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regpg - safely store server secrets

The regpg program is a thin wrapper around gpg for looking after secrets that need to be stored encrypted in a version control system (so you don't have to trust the VCS server) and decrypted when your configuration management system deploys them to servers.

Overview

  • discreet and discrete

    regpg is designed to store each secret in its own ASCII-armored PGP-encryped file, separate from non-secret code and configuration. The only other file regpg needs is a public keyring.

  • simplified key management

    regpg manages a keyring containing the public keys of whoever is allowed to decrypt the secrets.

    There is no need to curate your personal public keyring, or get involved in the web of trust, or use PGP keyservers. You exchange public keys with your colleagues via the regpg pubring.gpg file in your version control system.

  • keeping consistent

    After you have added or removed a key it is easy to re-encrypt secrets. regpg can check that all secrets are properly encrypted to the keys in its pubring.gpg file.

  • handy helpers

    regpg has subcommands for generating and encrypting TLS and SSH private keys in one step, and for wrangling X.509 certificates.

    There are also some quick init commands to get regpg hooked up with ansible and git, and some conv commands to help you migrate to regpg from other tools.

  • conventional project layout

    At the root of your project you have a pubring.gpg file which lists the set of people who can decrypt the secrets. This is your current working directory when using regpg. Elsewhere in your project directory and its subdirectories you have encrypted secret.asc files. The F<.asc> extension is short for ASCII-armored PGP message.

  • when not to use regpg

    It's usually better to use HashiCorp Vault or your cloud provider's native secret management, if you can.

Downloads

Download the single-file regpg perl script: https://dotat.at/prog/regpg/regpg and its GPG signature.

Download the full source archives and GPG signatures:

Documentation

If you use regpg, let me know! Send me mail at dot@dotat.at.

If you would like to submit a bug report or a patch, or if you would like more information about regpg's licence, see doc/contributing.md

Installing

For a simple one-file install you can copy the regpg script to a directory on your $PATH. If you have regpg.pl but not bare regpg then you need to run make.

You can run make install to install the script and man page to the standard places in your home directory, and make uninstall to remove them. See the start of the Makefile for variables you can set on the command line to adjust the install location. See doc/contributing.md for more details about building from git.

Dependencies

To use regpg you need the following programs. I've listed the versions that I have tested.

  • perl - 5.16 - 5.20 - 5.22 - 5.26
  • gnupg - 1.4.18 - 1.4.21 - 2.0.22 - 2.0.26 - 2.1.11 - 2.1.18 - 2.2.10
  • gnupg-agent - 2.0.22 - 2.0.26 - 2.1.11 - 2.2.1
  • pinentry-gtk2 0.8.3 (or) pinentry-tty 0.9.7 (or) pinentry-curses 0.8.1

You only need the following programs if you use regpg's helper subcommands.

  • git - 2.7 - 2.10 - 2.15 - 2.19
  • Ansible - 2.0 ... 2.6
  • BIND - 9.14
  • OpenSSH - 6.7 - 7.2 - 7.6
  • OpenSSL - 1.0.1 - 1.0.2 - 1.1.0 - 1.1.1
  • PuTTY - 0.68 - 0.70
  • xclip - 0.12

You only need the following to build from git.

  • make - any version should do
  • Markdown.pl or Text::Markdown - aka markdown or libtext-markdown-perl on Debian-like systems
  • perlcritic - aka libperl-critic-perl on Debian-like systems

Repositories

You can clone or browse the repository from:

Acknowledgments

Thanks to Jon Warbrick who gave me the idea for regpg's key management; and David Carter, Ben Harris, Paul Haughton, Ian Lewis, David McBride, mchubby, and Matthew Vernon for helpful bug reports and discussions.


Written by Tony Finch fanf2@cam.ac.uk dot@dotat.at
at Cambridge University Information Services.

regpg is free software: you can redistribute it and/or modify it under the terms of the GNU General Public License as published by the Free Software Foundation, either version 3 of the License, or (at your option) any later version.

regpg is distributed in the hope that it will be useful, but WITHOUT ANY WARRANTY; without even the implied warranty of MERCHANTABILITY or FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE. See the GNU General Public License for more details.

You should have received a copy of the GNU General Public License along with regpg. If not, see http://www.gnu.org/licenses/.