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fake-kms

v1.2.0

Published

Setup a fake KMS server for testing purposes

Downloads

5

Readme

fake-kms

Setup a fake KMS server for testing purposes

Example

const AWS = require('aws-sdk')
const FakeKMS = require('fake-kms').FakeKMS

async function test() {
  const server = new FakeKMS({
    port: 0,
    encrypt: {
      'SK_LIVE': 'a secret text'
    }
  })

  await server.bootstrap()

  const secrets = server.getCiphers()

  const kms = new AWS.KMS({
    endpoint: `http://${sever.hostPort}`,
    sslEnabled: false
  })

  const data = await kms.decrypt({
    CiphertextBlob: secrets['SK_LIVE']
  })

  // Should be `a secret text`
  console.log('the text', data.Plaintext.toString())

  await server.close()
}

process.on('unhandledRejection', (err) => { throw err })
test()

Features

Currently this fake-kms module only supports the kms.decrypt() method. Aka it has enough of an implementation to support calling decrypt on the aws-sdk.KMS.

The other functionality can be added in the future, as needed.

Docs :

const server = new FakeKMS(opts)

Creates a fake KMS server.

  • opts.port ; defaults to 0
  • opts.encrypt ; An object of key / value pairs that you want pre-created in the KMS.

await server.bootstrap()

Starts the server.

After bootstrap returns you can read server.hostPort to get the actual listening port of the server.

const secrets = server.getCiphers()

This returns an object of key / value pairs for all the secrets that have been encrypted in the KMS.

Each value is a valid CiphertextBlob as a base64 string that can be passed to the kms library in kms.decrypt()

await server.close()

Shuts down the server.

install

% npm install fake-kms

MIT Licensed