npm package discovery and stats viewer.

Discover Tips

  • General search

    [free text search, go nuts!]

  • Package details

    pkg:[package-name]

  • User packages

    @[username]

Sponsor

Optimize Toolset

I’ve always been into building performant and accessible sites, but lately I’ve been taking it extremely seriously. So much so that I’ve been building a tool to help me optimize and monitor the sites that I build to make sure that I’m making an attempt to offer the best experience to those who visit them. If you’re into performant, accessible and SEO friendly sites, you might like it too! You can check it out at Optimize Toolset.

About

Hi, 👋, I’m Ryan Hefner  and I built this site for me, and you! The goal of this site was to provide an easy way for me to check the stats on my npm packages, both for prioritizing issues and updates, and to give me a little kick in the pants to keep up on stuff.

As I was building it, I realized that I was actually using the tool to build the tool, and figured I might as well put this out there and hopefully others will find it to be a fast and useful way to search and browse npm packages as I have.

If you’re interested in other things I’m working on, follow me on Twitter or check out the open source projects I’ve been publishing on GitHub.

I am also working on a Twitter bot for this site to tweet the most popular, newest, random packages from npm. Please follow that account now and it will start sending out packages soon–ish.

Open Software & Tools

This site wouldn’t be possible without the immense generosity and tireless efforts from the people who make contributions to the world and share their work via open source initiatives. Thank you 🙏

© 2024 – Pkg Stats / Ryan Hefner

@jontg/gsts

v5.0.2

Published

Google authentication for the AWS Management Console via Amazon's STS service

Downloads

6

Readme

gsts (short for Google STS) is an AWS CLI credential provider based on browser automation to seamlessly obtain and store AWS STS credentials to interact with Amazon services via Google Workspace SAML federation.

This allows you to configure AWS to rely on Google Workspace as your Identity Provider, moving the responsibility away from Amazon into Google to validate your login credentials (federated identity). This is a wildly popular solution when looking to offer Single-Sign On capabilities inside organizations.

Instead of having to go through a flow tailored for the web browser, this tool enables developer productivity by keeping everything on the command line.

Features:

  • Seamless integration with the aws cli tool for secure, continuous and non-interactive STS session renewals.
  • Only once headful design for interactively entering your Google Workspace credentials.
  • Full support for all 2FA methods as provided by Google, including Security Keys (Yubikeys, etc.).
  • Persistent headless re-authentication system.
  • Offers a quick action to open the AWS console from the command-line.
  • Support for AWS China (aws-cn) and AWS GovCloud (US) (aws-us-gov) ARNs.
  • Compatible with Amazon ECR and EKS.

Installation

macOS

brew tap ruimarinho/tap
brew install gsts

Other Platforms

Install the package via npm:

npm install --global gsts

or via yarn:

yarn global add gsts

Usage

gsts is optimized to run as a credential source provider for the aws cli. This ensures a seamless, automated and secure way of obtaining fresh session tokens without any kind of system interaction.

There are three key options or variables you need know about (you can read more about how to discover them below):

  1. Google's Identity Provider ID, or IdP ID (--idp-id).
  2. Google's Service Provider ID, or SP ID (--sp-id).
  3. The AWS ARN role(s) to authenticate with.

Assuming the following scenario:

  1. You're using the default AWS profile name.
  2. You're using the default ~/.aws/config for configuring the aws cli.
  3. The AWS ARN role you're trying to authenticate with is arn:aws:iam::123456789012:role/role-name and it's the only role you have access to.

You would then proceed to add the following credential_process entry to your ~/.aws/config file under the [default] profile section:

[default]
credential_process = gsts --idp-id=<your_idp_id> --sp-id=<your_sp_id>

The

Note: if you are using a custom profile name other than default (for example, sts), then your configuration would slightly differ (notice the change to the [profile <name>] format):

[profile sts]
credential_process = gsts --idp-id=<your_idp_id> --sp-id=<your_sp_id>

If your user has access to more than one AWS ARN role, you may specify which one to use on each profile by defining --aws-role-arn:

[default]
credential_process = gsts --idp-id=<your_idp_id> --sp-id=<your_sp_id> --aws-arn-role=arn:aws:iam::111111112222222:role/role-name

You can then call any aws cli command and gsts will be spawned automatically:

aws sts get-caller-identity

That's it! With this setup, you're not supposed to call gsts manually ever. The first authentication will be performed directly on a headful browser where all of the authentication challenges generated by Google are natively supported (TOTP, Push, SMS, Security Keys, etc). Subsequent runs use an existing session to obtain fresh STS credentials every time it is executed.

In-memory (Cacheless) Credentials

For increased security, gsts supports passing over credentials to the aws cli without ever storing a copy of the credentials locally on its own cache dir via --no-credentials-cache.

The only downside is that every aws command will require re-authentication via gsts, which in some scenarios could generate too many authentication requests.

Configuration Settings Precedence

To avoid redundancy and potentially inconsistent configuration, such as having gsts obtain credentials for a different region than the one specified on the AWS profile settings, there are a few special aws cli environment variables that are automatically processed if defined.

The gsts configuration settings take precedence in the following order:

  1. gsts command line arguments.
  2. gsts environment variables (GSTS_*).
  3. aws cli configuration settings, in the same order processed by the the AWS CLI:
    1. aws cli environment variables
    2. aws cli configuration file (i.e. those in ~/.aws/config)

AWS CLI Supported Environment Variables

Environment variables supported by aws cli and processed by gsts:

  • AWS_CONFIG_FILE: if defined, this environment variable overrides the behavior of gsts to read the config file from its default path at ~/.aws/config.

  • AWS_PROFILE: if defined, this environment variable overrides the behavior of using the profile named [default] in the configuration and credentials files. You can override this environment variable by using the GSTS_AWS_PROFILE environment variable or the --aws-profile command line parameter.

  • AWS_DEFAULT_REGION: if defined, this environment variable overrides the value for the profile setting region. You can override this environment variable by using the GSTS_AWS_REGION environment variable or the --aws-region command line parameter.

  • AWS_REGION: if defined, this environment variable overrides the values in the environment variable AWS_DEFAULT_REGION and the profile setting region. You can override this environment variable by using the GSTS_AWS_REGION environment variable or the --aws-region command line parameter.

AWS CLI Supported Profile Configuration Settings

Profile configuration settings supported by aws cli and processed by gsts:

  • duration_seconds: the duration, in seconds, of the role session. You can override this profile configuration setting by using the GSTS_AWS_SESSION_DURATION environment variable or the --aws-session-duration command line parameter.

  • region: You can override this profile configuration setting by using the GSTS_AWS_REGION, AWS_REGION or AWS_DEFAULT_REGION environment variables as explained above or the --aws-region command line parameter.

Notably, output is not supported since it could break gsts support for credential_process if its value is not json and setting role_arn makes the aws cli incompatible with credential_process.

Amazon ECR

If you'd like to automatically authenticate your Docker installation before pulling private images from Amazon ECR, you can use the fantastic ECR Docker Credential Helper in combination with gsts.

  1. Install docker-credential-helper-ecr (on macOS, you can do it via Homebrew using brew install docker-credential-helper-ecr).

  2. Add the following config to your ~/.docker/config.json file:

    {
      "credHelpers" : {
        "<ACCOUNT_ID>.dkr.ecr.<ECR_REGION>.amazonaws.com" : "ecr-login"
      }
    }

The config entry ecr-login maps to the binary docker-credential-ecr-login which must be available under your $PATH.

The next step a docker pull for an image from an ECR registry matching the string above is called, Docker will invisibly call gsts and perform authentication on your behalf.

Amazon EKS

If you'd like to automatically authenticate your Kubernetes authentication via Amazon EKS, add the following exec config under the users property of your ~/.kube/config file:.

apiVersion: v1
clusters:
  - [...]
kind: Config
preferences: {}
users:
- name: arn:aws:eks:us-west-1:111122223333:cluster/my-cluster
  user:
    exec:
      apiVersion: client.authentication.k8s.io/v1
      args:
      - eks
      - get-token
      - --region
      - eu-west-1
      - --cluster-name
      - my-cluster
      command: aws
      env:
      - name: AWS_PROFILE
        value: default
      interactiveMode: Never
      provideClusterInfo: false

In this particularly case, the AWS_PROFILE env setting isn't strictly necessary as the default value would be used.

Quick Actions

gsts offer a quick way to open the Amazon AWS console via the command line:

gsts console

Reference

❯ gsts --help

Commands:
  gsts console  Authenticate via SAML and open Amazon AWS console in the default browser

Options:
      --help                               Show help                                                                                         [boolean]
      --version                            Show version number                                                                               [boolean]
      --aws-profile                        AWS profile name to associate credentials with                                                   [required]
      --aws-role-arn                       AWS role ARN to authenticate with
      --aws-session-duration               AWS session duration in seconds (defaults to the value provided by the IDP, if set)                [number]
      --aws-region                         AWS region to send requests to                                                                   [required]
      --cache-dir                          Where to store cached data                                               [default: "~/Library/Caches/gsts"]
      --clean                              Start authorization from a clean session state                                                    [boolean]
      --force                              Force re-authorization even with valid session                                   [boolean] [default: false]
      --idp-id                             Identity Provider ID (IdP ID)                                                                    [required]
      --no-credentials-cache               Disable default behaviour of storing credentials in --cache-dir                                   [boolean]
  -o, --output                             Output format                                                                     [choices: "json", "none"]
      --playwright-engine                  Set playwright browser engine              [choices: "chromium", "firefox", "webkit"] [default: "chromium"]
      --playwright-engine-executable-path  Set playwright executable path for browser engine
      --playwright-engine-channel          Set playwright browser engine channel       [choices: "chrome", "chrome-beta", "msedge-beta", "msedge-dev"]
      --sp-id                              Service Provider ID (SP ID)                                                             [string] [required]
      --username                           Username to auto pre-fill during login
  -v, --verbose                            Log verbose output                                                                                  [count]

Discovery of IdP and SP IDs

If you're the admin of Google Workspace, after configuring the SAML application for AWS you can extract the SP ID by looking at the service parameter of the SAML AWS application page.

The IDP ID can be found under Security > Set up single sign-on (SSO) for SAML applications as the parameter idpid.

In case you are using a pre-configured AWS SAML application as traditionally available under the dotted menu on any Google app (Gmail, Calendar and so on) you can instead right-click the AWS icon and copy the link:

The copied URL will be in the format of https://accounts.google.com/o/saml2/initsso?idpid=<IDP_ID>&spid=<SP_ID>&forceauthn=false.

Troubleshooting

gsts conflicts with an alias from oh-my-zsh's git plugin

ohmyzsh's git plugin includes an alias named gsts as a shorthand for git stash show --text. You can either disable the git plugin entirely or, alternatively, add unalias gsts at the end of your dotfiles if you don't use this git command often.

"Error when retrieving credentials from custom-process: Error: Failed to launch the browser process!" when using the aws-cli with credential_process

Although seamingly unrelated to gsts, try unsetting LD_LIBRARY_PATH before calling it, like so:

credential_process = bash -c "unset LD_LIBRARY_PATH; gsts --aws-role-arn arn:aws:iam::123456789012:role/role-name --sp-id 12345 --idp-id A12bc34d5"

License

MIT