Otterdog is a tool to manage GitHub organizations at scale using a configuration as code approach. It is actively developed by the Eclipse Foundation and used to manage its numerous projects hosted on GitHub.
To install and use the cli part of otterdog you have to install the following:
- git (mandatory): install using
apt install git
- go (mandatory): install using
apt install golang-1.23
orsnap install go
- otterdog (mandatory): install using
pipx install otterdog
- bitwarden cli tool (optional): install using
snap install bw
- pass cli tool (optional): install using
apt install pass
Otterdog Presentation @ Open Source Summit 2023
Default Configuration used @ Eclipse Foundation
The documentation is available at otterdog.readthedocs.io.
- python3.10+ (mandatory): e.g. install using
apt install python3
orpyenv
- git (mandatory): install using
apt install git
- go (mandatory): install using
apt install golang-1.23
orsnap install go
- poetry (mandatory): install using
curl -sSL https://install.python-poetry.org | python3 -
orpipx install poetry
- bitwarden cli tool (optional): install using
snap install bw
- pass cli tool (optional): install using
apt install pass
- Create a virtual python environment and install necessary python dependencies using poetry:
$ make init
- Testing build
$ ./otterdog.sh -h
The general configuration for supported organizations and their corresponding credentials in order to access their GitHub settings has to be placed in a json file (default: otterdog.json, can be changed with the -c flag), e.g.:
{
"organizations": [
{
"name": "<org name>",
"github_id": "<github org id>",
"credentials": {
"provider": "<bitwarden | pass>",
"item_id" : "39adacc9-2b51-41a9-a27e-ac7c00eea6a5"
}
}
]
}
Otterdog needs certain credentials to access information from an organization and its repositories on GitHub:
- username / password / 2FA seed
- API token
The login / username / 2FA seed are required to access the web interface of GitHub in order to retrieve certain settings that are not accessible via its rest / graphql API.
The GitHub api token needs to have the following scopes enabled:
- repo
- workflow
- admin:org
- admin:org_hook
- delete_repo
The credentials can be stored in different providers (bitwarden, pass).
When using bitwarden to store the credentials, you need to enter a valid item id as additional credential data:
{
"organizations": [
{
"name": "<org name>",
"github_id": "<github org id>",
"credentials": {
"provider": "bitwarden",
"item_id" : "<bitwarden item id>"
}
}
]
}
The item stored in bitwarden needs to contain the following information (a sample json output of such an item):
{
"object": "item",
"id": "<bitwarden item id>",
"name": "<item name>",
"fields": [
{
"name": "api_token_admin",
"value": "<github API token>"
}
],
"login": {
"username": "<github username>",
"password": "<github password>",
"totp": "<github TOTP text code>"
}
}
Mandatory items:
- Field with name "api_token_admin" and as value the GitHub token to access the organization
- login.username of a user that can access the organization with enabled 2FA
- login.password the password of that user
- login.totp the TOTP text code
When using pass to store the credentials, you need to enter fully qualified pass names to access the various required credential data:
{
"organizations": [
{
"name": "<org name>",
"github_id": "<github org id>",
"credentials": {
"provider": "pass",
"api_token": "<path/to/api_token>",
"username": "<path/to/username>",
"password": "<path/to/password>",
"2fa_seed": "<path/to/2fa_seed>"
}
}
]
}
In case your password storage dir is not located at the default location, you can
configurate that in the defaults
:
{
"defaults": {
"pass": {
"password_store_dir": "path/to/storage/dir"
}
}
}
Run the import operation to retrieve the current live configuration for an organization:
$ otterdog.sh import <organization>
The created configuration file for the organization can be found at <data-directory>/orgs/<organization>.jsonnet
Run the plan operation to highlight differences between the live configuration and the written configuration:
$ otterdog.sh plan <organization>
Run apply operation to reflect the written configuration on github itself:
$ otterdog.sh apply <organization>