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Programming language: Go
License: MIT License
Tags: Utilities    
Latest version: v3.1.2

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README

DBT Dynamic Binary Toolkit

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Mentioned in Awesome Go

A framework for running self-updating, signed binary tools from a central, trusted repository.

What kind of tools you say? Anything that can be compiled into a stand-alone binary.

Tools are always up to date (unless you specify an older version), as is dbt itself. How? magic.

Overview

DBT consists of a binary dbt a config file, and a cache located at ~/.dbt. The dbt binary checks a trusted repository for tools, which are themselves signed binaries.

Tools are automatically downloaded, and verified for checksum and signature, then if they pass, they're run.

The DBT binary, when run:

  • Fetches the latest truststore from the Repository, verifies its checksum.

  • Checks the repository to see what the latest version of dbt is.

  • Compares its own checksum against the latest version's checksum.

  • Auto-updates itself by downloading the latest version, and if the new version's checksum and signature verifies, it overwrites itself on the filesystem, then calls the new binary with the original arguments, letting the child overwrite the parent in the process table.

  • The new binary verifies itself in the same manner. Presumably at this point, it is the latest version and we can continue.

  • Then dbt checks the filesystem for the tool indicated, performing the same cycle.

  • Checks the Tool on disk, verify checksum against what's in the repository - replacing it if needed.

  • Verifies the signature of the Tool - replaces if needed.

  • Executes the Tool with the provided arguments, letting the Tool overwrite DBT in the process table, to continue on it's own merry way.

It's rather mind-bending and recursive, but what you get is an always up to date tool with built in authorship and integrity checks.

Tools can be anything and do anything- the only limit is the imagination and skills of the author. DBT is writen in, and inspired by Golang, where everything compiles down to a single binary, and you can easily cross-compile for other OSes and Architectures, but you don't have to use golang to use dbt.

A Tool can be anything that is contained in a single file, and can have a 'detatched signature'. Since you can digitally 'sign' any digital file, anything completely self contained in a single file is good to go. Prefer Python? Build your stuff with PyInstaller or PyOxidizer and DBT will distribute it to your users.

You could even have a bash script, signed by a trusted source, in a repo that DBT is configured to trust, and it will work. Pretty cool huh?

This allows the author to make tools that do things that can be truly 'write once, run anywhere' - for any desired degree of 'anywhere'. Furthermore, the tools and dbt itself are self-updating, so every time you use it, you're using the latest version available.

For backwards compatibility and emergencies, you can also specify the version of a tool, and use any old version in your trusted repository. The default, however will be to get and use the latest.

If the trusted repo is offline, or unavailable, you can choose to degrade gracefully into 'offline mode' and use tools that are already downloaded to disk.

As an added bonus, the Tools are programs in and of themselves. There's no difference between a binary program running by itself and one run via dbt. All dbt does is download a program, verify it for integrity and authorship, and then exec it with the arguments you provide.

It's all up to you. DBT is a framework, and frameworks are all about enablement.

Diagram (requires mermaid extension)

sequenceDiagram
    participant DBT
    participant Tool
    participant Repository
    DBT-->>Repository: Get truststore from Repository (public keys of trusted tool authors).
    DBT-->>Repository: What's latest version of dbt, and what's it's sha256 checksum?
    loop DBT Integrity Check
        DBT->>DBT: Calculate my own checksum.
        DBT->>DBT: Compare calculated checksum against downloaded checksum.
        DBT->>DBT: Verify signature of DBT itself.
    end
    Note over DBT,Repository: If validation fails, download the latest version.<br>Validate that, and if it passes, execute it with the original arguments.<br> The original process exits.  The child takes over parent's pid.<br>Lather, rinse, and repeat.
    DBT-->>Repository: Is there a tool called <tool name>?
    DBT-->>Repository: What's the latest version of <tool name>, and what's it's sha256 checksum?
    loop Tool Integrity Check
        DBT->>Tool: Is <tool name> already on disk?
        Note over DBT,Repository: If not, download it, it's checksum, and it's signature.
        DBT->>Tool: Calculate sha256 checksum of Tool.
        DBT->>Tool: Compare calculated checksum against downloaded checksum.
        DBT->>Tool: Verify signature of Tool.
    end
    DBT-->>Tool: Run <tool name> with provided arguments.
    Note over DBT,Repository: DBT exits.  Tool takes DBT's pid in the process table.

So, from the command line, if you were to run:

dbt -V -- catalog list -v

You would run dbt in verbose mode, and catalog with flag -v and argument list

The -- tells the shell it's done parsing flags and options. Anything to the right of it are arguments, the first of which is the name of the tool to run, and anything after that gets passed into the tool as the tool's arguments. Slightly wonky, but very very useful.

Why?

I had an experience in a role where a great many people did not agree with or accept that part of being a conscientious computer user was keeping their systems and tools up to date. Expecting people to pay attention to upgrade announcements, or even run things like brew upgrade regularly was not only too much. It was viewed as offensive, and a failure on my part as a toolsmith. wow huh?

Necessity is, as they say, the mother of invention though, so I worked out a way to slice that particular Gordian Knot. What I came up with was a way I could make everyone happy. Users were happy because they didn't need to concern themselves with updates. I could also make myself happy, because I could make sure the system was secure, reliable, and had some fall back. What I came up with I now offer to you as 'DBT'.

Whether the particular folks that drove me to this extreme were right or wrong is not really important. It turns out there is actually a legitimate use case for self-updating tooling beyond simply appeasing user laziness.

Sometimes you want to be a user of a tool, and not it's author or maintainer. Those hardy souls that make wonderfully useful and reliable building blocks that the rest of us can use to construct our own towers of awesomeness are to be glorified and revered- it's true. Face it though, you don't have time to be that person for every library and tool in your bag of tricks.

Are you on the latest version? What is the latest version? Do you need to upgrade? How? Will the version you have even work? How do you know when you need a new version? These are questions that sometimes you'd rather not have to ask. They're also questions that, odds are, the author of the tool is already tired of answering. Why not let the machine handle it for you?

DBT is doing exactly what you would do, if you had time, resources, and face it, interest in doing it all by hand in a secure fashion.

Be honest. How often do you verify the checksum or signature on something you download and run? Do you even know how to verify them? Don't feel bad, many people don't. While it's a good thing to know how to do, the syntax for the tools are generally wonky and esoteric. It's not the sort of thing you're going to remember how to do unless you do it a lot, and who wants that job? Blech.

DBT does your due diligence for you, and lets you get on with your day.

Another real-world example: Imagine this, you've got a system of dynamic VM's and Containers, all leveraging common tooling. You might even have a serious DAG or web of 'things' dynamically generating other 'things' in a busy and automated fashion. What is there's a problem, or an upgrade? With normal utility tools and scripts you have to re-bake your machine images and containers to pick up the changes. You might say that that's a good thing. But what if it's not?

With DBT, you have the best of both worlds. You can force your tools to use an explicit version (dbt -v 1.2.3 -- <tool>). You can also dispense with the '-v' and run the latest. Voila! You're automatically picking up the latest version of the tooling from your trusted repository.

Usage

Generally speaking, you will run your tools with a command of the form:

dbt [flags] -- <command>  <command args and flags>

Take special note of the -- That double dash separates the flags for dbt itself from those of the command. It can get confusing if you don't spot the double dash and grok it's meaning.

Without it, any flags you try to run on <command> will be consumed by dbt itself, and the result will probably not be what you intend.

Of course, if your command has no flags itself, only positional arguments, you can run it straight without the double dash.

Security

DBT is as secure as the repository you trust to hold the binaries, and the degree to which you protect the signing keys. It will ensure, come hell or high water that every bit of the binary downloaded is what it aught to be, and that the signature is one you've decided to trust. If it can't do that, it'll stop- immediately and scream bloody murder.

You can make the repo wide open, and give everyone a copy of a non-encrypted key and it'll work. It's just not recommended.

I just build the tools. You choose how to use them.

"If you aim the gun at your foot and pull the trigger, it's UNIX's job to ensure reliable delivery of the bullet to where you aimed the gun (in this case, Mr. Foot)." -- Terry Lambert, FreeBSD-Hackers mailing list.

Included Tools

The whole point of DBT is that you'll create your own tools to do things your way. DBT is itself just a framework, and does exactly nothing without the tools that it's designed to download and run. By itself, it can't even tell you what tools are available to you.

DBT is designed to be as open and generic as possible. I, the author, don't know what you're going to do with it, and I will make as few assumptions as I possibly can while still presenting you with a useful tool.

There are, however, some common tasks that any user of DBT might want at their fingertips. The following is a list of tools that will build automatically with dbt and be available for your pleasure:

  • Catalog A tool for showing what tools are in your repository.

  • Boilerplate A tool for generating tool boilerplate. You could do it by hand, but why?

  • Reposerver A dbt repository server. It serves up the various dbt tools and components from a file location on disk.

If for some reason you don't want to use the included tools, just remove them from your metadata.json and they won't publish.

Repository Support

Artifactory Open Source can be used as a dbt repo. It works well without auth, or with basic authentication.

The dbt reposerver tool is written entirely in golang. At present, it's expected to run inside of a VPN or other private network, as it doesn't currently have authentication support. Stay tuned for authentication support.

You can additionally utilize Amazon S3 as a repo server. Authentication to S3 is assumed to be already in place and leverages the expected configs in ~/.aws. Credential managers work transparently through credential_process as detailed in the AWS docs.

N.B. For S3 usage, only Virtual Host based S3 urls are supported. Why? Because AWS is deprecating the path-style access to buckets. https://aws.amazon.com/blogs/aws/amazon-s3-path-deprecation-plan-the-rest-of-the-story/

Installation

The easiest way to install dbt is via a tool called gomason. You can build via go build and move the files any which way you like, but gomason makes it easy.

If you don't want to make any changes to the code or tools:

  1. Fork the repo.

  2. Change the metadata.json file to reflect your own repository setup and preferences. Specifically you need to change the repository and tool-repository lines.

  3. Install gomason via go get github.com/nikogura/gomason. Then run gomason publish. If you have it all set up correctly, it should build and install the binary as well as the installer script for your version of DBT together with the tools catalog, boilerplate, and reposerver.

  4. Run the installer you built. It'll be found in <repo>/install_dbt.sh. With an HTTP reposerver like Artifactory or DBT's internal server, you can install this script via curl https://your.repo.host/path/to/install_dbt.sh | bash. If you're using S3 as your backend, you will have to do it in 2 steps: 1. aws s3 cp s3://<your bucket>/install_dbt.sh install_dbt.sh. 2. bash install_dbt.sh. This 2 step is forced by the aws cli not being able to feed a downloaded object directly to bash. (Or at least, I haven't figured out how to make it do so - yet!)

  5. Verify installation by running: dbt catalog list.

Customization Steps

The above is fine if you want dbt straight out of the box. If you want different behavior, or to modify the templates, you'll need to do some extra work.

This will entail replacing the pesky nikogura parts out of the package names and replacing them with the name of your github organization (or other VCS provider). I know right? That Nik guy, he causes so many problems...

To customise:

  1. Fork the repo.

  2. Change the metadata.json file to reflect your own repository setup and preferences. You need to change the repository, tool-repository, and package lines.

  3. You'll also need to change the package name in go.mod, cmd/dbt/main.go, cmd/boilerplate/main.go, cmd/catalog/main.go cmd/reposerver/main.go and TestPackageGroup in pkg/dbt/dbt_setup_test.go. Essentially, you'll need to wire it up so that your fork is referencing itself, not my public repo. Basic golang stuff. Don't forget to check your changes into your fork.

  4. Install gomason via go get github.com/nikogura/gomason. Then run gomason publish. If you have it all set up correctly, it should build and install the binary as well as the installer script for your version of DBT.

  5. Run the installer you built. It'll be found in <repo>/install_dbt.sh.

With an HTTP reposerver like Artifactory or DBT's internal server, you can install this script via curl https://your.repo.host/path/to/install_dbt.sh | bash.

If you're using S3 as your backend, you will have to do it in 2 steps:

  1. aws s3 cp s3://<your bucket>/install_dbt.sh install_dbt.sh.

  2. bash install_dbt.sh.

This 2 step is forced by the aws cli not being able to feed a downloaded object directly to bash. (Or at least, I haven't figured out how to make it do so - yet!)

  1. Verify installation by running: dbt catalog list .

The details of what all is supported in metadata.json can be found in https://github.com/nikogura/gomason.

If you run into trouble, run gomason publish -v to see what went wrong. It's wordy, but fairly precise about what it's trying to do. Typically errors stem from either bad perms in your repository, or typos in metadata.json.

If your metadata.json has the following:

"repository": "http://localhost:8081/artifactory/dbt"

Then you should see a file http://localhost:8081/artifactory/dbt/install_dbt.sh, which you can run with:

    bash -c "$(curl http://localhost:8081/artifactory/dbt/install_dbt.sh)" 

And voila! Your DBT is now installed.

You will, however need to populate the truststore file, which by default, with the above config would be located at http://localhost:8081/artifactory/dbt/truststore. This file contains the PEM encoded public keys of the entities you trust to create DBT binaries. You can edit this file by hand, it's just a bunch of PEM data squashed together.

AUTHOR'S NOTE: When I personally maintain an internal fork, I set up a clone of the fork with 2 upstreams: 'origin' is my internal fork, and 'upstream' which is the public github.com/nikogura/dbt. Then I make all my internal changes as required, and when upstream changes, do a git pull upstream .... Usually the only changes/conflicts are in the metadata.json.

Correct the conflicts in metadata.json, commit, and git push origin master and my CI system takes it from there. It sounds complicated, and it's certainly not trivial, but it's been very reliable to date.

Rest assured, when I come across a better method, I will not keep it to myself.

Configuration

Dbt uses a config file typically located in ~/.dbt/conf/dbt.json

An example dbt config file:

    {
      "dbt": {
        "repository": "http://localhost:8081/dbt",
        "truststore": "http://localhost:8081/dbt/truststore"
      },
      "tools": {
        "repository": "http://localhost:8081/dbt-tools"
      }
      "username": "",
      "password": "",
      "usernamefunc": "echo $USERNAME",
      "passwordfunc": "echo $PASSWORD"
    }

It contains sections for the dbt tool itself, as well as for the tools dbt will download and run.

The individual sections are detailed below.

dbt

This section applies to the dbt binary itself. The dbt binary doesn't do much in and of itself beyond download , verify, and run tools, but this is where you set the degree of paranoia on the system by setting the truststore.

It's also conceivable that dbt itself might need a higher level of paranoia than the tools. It's all up to you.

repository

Url of the trusted repository.

truststore

Url of the truststore. This file contains the public keys of the trusted authors of dbt binaries. This can be a single ascii armored public key such as:

    -----BEGIN PGP PUBLIC KEY BLOCK-----

    mQENBFowLigBCAC++pVrVRRM86Wo8V7XJsOmU2xtBBY5a8ktB1tdpEhzlPWQHObx
    LINj79HE3lRlIFQmxnKcX3I15bzT3yo3XWLyVUsCDA1Mg9JoU2zJ+u3XftdNBg8J
    eRlTiEwZYflxEYZFSyh3TZI2VZxxlINp/jOGG0dpAdKF3sfKxdTRb30lgDr+wIzv
    oncrjX023UQDHoRZ3f+zPpnkubjhwH8jUHLiGsyKvu0XDB0c4y/6yG6vLUMQDuKX
    bkzBtssdLLA6MTur9Q26dQV/DvuNZdHx17vwXSvf/JMKdWcX80fsAJD644KW9DOg
    pgLqtBa4Tfutt3S8ueIHDnPZBKFL0u+Q61xvABEBAAG0HERCVCBUZXN0IFN1aXRl
    IDxkYnRAZGJ0LmNvbT6JAVQEEwEIAD4WIQTdbDzq2B9JD2WAtKLOaEY1/aXTHwUC
    WjAuKAIbAwUJA8JnAAULCQgHAgYVCAkKCwIEFgIDAQIeAQIXgAAKCRDOaEY1/aXT
    H52LCACYqQnVmJRarckqh1//FUFFpXlTcwWV2zGr3CEFRs0BrWEQD7giehFpKoTL
    JOJJSFd4xcbo/9wMXpJ16soK83o48laxkj+2LDUfDylnTVpVI6zVvAseqnt5nbrA
    CWes75FeIHtQ6woDy7K3RHUORNZ+K37MaH3Wmp1TzwY/vATQyWc9qUebGitxWuVD
    RdtTEcq6WniDWAJ5FqhHZ3TV/hK7QPTi1gaHG+yJZeXuajsNo6CLrfJy6H6itEfi
    XKOns2fiGE/pPxjJpfdTOQipFmw68FuNo8i/A0Nc//d43ejcrqAb9fAKOOTZrpw+
    MoqMsFm6V8j+ZN+oKHKSPaD4i6iNuQENBFowLigBCADKSSCJNCY0vPVz8RaCy/uJ
    byiZ4dkEUIFkE4TKFCulG8QUMdfczUtYfuUH4ir5vNsG2vxHqDo7W0CBZ1nZjVW9
    uUy0TrNrVEsPDcMEqn827oK/pqQmlPq6wxGr6qfrMeAnQKKyQpYA0bwWDxwJ6BBb
    0Lw/YyulbLyoCEUPm4Usn+WA8xvUxoWYj/pjg773OLyoznETQiabieNpTmkgad6x
    0mH1mbjT0r0RCR0ZUqL1tjGUAfIEr58AVKvP4vZT8jw4quma2QFKLrSswF/bCXqr
    K/Eqm+S2lDcOUlY35/fZrBt9Mmr8dF00KYWeND0NE0HFB1cpK5bhHKqMSuwOlrbn
    ABEBAAGJATwEGAEIACYWIQTdbDzq2B9JD2WAtKLOaEY1/aXTHwUCWjAuKAIbDAUJ
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    zHBlhCAdlhsz+4TN+d04QprL2RW86TsIebptwxUscjqJ8lXO
    =b72A
    -----END PGP PUBLIC KEY BLOCK-----

The file can consist of multiple public keys such as:

    -----BEGIN PGP PUBLIC KEY BLOCK-----

    mQENBFowLigBCAC++pVrVRRM86Wo8V7XJsOmU2xtBBY5a8ktB1tdpEhzlPWQHObx
    LINj79HE3lRlIFQmxnKcX3I15bzT3yo3XWLyVUsCDA1Mg9JoU2zJ+u3XftdNBg8J
    eRlTiEwZYflxEYZFSyh3TZI2VZxxlINp/jOGG0dpAdKF3sfKxdTRb30lgDr+wIzv
    oncrjX023UQDHoRZ3f+zPpnkubjhwH8jUHLiGsyKvu0XDB0c4y/6yG6vLUMQDuKX
    bkzBtssdLLA6MTur9Q26dQV/DvuNZdHx17vwXSvf/JMKdWcX80fsAJD644KW9DOg
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    IDxkYnRAZGJ0LmNvbT6JAVQEEwEIAD4WIQTdbDzq2B9JD2WAtKLOaEY1/aXTHwUC
    WjAuKAIbAwUJA8JnAAULCQgHAgYVCAkKCwIEFgIDAQIeAQIXgAAKCRDOaEY1/aXT
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    0mH1mbjT0r0RCR0ZUqL1tjGUAfIEr58AVKvP4vZT8jw4quma2QFKLrSswF/bCXqr
    K/Eqm+S2lDcOUlY35/fZrBt9Mmr8dF00KYWeND0NE0HFB1cpK5bhHKqMSuwOlrbn
    ABEBAAGJATwEGAEIACYWIQTdbDzq2B9JD2WAtKLOaEY1/aXTHwUCWjAuKAIbDAUJ
    A8JnAAAKCRDOaEY1/aXTH63LB/4qt+H+3HNEvaRgigod+srkxyT/nQH1tLSHQtht
    fukuCgNY7J1y/qGroZxZbB6HSJi//64CH0bV0P06nNoDJt2lPJxKA8nuhxiFEZkf
    ACqtJB4W6CUUIZws9YSxVuV84gHZ4g1eQ6mO99R/4jCbhGCebxr0IgPxkulao9Z+
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    vAh3MTVCC0qvQq4V1T1yTCYZ+J7p5wrt1UsBCtYKJfKTeAZN9T7Ji3LVr4jUG2Gn
    zHBlhCAdlhsz+4TN+d04QprL2RW86TsIebptwxUscjqJ8lXO
    =b72A
    -----END PGP PUBLIC KEY BLOCK-----
    -----BEGIN PGP PUBLIC KEY BLOCK-----

    mQENBFpAPGYBCACtRHQZMgHhmETN6X6MCkP7H88jVBSTwhMoZgk0vl6BWK832Uvi
    SMGiZ63uiPkzoUwOtFhexE0QYgKvGPLTm7RWK2aPmsQOk1o+ksFElsRJxT7LzPEM
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    =KIOK
    -----END PGP PUBLIC KEY BLOCK-----

There's nothing magical about this file. It's just the keys you've decided to trust, concatenated together. Comments after an -----END PGP PUBLIC KEY BLOCK----- or before an -----BEGIN PGP PUBLIC KEY BLOCK--- are ignored, and can be quite useful for humans trying to maintain this file.

tools

This section is for the tools dbt downloads, verifies, and runs for you.

repository

Url of the repo where the tools are stored. This is where tools are found, and where the tool catalog looks for tools.

username

Username if basic auth is used on repos. (Optional)

password

Password if basic auth is used on repos. (Optional)

usernamefunc

Shell function to retrieive username.

passwordfunc

Shell funciton to retrieve password.