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Katie
Katie

Posted on • Originally published at katiekodes.com on

Hello world, it’s the AWS parameter store

I'd like to help some cloud-newbie sysadmins write automation scripts that reduce the overhead for common tasks and therefore make them more appealing to do frequently (the whole idea behind "infrastructure as code"):

  1. Making changes that prevent issues with the connection between a production transactional database and its production data warehouse, after spinning up a new nonproduction data warehouse by cloning it from a production server (involves running thousands of commands involving dozens of passwords).
  2. Changing a database superuser's password in all the places it needs to be changed so that no integrations break

For a "hello world" project, I decided to write a couple of Linux shell scripts that demonstrate the principle of injecting a secret password into the script at runtime using AWS Systems Manager Parameter Store to store the passwords.

Code

First, through the AWS web console, I created a SecureString in Parameter Store with a name of /pizza/flavors/first/ and a value of green pepper.

Next, I put two shell scripts on a Linux machine that was logged into the AWS CLI tool with permission to manipulate the Parameter Store:

hellopizza.sh

var="I like $1 pizza";
echo "$var"
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paramstore.sh

thekey="/pizza/flavors/$1";
thetopping=`aws ssm get-parameters --names $thekey --with-decryption --query "Parameters[*].{Value:Value}" --output text --region us-west-2`
./hellopizza.sh "$thetopping"
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Tests

Success

To run my code, I typed:

./paramstore.sh first
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And we have a winner! The output was:

I like green pepper pizza
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Errors

Not yet having a key named second, I tried this to make sure it would fail:

./paramstore.sh second
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Sure enough, it did (note the double gap between like and pizza):

I like  pizza
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If I ran ./paramstore.sh first without proper authentication, I would get one of the following two outputs:

An error occurred (ExpiredTokenException) when calling the GetParameters operation: The security token included in the request is expired
I like  pizza
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An error occurred (AccessDeniedException) when calling the GetParameters operation: User: MY_AWS_USERNAME is not authorized to perform: ssm:GetParameters on resource: MY_AWS_RESOURCE:parameter/C
I like  pizza
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Further thoughts

That was easy. Too easy. The "dozens of passwords" like green pepper would only be needed by code running on the server during occasional sysadmin maintenance tasks.

I feel like the running machine shouldn't normally have ssm:GetParameters access, and that a sysadmin should have to go into AWS and flip it on before running these scripts, then flip it off as they finish. What do you think?

Future project

A future project might be to repeat this with AWS Secrets Manager.

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