Forgejo Action to setup ssh-agent with a private key
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Matthias Pigulla 1a9af8e8e0 Update README to show correct version number in example
Supersedes #3; thank you @kod-kristoff!
2019-09-24 22:08:56 +00:00
.github/workflows Use $HOME to support OS X as well (#2) 2019-09-15 09:32:43 +02:00
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package-lock.json Write GH action to set up ssh keys for private repos 2019-09-14 22:28:16 +00:00
package.json Write GH action to set up ssh keys for private repos 2019-09-14 22:28:16 +00:00
README.md Update README to show correct version number in example 2019-09-24 22:08:56 +00:00

ssh-agent GitHub Action

This action

  • starts the ssh-agent,
  • exports the SSH_AUTH_SOCK environment variable,
  • loads a private SSH key into the agent and
  • configures known_hosts for GitHub.com.

Why?

When running a GitHub Action workflow to stage your project, run tests or build images, you might need to fetch additional libraries or vendors from private repositories.

GitHub Actions only have access to the repository they run for. So, in order to access additional private repositories, create an SSH key with sufficient access privileges. Then, use this action to make the key available with ssh-agent on the Action worker node. Once this has been set up, git clone commands using ssh URLs will just work. Also, running ssh commands to connect to other servers will be able to use the key.

Usage

  1. Create an SSH key with sufficient access privileges. For security reasons, don't use your personal SSH key but set up a dedicated one for use in GitHub Actions. See below for a few hints if you are unsure about this step.
  2. In your repository, go to the Settings > Secrets menu and create a new secret called SSH_PRIVATE_KEY. Put the unencrypted private SSH key in PEM format into the contents field.
    This key should start with -----BEGIN RSA PRIVATE KEY-----, consist of many lines and ends with -----END RSA PRIVATE KEY-----. You can just copy the key as-is from the private key file.
  3. In your workflow definition file, add the following step. Preferably this would be rather on top, near the actions/checkout@v1 line.
# .github/workflows/my-workflow.yml
jobs:
    my_job:
        ...
        steps:
            - actions/checkout@v1
            # Make sure the @v0.1.1 matches the current version of the
            # action 
            - uses: webfactory/ssh-agent@v0.1.1
              with:
                  ssh-private-key: ${{ secrets.SSH_PRIVATE_KEY }}
            - ... other steps
  1. If, for some reason, you need to change the location of the SSH agent socket, you can use the ssh-auth-sock input to provide a path.

Known issues and limitations

Currently OS X and Linux only

This action has not been tested for the Windows virtual environment. If you can provide the steps necessary to setup (even install?) OpenSSH on the Windows machine, please open an issue.

Works for the current job only

Since each job runs in a fresh instance of the virtual environment, the SSH key will only be available in the job where this action has been referenced. You can, of course, add the action in multiple jobs or even workflows. All instances can use the same SSH_PRIVATE_KEY secret.

SSH private key format

If the private key is not in the PEM format, you will see an Error loading key "(stdin)": invalid format message.

Use ssh-keygen -p -f path/to/your/key -m pem to convert your key file to PEM, but be sure to make a backup of the file first 😉.

Creating SSH keys

In order to create a new SSH key, run ssh-keygen -t rsa -b 4096 -m pem -f path/to/keyfile. This will prompt you for a key passphrase and save the key in path/to/keyfile.

Having a passphrase is a good thing, since it will keep the key encrypted on your disk. When configuring the secret SSH_PRIVATE_KEY value in your repository, however, you will need the private key unencrypted.

To show the private key unencrypted, run openssl rsa -in path/to/key -outform pem.

Authorizing a key

To actually grant the SSH key access, you can on GitHub use at least two ways:

  • Deploy keys can be added to individual GitHub repositories. They can give read and/or write access to the particular repository. When pulling a lot of dependencies, however, you'll end up adding the key in many places. Rotating the key probably becomes difficult.

  • A machine user can be used for more fine-grained permissions management and have access to multiple repositories with just one instance of the key being registered. It will, however, count against your number of users on paid GitHub plans.

Hacking

As a note to my future self, in order to work on this repo:

  • Clone it
  • Run npm install to fetch dependencies
  • hack hack hack
  • node index.js (inputs are passed through INPUT_ env vars, but how to set ssh-private-key?)
  • Run ./node_modules/.bin/ncc build index.js to update dist/index.js, which is the file actually run
  • Read https://help.github.com/en/articles/creating-a-javascript-action if unsure.
  • Maybe update the README example when publishing a new version.

This action was written by webfactory GmbH, Bonn, Germany. We're a software development agency with a focus on PHP (mostly Symfony). If you're a developer looking for new challenges, we'd like to hear from you!

Copyright 2019 webfactory GmbH, Bonn. Code released under the MIT license.