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Malicious npm Packages Inject SSH Backdoors via Typosquatted Libraries
Socket’s threat research team has detected six malicious npm packages typosquatting popular libraries to insert SSH backdoors.
Integrate EnvKey with your Node.js projects to keep api keys, credentials, and other configuration securely and automatically in sync for developers and servers.
npm install 'envkey' --save
Then at the entry point of your application:
// main.js
require('envkey')
Or if you prefer ES6+ imports:
// main.js
import 'envkey'
Generate an ENVKEY
in the EnvKey App. Then set ENVKEY=...
, either in a gitignored .env
file in the root of your project (in development) or in an environment variable (on servers).
Now all your EnvKey variables will be available on process.env
.
The package will throw an error if an ENVKEY
is missing or invalid.
Assume you have STRIPE_SECRET_KEY
set to sk_test_2a33b045e998d2ef60c7861d2ac22ea8
for the development
environment in the EnvKey App. You generate a local development ENVKEY
.
In your project's gitignored .env
file:
# .env
ENVKEY=GsL8zC74DWchdpvssa9z-nk7humd7hJmAqNoA
In lib/stripe.js
:
var stripe = require('stripe')(process.env.STRIPE_SECRET_KEY);
Now STRIPE_SECRET_KEY
will stay automatically in sync for all the developers on your team.
For a server, generate a server ENVKEY
in the EnvKey App, then set the ENVKEY
as an environment variable instead of putting it in a .env
file.
Now your servers will stay in sync as well. If you need to rotate your STRIPE_SECRET_KEY
, you can do it in a few seconds in the EnvKey App, restart your servers, and you're good to go. All your team's developers and all your servers will have the new value.
The envkey package will not overwrite existing environment variables or additional variables set in a .env
file. This can be convenient for customizing environments that otherwise share the same configuration. You can also use sub-environments in the EnvKey App for this purpose.
The envkey package caches your encrypted config in development so that you can still use it while offline. Your config will still be available (though possibly not up-to-date) the next time you lose your internet connection. If you do have a connection available, envkey will always load the latest config. Your cached encrypted config is stored in $HOME/.envkey/cache
For caching purposes, this package assumes you're in development mode if process.env.NODE_ENV
is "development" or "test". If process.env.NODE_ENV
is undefined, then it's assumed you're in development mode when a .env file exists in the root of your project.
If you want more control over how/when envkey loads your config, you can import/require the loader module directly instead of the top-level package that autoloads.
With require:
const envkeyLoader = require('envkey/loader')
envkeyLoader.load({
dotEnvFile: ".staging.env", // where to find the dotEnv file that contains your ENVKEY,
permitted: ["KEY1", "KEY2"] // whitelist of permitted vars (useful for client-side config) - defaults to permitting all if omitted
})
Or with imports:
import {load as envkeyLoad} from 'envkey/loader'
envkeyLoad({ dotEnvFile: ".staging.env" })
You can also load your config asynchronously by providing a callback to the load function:
const envkeyLoader = require('envkey/loader')
envkeyLoader.load({
dotEnvFile: ".staging.env", // where to find the dotEnv file that contains your ENVKEY,
permitted: ["KEY1", "KEY2"] // whitelist of permitted vars (useful for client-side config) - defaults to permitting all if omitted
}, function(err, res){
console.log("Config loaded")
console.log(process.env.KEY1)
})
For even more flexibility, you can use the fetch
method to return your config as simple json and do as you wish with it. As with load
, it can be called synchronously or asynchronously.
const envkeyLoader = require('envkey/loader')
// synchronous
const config = envkeyLoader.fetch({
dotEnvFile: ".staging.env",
permitted: ["KEY1", "KEY2"]
})
console.log(config.KEY1)
// asynchronous
envkeyLoader.fetch({
dotEnvFile: ".staging.env",
permitted: ["KEY1", "KEY2"]
}, function(err, res){
console.log(res.KEY1)
})
Since EnvKey is for configuration in addition to secrets, it can be convenient to inject a portion of your EnvKey config into your client-side code. This should be done by whitelisting variables that are safe for the client (i.e. can be made public) and injecting them during your build process. EnvKey has a webpack plugin to help you do it right.
If you look in the ext
directory of this package, you'll find a number of envkey-fetch
binaries for various platforms and architectures. These are output by the envkey-fetch Go library. It contains EnvKey's core cross-platform fetching, decryption, verification, web of trust, redundancy, and caching logic. It is completely open source.
On a stripped down OS like Alpine Linux, you may get an x509: certificate signed by unknown authority
error when envkey-node
attempts to load your config. envkey-fetch attempts to handle this by including its own set of trusted CAs via gocertifi, but if you're getting this error anyway, you can fix it by ensuring that the ca-certificates
dependency is installed. On Alpine you'll want to run:
apk add --no-cache ca-certificates
For more on EnvKey in general:
Read the docs.
Read the integration quickstart.
Read the security and cryptography overview.
Post an issue or email us: support@envkey.com.
FAQs
EnvKey secures and simplifies configuration and secrets management.
The npm package envkey receives a total of 4,918 weekly downloads. As such, envkey popularity was classified as popular.
We found that envkey demonstrated a not healthy version release cadence and project activity because the last version was released a year ago. It has 1 open source maintainer collaborating on the project.
Did you know?
Socket for GitHub automatically highlights issues in each pull request and monitors the health of all your open source dependencies. Discover the contents of your packages and block harmful activity before you install or update your dependencies.
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