The Quay Config Tool implements several features to capture and validate configuration data based on a predefined schema.
This tool includes the following features:
- Validate Quay configuration using CLI tool
- Generate code for custom field group definitions (includes structs, constructors, defaults)
- Validation tag support from Validator
- Built-in validator tags for OAuth and JWT structs
Installation
Build from Source
Install using the Go tool:
go get -u github.com/quay/config-tool/...
This will generate files for the Quay validator executable and install the config-tool
CLI tool.
Build from Dockerfile
Clone this repo and build an image:
$ git clone https://github.com/quay/config-tool.git
$ cd config-tool
$ sudo podman build -t config-tool .
Start the container and execute command:
$ sudo podman run -it -v ${CONFIG_MOUNT}:/conf config-tool ...
Note that you must mount in your config directory in order for the config-tool to see it.
Usage
The CLI tool contains two main commands:
The print
command is used to output the entire configuration with defaults specified
{
"HostSettings": (*fieldgroups.HostSettingsFieldGroup)({
ServerHostname: "quay:8081",
PreferredURLScheme: "https",
ExternalTLSTermination: false
}),
"TagExpiration": (*fieldgroups.TagExpirationFieldGroup)({
FeatureChangeTagExpiration: false,
DefaultTagExpiration: "2w",
TagExpirationOptions: {
"0s",
"1d",
"1w",
"2w",
"4w"
}
}),
"UserVisibleSettings": (*fieldgroups.UserVisibleSettingsFieldGroup)({
RegistryTitle: "Project Quay",
RegistryTitleShort: "Project Quay",
SearchResultsPerPage: 10,
SearchMaxResultPageCount: 10,
ContactInfo: {
},
AvatarKind: "local",
Branding: (*fieldgroups.BrandingStruct)({
Logo: "not_a_url",
FooterIMG: "also_not_a_url",
FooterURL: ""
})
})
}
The validate
command is used to show while field groups have been validated succesully
$ config-tool validate -c <path-to-config-dir>
+---------------------+--------------------+-------------------------+--------+
| FIELD GROUP | FIELD | ERROR | STATUS |
+---------------------+--------------------+-------------------------+--------+
| HostSettings | - | - | 🟢 |
| TagExpiration | - | - | 🟢 |
| UserVisibleSettings | BRANDING.Logo | Field enforces tag: url | 🔴 |
| | BRANDING.FooterIMG | Field enforces tag: url | 🔴 |
+---------------------+--------------------+-------------------------+--------+
$ config-tool editor -c <path-to-config-dir> -p <editor-password> -e <operator-endpoint>
This command will bring up an interactive UI in which a user can modify, validate, and download a config. In addition, Swagger documentation can be reached by going to {{host}}/swagger/index.html
Using HTTPS
You can deploy the config editor using TLS certificates by passing environment variables to the runtime. The public and private keys must contain valid SANs for the route that you wish to deploy the editor on.
The paths can be specifed using CONFIG_TOOL_PRIVATE_KEY
and CONFIG_TOOL_PUBLIC_KEY
.
NOTE: If running from a container, the CONFIG_TOOL_PRIVATE_KEY
and CONFIG_TOOL_PUBLIC_KEY
values are the locations of the certs INSIDE the container. This might look something like the following:
$ docker run -p 7070:8080 \
-v ${PRIVATE_KEY_PATH}:/tls/localhost.key \
-v ${PUBLIC_KEY_PATH}:/tls/localhost.crt \
-e CONFIG_TOOL_PRIVATE_KEY=/tls/localhost.key \
-e CONFIG_TOOL_PUBLIC_KEY=/tls/localhost.crt \
-e DEBUGLOG=true \
-ti config-app:dev