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JFrog CLI

Setup JFrog CLI

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Table of Contents

Overview

This GitHub Action downloads, installs and configures JFrog CLI, so that it can be used as part of the workflow.

Additionally, the Action incorporates the following features when utilizing JFrog CLI to interact with the JFrog Platform:

  • Versatile authentication methods - Three distinct methods are available for authenticating with the JFrog Platform.
  • Seamless build info generation - All build related operations will be automatically recorded, and the collected build info will be published at the end of the workflow. There's no need to add the build name and build number options and arguments to commands which accept them, and no need to run jf rt build-publish for the build to be published.
  • Extensive Job Summary - A detailed summary of key JFrog CLI commands executed during the workflow will be generated and displayed in the GitHub Actions run page.

Usage

- uses: jfrog/setup-jfrog-cli@v4
# + Authentication method
- run: jf --version

Authentication Methods

JFrog CLI integrates with the JFrog Platform. In order to facilitate this connection, certain connection details of the JFrog Platform must be provided. There are three methods to provide these details, and you only need to choose one method:

👤 Connecting to JFrog using OIDC (OpenID Connect)

General

The sensitive connection details, such as the access token used by JFrog CLI on the JFrog platform, can be automatically generated by the action instead of storing it as a secret in GitHub. This is made possible by leveraging the OpenID-Connect (OIDC) protocol. This protocol can authenticate the workflow issuer and supply a valid access token, requiring only the JF_URL environment variable. Learn more about this integration in this blog post. To utilize the OIDC protocol, follow these steps:

JFrog Platform configuration

  1. Configure an OIDC Integration: This phase sets an integration between GitHub Actions to the JFrog platform.
    1. Navigate to the Administration tab In the JFrog Platform UI
    2. Click General | Manage Integrations
    3. Click New Integration | OpenID Connect: New Integration
    4. Configure the OIDC integration: Configure OIDC integration
NOTE:
The value specified as the 'Provider Name' should be used as the oidc-provider-name input in Workflow configuration step 2 below.
The 'Audience' field does not represent the 'aud' claim for insertion into the identity-mapping in Platform configuration step 2 below. Only the claims included in the Claims Json created during step 2 will be validated.
  1. Configure an identity mapping: This phase sets an integration between a particular GitHub repository to the JFrog platform.

    An identity mapping is a configuration object utilized by the JFrog Platform to associate incoming OIDC claims with particular selected fields. These fields might include repository, actor, workflow, and others. To configure the identity mapping, click on the identity mapping created in section 1 and then click on Add Identity Mapping. Fill in priority 1 and fill out all required fields: New OIDC Integration

    You have the flexibility to define any valid list of claims required for request authentication. You can check a list of the possible claims here. Example Claims JSON:

    {
        "repository": "repository-owner/repository-name"
    }

Workflow configuration

  1. Set required permissions: In the course of the protocol's execution, it's imperative to acquire a JSON Web Token (JWT) from GitHub's OIDC provider. To request this token, it's essential to configure the specified permission in the workflow file:

    permissions:
        id-token: write
  2. Pass the 'oidc-provider-name' input to the Action (Required): The 'oidc-provider-name' parameter designates the OIDC configuration whose one of its identity mapping should align with the generated JWT claims. This input needs to align with the 'Provider Name' value established within the OIDC configuration in the JFrog Platform.

  3. Pass the 'oidc-audience' input to the Action (Optional): The 'oidc-audience' input defines the intended recipients of an ID token (JWT), ensuring access is restricted to authorized recipients for the JFrog Platform. By default, it contains the URL of the GitHub repository owner. It enforces a condition, allowing only workflows within the designated repository/organization to request an access token. Read more about it here.

Example step utilizing OpenID Connect:

- uses: jfrog/setup-jfrog-cli@v4
  env:
      JF_URL: ${{ vars.JF_URL }}
  with:
      oidc-provider-name: setup-jfrog-cli

Notice: When using OIDC authentication, this action outputs both the OIDC token and the OIDC token username. These can be utilized within the current workflow to log into the JFrog platform through other actions or clients (e.g., for use with docker login). The added outputs are oidc-token and oidc-user, respectively.

🔐 Storing the connection details using environment variables

The connection details of the JFrog platform used by this action can be stored as GitHub secrets (or GitHub Variables for non-secret values)

You can set the connection details to your JFrog Platform by using one of the following combinations:

  1. JF_URL (no authentication)
  2. JF_URL + JF_USER + JF_PASSWORD (basic authentication)
  3. JF_URL + JF_ACCESS_TOKEN (authentication using a JFrog Access Token)

You can use these environment variables in your workflow as follows:

- uses: jfrog/setup-jfrog-cli@v4
  env:
    # JFrog Platform url
    JF_URL: ${{ vars.JF_URL }} # or 'https://acme.jfrog.io'

    # Basic authentication credentials
    JF_USER: ${{ secrets.JF_USER }}
    JF_PASSWORD: ${{ secrets.JF_PASSWORD }}
    # or
    # JFrog Platform access token
    JF_ACCESS_TOKEN: ${{ secrets.JF_ACCESS_TOKEN }}
- run: |
    jf rt ping
⚙️ Storing the connection details using single Config Token

  1. Make sure JFrog CLI is installed on your local machine by running jf -v.
  2. Configure the details of the JFrog platform by running jf c add.
  3. Export the details of the JFrog platform you configured, using the server ID you chose. Do this by running jf c export <SERVER ID>.
  4. Copy the generated Config Token to the clipboard and save it as a secret on GitHub.

To use the saved JFrog platform configuration in the workflow, all you need to do it to expose the secret to the workflow. The secret should be exposed as an environment variable with the JFENV prefix. Here's how you do this:

- uses: jfrog/setup-jfrog-cli@v4
  env:
      JF_ENV_1: ${{ secrets.JF_SECRET_ENV_1 }}
- run: |
      # Ping the server
      jf rt ping

As you can see in the example above, we created a secret named JF_SECRET_ENV_1 and exposed it to the workflow as the JF_ENV_1 environment variable. That's it - the ping command will now ping the configured Artifactory server.

If you have multiple Config Tokens as secrets, you can use all of them in the workflow as follows:

- uses: jfrog/setup-jfrog-cli@v4
  env:
      JF_ENV_1: ${{ secrets.JF_SECRET_ENV_1 }}
      JF_ENV_2: ${{ secrets.JF_SECRET_ENV_2 }}
- run: |
      # Set the utilized JFrog configuration by providing the server ID (configured by the 'jf c add' command).
      jf c use local-1
      # Ping local-1 Artifactory server
      jf rt ping
      # Now use the second sever configuration exposed to the Action.
      jf c use local-2
      # Ping local-2 Artifactory server
      jf rt ping
Important: When exposing more than one JFrog configuration to the Action, you should always add the jf c use command to specify the server to use.
Important: If both Config Token(JF_ENV_*) and separate environment variables(JF_URL, ...) are provided, the default config will be the Config Token. To make the above separate environment variables as the default config use jf c use setup-jfrog-cli-server

General Configuration

Setting build name and number for build info publication to Artifactory

Setting Build Name and Number for Build Info Publication

Build info collection and publication to Artifactory happens seamlessly when using the action in your workflow.
The Action automatically sets the following environment variables: JFROG_CLI_BUILD_NAME and JFROG_CLI_BUILD_NUMBER with the workflow name and run number respectively. You therefore don't need to specify the build name and build number on any of the build related JFrog CLI commands.

In the following example, all downloaded files are registered as dependencies of the build and all uploaded files are registered as the build artifacts.

- run: |
      jf rt download "my-repo/artifacts/*" local-dir/
      jf rt upload "local-dir/*" new-repo/my-artifacts/
      jf rt build-publish

You may override the default build name and number by setting the following environment variables in your workflow:

env:
  JFROG_CLI_BUILD_NAME: "Custom build name"
  JFROG_CLI_BUILD_NUMBER: "123"
Setting JFrog CLI version

Setting JFrog CLI Version

By default, the JFrog CLI version set in action.yml is used. To set a specific version, add the version input as follows:

- uses: jfrog/setup-jfrog-cli@v4
  with:
      version: X.Y.Z

It is also possible to set the latest JFrog CLI version by adding the version input as follows:

- uses: jfrog/setup-jfrog-cli@v4
  with:
      version: latest
Important: Only JFrog CLI versions 1.46.4 or above are supported.
Setting the JFrog project key

Setting the JFrog Project Key

JFrog Projects are a management entity that hosts all your resources related to a specific project, such as repositories, builds and Release Bundles.

By default, the JFrog CLI accepts a project flag in some of its commands. You can set the project key in the environment variable JF_PROJECT to avoid passing it in each command.

- uses: jfrog/setup-jfrog-cli@v4
  env:
      JF_PROJECT: "project-key"
Downloading JFrog CLI from Artifactory

Downloading JFrog CLI from Artifactory

If your agent has no Internet access, you can configure the workflow to download JFrog CLI from a remote repository in your JFrog Artifactory, which is configured to proxy the official download URL.

Here's how you do this:

  1. Create a remote repository in Artifactory. Name the repository jfrog-cli-remote and set its URL to https://releases.jfrog.io/artifactory/jfrog-cli/

  2. Set download-repository input to jfrog-cli-remote:

    - uses: jfrog/setup-jfrog-cli@v4
      env:
          # JFrog platform url (for example: https://acme.jfrog.io)
          JF_URL: ${{ vars.JF_URL }}
          JF_ACCESS_TOKEN: ${{ secrets.JF_ACCESS_TOKEN }}
    
      with:
          download-repository: jfrog-cli-remote

JFrog Job Summary

Workflows using this GitHub action will output a summary of some of the key commands that were performed using JFrog CLI.

The summary can be viewed from the GitHub Actions run page and is enabled by default.

Preconditions

To fully leverage from the JFrog Job Summary, one should:

  1. Use JFrog CLI version 2.66.0 or above.
  2. Set JF_URL as a GitHub Variable rather than a GitHub Secret (see note below).

NOTE: The Job Summary includes direct links to the JFrog Platform UI, for applicable licenses. For the links to function correctly, JF_URL should be set as a variable rather than a secret. This is to prevent GitHub from masking the URL.

Default Behavior:

By default, build-info will be collected during the workflow and automatically published to Artifactory when the workflow completes.

This behavior is disabled if the jf rt build-publish command was manually run during the workflow, or if requested explicitly by setting the disable-auto-build-publish input to true:

- uses: jfrog/setup-jfrog-cli@v4
  with:
    disable-auto-build-publish: true

To disable the JFrog Job Summary altogether, set the disable-job-summary input to true:

- uses: jfrog/setup-jfrog-cli@v4
  with:
    disable-job-summary: true

Published Sections

Section Command
Curation Audit jf mvn install
jf npm install
jf pip/pipenv/poetry install
jf go build
Build Info jf rt build-publish (automatically or manually)
Build Info: Security jf build-scan
Published Modules: Artifacts jf docker push, jf rt build-docker-create
jf mvn install
jf npm publish
jf twine upload
jf go publish
jf terraform publish
jf rt upload
Published Modules: Security jf docker scan
Code Scanning jf docker scan, jf scan

JFrog Job Summary Example

JFrog-Job-Summary

Behind the scenes

The setup-jfrog-cli GitHub Action leverages the Command Summaries feature of the JFrog CLI to generate a detailed summary of the entire workflow.

The final summary will include the summary of each CLI command that supports this feature. To read more about the JFrog CLI supported commands, visit the following link: JFrog CLI Command Summaries Documentation.

Code Scanning Alerts

Note: To use code scanning alerts, ensure you are using JFrog CLI version v2.67.0 or above.

The action also supports the display of code scanning alerts in the GitHub Actions UI.

Code scanning alerts are generated following the execution of the jf docker scan and jf scan commands.

This feature is available for customers with an Artifactory Enterprise license or above.

Preconditions

JF_GIT_TOKEN - GitHub token with security-events: write permission.

You can utilize ${{secrets.GITHUB_TOKEN}} for JF_GIT_TOKEN, which is an automatically generated token by GitHub.

permissions:
  id-token: write
  contents: read
  # Required for uploading code scanning.
  security-events: write
- uses: jfrog/setup-jfrog-cli@v4
  env:
    # The GitHub token is automatically generated for the job
    JF_GIT_TOKEN: ${{ secrets.GITHUB_TOKEN }}

Code Scanning Alerts Example:

Code-Scanning-Alerts

Example Projects

To help you get started, you can use these sample projects on GitHub.

Contributions

We welcome pull requests from the community. To help us improve this project, please read our Contribution guide.

References

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