cli

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Published: Feb 20, 2019 License: Apache-2.0

README

Step CLI

step is a zero trust swiss army knife. It’s an easy-to-use and hard-to-misuse utility for building, operating, and automating systems that use zero trust technologies like authenticated encryption (X.509, TLS), single sign-on (OAuth OIDC, SAML), multi-factor authentication (OATH OTP, FIDO U2F), encryption mechanisms (JSON Web Encryption, NaCl), and verifiable claims (JWT, SAML assertions).

For more information and docs see the step website and the blog post announcing step.

Animated terminal showing step in practice

Table of Contents

Installing

These instructions will install an OS specific version of the step binary on your local machine. To build from source see getting started with development below.

Mac OS

Install step via Homebrew:

brew install step

# test ...
step certificate inspect https://smallstep.com

Note: If you have installed step previously through the smallstep/smallstep tap you will need to run the following commands before installing:

brew untap smallstep/smallstep
brew uninstall step
Linux

Download the latest Debian package from releases:

wget https://github.com/smallstep/cli/releases/download/X.Y.Z/step_X.Y.Z_amd64.deb

Install the Debian package:

sudo dpkg -i step_X.Y.Z_amd64.deb

Test:

step certificate inspect https://smallstep.com

Documentation

Documentation can be found in three places:

  1. On the command line with step help xxx where xxx is the subcommand you are interested in. Ex: step help crypto jwk

  2. On the web at https://smallstep.com/docs/cli

  3. In your browser with step help --http :8080 and visiting http://localhost:8080

Examples

X.509 Certificates

Create a root CA, an intermediate, and a leaf X.509 certificate. Bundle the leaf with the intermediate for use with TLS:

$ step certificate create --profile root-ca \
    "Example Root CA" root-ca.crt root-ca.key
$ step certificate create \
    "Example Intermediate CA 1" intermediate-ca.crt intermediate-ca.key \
    --profile intermediate-ca --ca ./root-ca.crt --ca-key ./root-ca.key
$ step certificate create \
    example.com example.com.crt example.com.key \
    --profile leaf --ca ./intermediate-ca.crt --ca-key ./intermediate-ca.key
$ step certificate bundle \
    example.com.crt intermediate-ca.crt example.com-bundle.crt

Extract the expiration date from a certificate (requires jq):

$ step certificate inspect example.com.crt --format json | jq -r .validity.end
$ step certificate inspect https://smallstep.com --format json | jq -r .validity.end
JSON Object Signing & Encryption (JOSE)

Create a JSON Web Key (JWK), add the public key to a keyset, and sign a JSON Web Token (JWT):

$ step crypto jwk create pub.json key.json
$ cat pub.json | step crypto jwk keyset add keys.json
$ JWT=$(step crypto jwt sign \
    --key key.json \
    --iss "issuer@example.com" \
    --aud "audience@example.com" \
    --sub "subject@example.com" \
    --exp $(date -v+15M +"%s"))

Verify your JWT and return the payload:

$ echo $JWT | step crypto jwt verify \
    --jwks keys.json --iss "issuer@example.com" --aud "audience@example.com"
Single Sign-On

Login with Google, get an access token, and use it to make a request to Google's APIs:

curl -H"$(step oauth --header)" https://www.googleapis.com/oauth2/v3/userinfo

Login with Google and obtain an OAuth OIDC identity token for single sign-on:

$ step oauth \
    --provider https://accounts.google.com \
    --client-id 1087160488420-8qt7bavg3qesdhs6it824mhnfgcfe8il.apps.googleusercontent.com \
    --client-secret udTrOT3gzrO7W9fDPgZQLfYJ \
    --bare --oidc

Obtain and verify a Google-issued OAuth OIDC identity token:

$ step oauth \
    --provider https://accounts.google.com \
    --client-id 1087160488420-8qt7bavg3qesdhs6it824mhnfgcfe8il.apps.googleusercontent.com \
    --client-secret udTrOT3gzrO7W9fDPgZQLfYJ \
    --bare --oidc \
 | step crypto jwt verify \
   --jwks https://www.googleapis.com/oauth2/v3/certs \
   --iss https://accounts.google.com \
   --aud 1087160488420-8qt7bavg3qesdhs6it824mhnfgcfe8il.apps.googleusercontent.com
Multi-factor Authentication

Generate a TOTP token and a QR code:

$ step crypto otp generate \
    --issuer smallstep.com --account name@smallstep.com \
    --qr smallstep.png > smallstep.totp

Scan the QR Code using Google Authenticator, Authy or similar software and use it to verify the TOTP token:

$ step crypto otp verify --secret smallstep.totp

Getting Started with Development

These instructions will get you a copy of the project up and running on your local machine for development, testing, and contribution purposes.

Please read the CLI Style Guide before implementing any features or modifying behavior as it contains expectations surrounding how the CLI should behave.

All changes to behavior must be documented in the CHANGELOG.md.

Prerequisites

To get started with local development, you will need three things:

  • Golang installed locally (instructions available here.
  • dep installed locally (instructions available here.
  • A version of make available for usage of the Makefile.
  • The repository checked out in the appropriate location of your $GOPATH.

Ensure you've checked out the repository into the appropriate path inside your $GOPATH. For example, if your $GOPATH is set to ~/go, then you'd check this repository out at ~/go/src/github.com/smallstep/cli. You can learn more about $GOPATH in the documentation.

Installing Dependencies and Bootstrapping

Once you've cloned the repository to the appropriate location, you will now be able to install any other dependencies via the make bootstrap command.

You should only ever need to run this command once, as it will ensure you have the right version of dep and gometalinter installed.

Building step

To build step, simply run make build which will build the cli and place the binary in the bin folder.

Running Tests and Linting

Now that you've installed any dependencies, you can run the tests and lint the code base simply by running make.

Unit Tests

Run the unit tests:

make test

For a more verbose version of the unit tests:

make vtest
Integration Tests

Run the integration tests:

make integration
And coding style tests

These tests apply the following Go linters to verify code style and formatting:

make lint
Adding and Removing Dependencies

To add any dependency to the repository, simply import it into your code and then run dep ensure which will update the Gopkg.lock file. A specific version of a dependency can be specified by adding it to the Gopkg.toml file and running dep ensure.

To remove a dependency, simply remove it from the codebase and any mention of it in the Gopkg.toml file and run dep ensure which will remove it from the vendor folder while updating the Gopkg.lock file.

Versioning

We use SemVer for versioning. For the versions available, see the tags on this repository.

License

This project is licensed under the Apache 2.0 License - see the LICENSE file for details

Directories

Path Synopsis
cmd
ca
crypto
kdf
pki
pkg
blackfriday
Package blackfriday is a markdown processor.
Package blackfriday is a markdown processor.
x509
Package x509 parses X.509-encoded keys and certificates.
Package x509 parses X.509-encoded keys and certificates.
x509/pkix
Package pkix contains shared, low level structures used for ASN.1 parsing and serialization of X.509 certificates, CRL and OCSP.
Package pkix contains shared, low level structures used for ASN.1 parsing and serialization of X.509 certificates, CRL and OCSP.

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