captainhook

A generic webhook endpoint that runs scripts based on the URL called

  • Owner: bketelsen/captainhook
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captainhook

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A generic webhook endpoint that runs scripts based on the URL called

This tool was built as part of a CI orchestration process, to be called when
Docker trusted builds finish. It explicitly ignores the posted data from the webhook
because that would be insecure, which is bad.

Shoulders of Giants

Captainhook would not be possible if not for all of the great projects it depends on. Please see SHOULDERS.md to see a list of them.

Quick Start

Install captainhook

go get github.com/bketelsen/captainhook

Create the configdir

mkdir ~/captainhook

Add a script

{
    "scripts": [
        {
            "command": "ls",
            "args": [
                "-l",
                "-a"
            ]
        },
        {
            "command": "echo",
            "args": [
		    "hello"
		    ]
        }
    ]
}

Name this script endpoint1.json

Start the service

captainhook -configdir ~/captainhook

Test using curl

curl -X POST http://localhost:8080/endpoint1

Configure calling webhooks

Each script you create in the configdir will be executed when
the corresponding endpoint is called.

If you have a script called deployBigApp.json you would trigger
it by posting to http://your.captainhook.url/deployBigApp.

The scripts in the json file are executed sequentially, and the output is logged
and returned to the caller in the response, which always has an HTTP status code
of 200 (OK) even if your scripts didn't work. This is intentional, to avoid causing
errors in external services like Docker or Github, which might not like you returning
statuses other than 200 (OK).

Accessing the Request POST Body

You'll sometimes need to access the POST data of the request for information such as a callback URL.
You can pass the raw POST data to a script by adding {{POST}} to the script arguments.

{
    "scripts": [
        {
            "command": "echo",
            "args": [
            "{{POST}}"
            ]
        }
    ]
}

Limiting access for webhooks

You can limit who can call your webhooks by specifying "allowedNetworks" in the json config.

{
    "scripts": [
        {
            "command": "echo"
        }
    ],
    "allowedNetworks": [
        "10.0.0.0/8",
        "127.0.0.1/32"
    ]
}

This would allow your hook to be called from the 10.0.0.0/8 network, or from localhost.

Supporting proxy headers for client IP

Only enable proxy support if you are on a trusted network behind a reverse proxy. End-users with direct network access can subvert the allowedNetworks restriction if proxy support is on.

captainhook -configdir ~/captainhook -enable-proxy -proxy-header X-Forwarded-For

Docker

docker pull bketelsen/captainhook
mkdir /some/local/config
$EDITOR /some/local/config/myhook.json
docker run -d -v /some/local/config:/config bketelsen/captainhook

Install

captainhook requires Go 1.10 to build locally with 'vgo' support.

go get github.com/bketelsen/captainhook

Build

Download

mkdir -p $GOPATH/src/github.com/bketelsen
cd $GOPATH/src/github.com/bketelsen
git clone git@github.com:bketelsen/captainhook.git
go build .

To Do

  • more logs

Copyright 2014, Brian Ketelsen and Kelsey Hightower
LICENSE information found in LICENSE file.

Main metrics

Overview
Name With Ownerbketelsen/captainhook
Primary LanguageGo
Program languageGo (Language Count: 4)
Platform
License:MIT License
所有者活动
Created At2014-05-20 16:13:14
Pushed At2022-10-19 13:51:03
Last Commit At2022-10-19 13:51:00
Release Count30
Last Release Namev0.1.22 (Posted on )
First Release Namev0.0.1 (Posted on )
用户参与
Stargazers Count317
Watchers Count14
Fork Count36
Commits Count119
Has Issues Enabled
Issues Count12
Issue Open Count4
Pull Requests Count11
Pull Requests Open Count0
Pull Requests Close Count2
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