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Render text/configuration jinja2 templates with shell environment variables containing json, base64, consul keys, file references, hashicorp vault secrets, ....

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e2j2 [Build Status Coverage Status ]

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This project is moved to gitlab

e2j2 (environment to jinja2 variables) is a commandline tool which will render jinja2 templates to textfiles. all environment variables can be used in the jinja2 templates, within the environment variables you can use special tags which give you the option to insert json, json file paths, base64 hashes, consul kv keys.

e2j2 can be used within docker containers, or for other simple configuration templating tasks. Within a docker container you can simply add the j2 extention to a configuration file, or to multiple files within one or more folder structures and then run e2j2 as part of your docker entrypoint script.

Most flags can be set on either the command line or in a json formatted config file. The following flags / configuration keys are supported:

Switch Type Config key Type Description
-h, --help       Show help text and exit
-v, --version       Show version number
-e, --ext, --extension string extension string Jinja2 file extention (default: .j2)
-f, --filelist comma separated list filelist array List of jinja2 templates
-s, --searchlist comma separated list searchlist array List of directories to search for templates (default: current directory)
-N, --noop       skip writing template to disk
-r, --recursive   recursive boolean Traverse recursively through the search list
--no-color, --nocolor   no_color boolean Disable ANSI color
-2, --twopass   twopass boolean Enable two pass rendering
-n, --nested-tags   nested_tags boolean Enable support for nested tags
-m, --marker-set string marker_set string Select marker set (default: '{{')
-A, --autodetect-marker-set   autodetect_marker_set boolean Autodetect marker set, fallback to defined marker set
--block-start string block_start string Block marker start (default from marker set)
--block-end string block_end string Block marker start (default: from marker set)
--variable-start string block_start string Variable marker start (default: from marker set)
--variable-end string variable_end string Variable marker end (default: from marker set)
--comment-start string comment_start string Comment marker start (default: from marker set)
--comment-end string comment_end string Comment marker start (default: from marker set)
-w, --env-whitelist comma separated list env_whitelist array List of envars to include
-b, --env-blacklist comma separated list env_blacklist array List of envars to exclude
-P, --copy-file_permissions   copy_file_permissions boolean Copy file permissions and ownership from template to rendered file
-S, --stacktrace   stacktrace boolean Include stacktrace in error file
--stderr     boolean Print to stderr instead of to error file
-c, --config string     Config file path
--watchlist comma separated list watchlist array Watch listed envvars for changes and render template(s) on change
-R, --run string run array Run command after rendering templates (command arg1, ..)
--splay int splay integer Random delay between 1 and X seconds between watchlist polls
--initial-run   render templates before starting watch    

By default only the jinja2 builtin filters are supported this can be extended by installing the jinja2-ansible-filters module.

lets assume we want to render the following server block in nginx, if we place the server configuration in a nginx include directory for example /etc/nginx/conf.d

server {
  server_name {{ NGINX.server_name }};
  listen 80;
  listen [::]:80;
  error_page 500 502 503 504 /50x.html;

  location / {
    index {{ NGINX.index_page }};
    root {{ NGINX.web_root }};
  }

  location ~ \.php$ {
    fastcgi_index index.php;
    fastcgi_param SCRIPT_FILENAME  $document_root$fastcgi_script_name;
    fastcgi_pass unix:{{ NGINX.fpm_socket }};
    fastcgi_split_path_info ^(.+\.php)(/.+)$;
    include {{ NGINX.fcgi_params }};
    root {{ NGINX.web_root }};
    try_files $uri =404;
  }
}

if you then set the NGINX environment variable, running e2j2 will render the jinja2 template and place it in the same folder:

~> export NGINX='json:
{
"server_name": "www.myweb.com",
"index_page": "index.php",
"web_root": "/usr/local/www/myweb",
"fcgi_params": "/usr/local/etc/nginx/myweb-fcgi-params",
"fpm_socket": "/var/run/php-fpm/myweb.socket"
}'
~> e2j2

In: .
    rendering: nginx_vhost_config.conf.j2=>done => writing: nginx_vhost_config.conf=>done

~> cat nginx_vhost_config.conf
server {
  server_name www.myweb.com;
  listen 80;
  listen [::]:80;
  error_page 500 502 503 504 /50x.html;

  location / {
    index index.php;
    root /usr/local/www/myweb;
  }

  location ~ \.php$ {
    fastcgi_index index.php;
    fastcgi_param SCRIPT_FILENAME  $document_root$fastcgi_script_name;
    fastcgi_pass unix:/var/run/php-fpm/myweb.socket;
    fastcgi_split_path_info ^(.+\.php)(/.+)$;
    include /usr/local/etc/nginx/myweb-fcgi-params;
    root /usr/local/www/roundcube;
    try_files $uri =404;
  }
}

Example:

setting:

MYENVVAR='plain environment variable'

will render envvar-example.j2 to:

This is a plain environment variable

Example:

setting:

MYFILEVAR=file:./file-example.txt

will render file-example.j2 to:

This is a file example

Example:

setting:

MYJSONVAR='json:{"key": "json-example"}'

will render json-example.j2 to:

This is a json-example

Example:

setting:

MYJSONFILEVAR='jsonfile:jsonfile-example.json'

will render jsonfile-example.j2 to:

This is a jsonfile example with subkey

Example:

Setting:

export MYBASE64VAR='base64:YmFzZTY0IGV4YW1wbGU='

will render base64-example.j2 to:

This is a base64 example

Configuration:

You can configure the consul tag by setting the CONSUL_CONFIG environment variable. The following config items are supported:

Item Explanation Default
url consul url http://127.0.0.1:8500
scheme consul url scheme http or https scheme from url
host consul host hostname from url
port consul http(s) port port from url
token consul token none

Global config example:

read -d '' CONSUL_CONFIG << EOF
{
   "url": "https://consul.foobar.tld",
   "token": "abcdef01-0123-abcd-1234-0123456789ab"
}
EOF

The ACL token can be configured by either the above configuration or by setting the CONSUL_TOKEN variable.

As an alternative for the global configuration it is also possible to configure / adjust the global configuration for each consul tag, by simply include the configuration when using the consul tag.

CONSUL_TOKEN and config key token can either contain the actual token or point to a file containing the token, use the file: tag to point to a file.

Tag config examples:

export MYCONSULVAR='consul:config={"url": "https://consul2.foobar.tld", "token": "012345678-0123-abcd-1234-0123456789ab"}:consulvar"
export MYCONSULVAR='consul:config={"url": "https://consul2.foobar.tld", "token": "file:/path/to/token"}:consulvar"

Consul example:

Setting:

key: consulvar in consul to value: consul example

and

export MYCONSULVAR='consul:consulvar'

will render consul-example.j2 to:

This is a consul example

Example:

Setting:

export MYLIST='list:"first","second","third","fourth"'

will render list-example.j2 to:

"first"
"second"
"third"
"fourth"

Starting from version 0.1.12 e2j2 supports embedding jinja2 macros in environment variables.

Example:

Setting the following two environment variables:

export WORDPRESS='json:{"database": {"name": "mydb", "user": "mydb_user", "password": "{{ DBSECRET }}", "host": "localhost"}}'
export DBSECRET='file:./twopass-secret'

will render (by running: e2j2 -f twopass-example.j2 -2) to:

// ** MySQL settings - You can get this info from your web host ** //
/** The name of the database for WordPress */
define( 'DB_NAME', 'mydb' );

/** MySQL database username */
define( 'DB_USER', 'mydb_user' );

/** MySQL database password */
define( 'DB_PASSWORD', 'Db$ecr3t' );

/** MySQL hostname */
define( 'DB_HOST', 'localhost' );

In version 0.5.0 support was introduced for nested tag variables, so the above listed example can be simplified. The DBSECRET variable is no longer needed, if the WORDPRESS variable is changed to:

export WORDPRESS='json:{"database": {"name": "mydb", "user": "mydb_user", "password": "file:./twopass-secret", "host": "localhost"}}'

If needed you can escape e2j2 tags by using the escape tag

Configuration:

You can configure the vault tag by setting the VAULT_CONFIG environment variable. The following config items are supported:

Item Explanation Default
url vault url http://127.0.0.1:8200
scheme vault url scheme http or https scheme from url
host vault host hostname from url
port vault http(s) port port from url
backend vault secret backend raw
token vault token none

the following backends are supported:

backend Description
raw use plain GET request to secret store API
kv1 key/value version 1
kv2 key/value version 2

Global config example:

read -d '' VAULT_CONFIG << EOF
 {
   "url": "https://vault.foobar.tld:8200",
   "token": "s.xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx",
   "backend: "kv2"
 }
EOF

The Authentication token can be configured by either the above configuration or by setting the VAULT_TOKEN variable.

As an alternative for the global configuration it is also possible to configure / adjust the global configuration for each vault tag, by simply include the configuration when using the vault tag.

VAULT_TOKEN and config key token can either contain the actual token or point to a file containing the token, use the file: tag to point to a file.

Tag config example:

export MYVAULTVAR='vault:config={"backend": "kv2", "token": "s.xxxxxxxxx"}:kv/my-secret"
export MYVAULTVAR='vault:config={"backend": "kv2", "token": "file:/path/to/token"}:kv/my-secret"

Vault example:

Setting:

vault kv put secret/my-secret secret=topsecret
export MYVAULTVAR='vault:secret/my-secret'

will render vault-kv1-example.j2 (by running: e2j2 -f vault-example.j2) to:

** topsecret **
This is a vault example

Configuration:

You can configure the dns tag by setting the DNS_CONFIG environment variable. The following config items are supported:

Item Explanation Default
nameservers overwrite nameservers use system resolvers
port overwrite dns port 53
type record type (A, AAAA or SRV) A

the supported record types will return a dict with the following keys:

Type Keys
A address
AAAA address
SRV target, port, weight, priority

DNS example:

Assuming a consul node running on localhost with the default dns port 8600.

Setting the DNS_CONFIG variable:

read -d '' DNS_CONFIG << EOF
 {
   "nameservers": ['127.0.0.1'],
   "port": 8600,
   "type": "SRV"
 }
EOF

Setting:

export MYDNSVAR='dns:consul.service.consul'

will render dns-example.j2 (by running: e2j2 -f dns-example.j2) to:

My consul node:
node1.node.dc1.consul. listening on port 8300

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Render text/configuration jinja2 templates with shell environment variables containing json, base64, consul keys, file references, hashicorp vault secrets, ....

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