional with tfsec) before committing and pushing the code to git source.
-
Terraforming in 2021 – new features, testing and compliance
Here again more than one tool exists to assist. We will highlight two of the most popular ones here: tfsec and checkov. Both provide a predefined set of checks that they use to inspect your code, allowing to explicitly open exceptions (if you really want to) by annotating your code with comments, and adjust the configuration to ignore some modules, for example.
-
How FirstPort manage GitHub, using code stored in GitHub
An additional benefit of using a CI workflow is adding automated tests. In this scenario, I’ve added a step leveraging tfsec to scan for static code vulnerabilities. In the example below, tfsec warns against creating an Azure network security rule which is fully open. This will halt and fail the workflow unless I provide an ignore comment to accept the warning.
-
Terraform v15.0 with AWS (EKS deployment)
· Provision an EKS Cluster (AWS) · Terraform v15.0 · Terraform Registry · Pre-Commit · Terraform Pre-commit · Terraform-docs · Tflint · Tfsec
-
A way to restrict options for devs in AWS
Using terraform, create a skeleton directory that they can review for how EC2 instances should be created. Use tools like https://github.com/tfsec/tfsec or other scanners/linters to validate that your developers followed this process and didn't uncheck something.
-
Terraform VMware vSphere Provider - is it worth it?
I know tfsec (https://github.com/tfsec/tfsec) which is pretty good for AWS resources but I think vSphere resources are not implemented.
-
Gopher Gold #15 - Wed Oct 14 2020
tfsec/tfsec (Go): 🔒🌍 Static analysis powered security scanner for your terraform code
aws-vault
-
Keep your AWS CLI config fresh with Cog
Undying fondness for aws-vault to securely cache my session credentials.
-
A CLI app that keeps your passwords encrypted and lets you manage them using a single secret
you might want to check https://github.com/99designs/keyring and https://github.com/99designs/aws-vault
-
Cannot use AWS SSO with Terraform
You install aws-vault (https://github.com/99designs/aws-vault), configure it according to the README and make sure you have an SSO entry that is compatible, i.e.:
-
How do you protect your secret keys in your local computer?
I use a aws-vault to switch thought all profiles on all aws account. It support SSO with 2FA.
-
LastPass says DevOps engineer’s hacked computer led to security breach in 2022
Nice! Do I understand this correctly?
You use aws-vault(https://github.com/99designs/aws-vault) and configure it with IAM and MFA with YubiKeys. You configure e.g. the profile jonsmith.
When you run
aws-vault exec jonsmith -- aws s3 ls
it will ask you, e.g. every hour to confirm with YubiKeys and cache the key for one hour. After that the temporary keys expire. Can you also store keys different from AWS?
-
Ask HN: Why most CLIs are not using keyring?
Don't know about kube, but awscli and a few others decouple the idea of getting credentials and doing the actions. You can use the password every time, but a better way is to either use the preconfigured profile or some wrapper which does use the keychain. For example https://github.com/99designs/aws-vault/ supports one-off commands and shell sessions with pre-populated tokens.
-
Recommended script access to AWS
It sounds like you have AWS SSO enabled and need a way to run scripts manually in the terminal. Take a look at the aws-vault project that makes it easy working with multiple AWS accounts.
-
Can I run cdk bootstrap in aws cloudshell?
A tool called aws-vault can fix the "insecure" part.
-
Programatic access with AWS SSO
Take a look at aws-vault, which has support for SSO and running in a docker container.
-
Authenticating to AWS provider
I read the docs on: https://github.com/99designs/aws-vault
What are some alternatives?
checkov - Prevent cloud misconfigurations and find vulnerabilities during build-time in infrastructure as code, container images and open source packages with Checkov by Bridgecrew.
awsume - A utility for easily assuming AWS IAM roles from the command line.
tflint - A Pluggable Terraform Linter
leapp - Leapp is the DevTool to access your cloud
terrascan - Detect compliance and security violations across Infrastructure as Code to mitigate risk before provisioning cloud native infrastructure.
powerlevel10k - A Zsh theme
atlantis - Terraform Pull Request Automation
azure-aws-creds - This project allows federated Azure Active Directory roles to be easily used with AWS CLI session credentials
pre-commit-hooks - Some out-of-the-box hooks for pre-commit
aws-cli - Universal Command Line Interface for Amazon Web Services
terraform-aws-gitlab-runner - Terraform module for AWS GitLab runners on ec2 (spot) instances
ohmyzsh - 🙃 A delightful community-driven (with 2,300+ contributors) framework for managing your zsh configuration. Includes 300+ optional plugins (rails, git, macOS, hub, docker, homebrew, node, php, python, etc), 140+ themes to spice up your morning, and an auto-update tool so that makes it easy to keep up with the latest updates from the community.