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Trigger program/script execution on your server via http calls. Ships with a scheduler, templating and Github's CI support

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Nukesor/webhook-server

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Webhook-Server

GitHub release Actions Status License: MIT Paypal

Webhook server example

!!!! ATTENTION !!!!

Development on this project has stopped and the newest version no longer works! There are other more mature webhook server implementations, such as https://github.com/adnanh/webhook.

!!!! ATTENTION !!!!

This little helper serves a simple purpose: Execute commands on your server on incoming http requests. Initially, it has been designed for continuous integration and supports Github's webhooks out of the box.

By now, Webhook-Server also comes with a custom scheduler. By default, the scheduler prevents parallel deployments and unnecessary deployment executions. But in case you want to queue many parallel load-heavy long-running tasks, it allows you to specify the amount of concurrent tasks for each type, to prevent overburdening your system. Tasks can be processed in parallel or one-by-one, the mode of execution and amount of parallel processes can be configured per webhook type.

Example applications:

  • Continuous integration for projects (Supports Github's webhooks).
  • On-Demand execution of parallel load-heavy tasks.
  • Trigger tasks on your server via a browser.
  • Trigger tasks between servers with a minimal setup.

Take a look at the example config file webhook_server.yml.

Installation

Arch Linux:
Just install it with any package manager, e.g. yay -S webhook-server-git.

Releases:
Each release includes prebuild binaries for Linux, Mac and Windows. You can finde them in the releases tab of the project.

Manual installation:

git clone https://github.com/nukesor/webhook-server
cd webhook-server
cargo install --path .

Your $CARGO_HOME/bin folder should be in your $PATH.

Configuration

Webhook-Server is configured via files in this order:

  • /etc/webhook_server.yml
  • ~/.config/webhook_server.yml
  • ./webhook_server.yml

Config values of higher hierarchy config files are overwritten by lower hierarchy config files. E.g. a value in /etc/webhook_server.yml can be overwritten by ~/.config/webhook_server.yml.

Mac-OS:

  • ~/Library/Application Support/webhook_server.yml
  • ~/Library/Preferences/webhook_server.yml
  • ./webhook_server.yml

Windows:

  • $APPDATA$\Roaming\webhook_server\webhook_server.yml
  • .\webhook_server.yml

Config values

  • domain (127.0.0.1) The domain the server should listen on
  • port (8000) The port the server should listen on
  • ssl_private_key (null) Path to SSL private key. The server will use it's own ssl certificate. Recommended, if you aren't using a proxy webserver, that already uses SSL. Using any kind of SSL is highly recommended, especially if you publicly expose your endpoint.
  • ssl_cert_chain (null) Path to SSL cert. Also required for SSL setup.
  • workers (4) The amount of workers for parallel webhook processing. If you plan on processing a LOT of requests or triggering long running task, increase the worker count.
  • basic_auth_user (null) Your user if you want to do basic auth. Check the Building a request section for more information on basic_auth headers
  • basic_auth_password (null) Your password if you want to do basic auth.
  • secret (null) A secret for authentication via payload signature verification. Check the Building a request section for more information on signature headers. Can be, for instance, be created with pwgen 25 1
  • basic_auth_and_secret (false) By default it's only required to authenticate via BasicAuth OR signature authentication. If you want to be super safe, set this to true to require both.
  • webhooks A list of webhooks. The whole thing looks pretty much like this:
webhooks:
  -
    name: 'ls'
    command: '/bin/ls {{param1}} {{param2}}'
    cwd: '/home/user'

Webhook config values

  • name The name of the webhook, also the endpoint that's used to trigger the webhooks. E.g. localhost:8000/ls.
  • command The command thats actually used. If you want to dynamically build the command, you can use templating parameters like {{name_of_parameter}}.
  • cwd The current working directory the command should be executed from.
  • mode (deploy) Determines the mode at which the command shall be executed.
    1. deploy At most one queued AND at most one running. This is the default.
    2. single At most one queued OR running Item per webhook type
    3. parallel Unlimited queued and a default of max 4 parallel tasks. The number can be adjusted.
  • parallel_processes (4) The max amount of parallel tasks when running in parallel mode.

Misc files

There are some template files for your setup in the misc folder of the repository. These include:

  • A nginx proxy route example
  • A systemd service file

If you got anything else that might be useful to others, feel free to create a PR.

Github Webhook Setup

Go to your project's settings tab and select webhooks. Create a new one and set these options:

  • Content-Type: Json
  • Secret: Same string as in your config
  • Enable SSL verification: Recommended, if you have any kind of SSL
  • Just the push event (The payload isn't used anyway)

You can click on the Recent Deliveries to redeliver any sent webhook, in case you want to debug your setup.

Building a request

Webhook server accepts JSON POST requests and simple GET requests.

This is an example POST request issued with httpie and a secret of 72558847d57c22a2f19d711537cdc446 and test:testtest basic auth credentials:

echo -n '{"parameters":{"param1":"-al","param2":"/tmp"}}' | http POST localhost:8000/ls \
        Signature:'sha1=d762407ca7fb309dfbeb73c080caf6394751f0a4' \
        Authorization:'Basic dGVzdDp0ZXN0dGVzdA=='

If you don't need templating, you can send a simple GET request:

http GET localhost:8000/ls Authorization:'Basic dGVzdDp0ZXN0dGVzdA=='

Payload:

The payload is a simple JSON object, with a single entry parameters. This object contains all parameters necessary for rendering the template. If no templating is needed, you can provide an empty object as payload or simply call the route via GET.

For instance, the payload for the command '/bin/ls {{param1}} {{param2}}' could look like this:

{
    "parameters": {
        "param1": "-al",
        "param2": "/tmp"
    }
}

This would result in the execution of ls -al /tmp by the server.

Headers:

  • Authorization: If basic_auth_username and basic_auth_password is specified, this should be the standard Basic base64 encoded authorization header. Basic Auth guide
  • Signature: If you specify a secret, the content of the signature is the HMAC of the json payload with the UTF8-encoded secret as key. This procedure is based on Github's webhook secret system. (Github tells you to use a hex key, but they interpret it as UTF8 themselves -.-)
    Python example: hmac.new(key, payload, hashlib.sha1)
    Ruby example: OpenSSL::HMAC.hexdigest("SHA1", key, payload)
    Github guide
  • X-Hub-Signature: If there is no Signature, this header will be used for the signature check (to support Github's webhooks).

Query current status

You can get the current state of the webhook scheduler and finished tasks by querying the root (/) of the server. This will give you a JSON response with information about pretty much everything going on right now.

To access the route, authenticate via Basic authorization. If no Basic authorization is specified while a secret exists, the secret will be used with an empty body. In case no authentication is used at all, the status can be queried by anyone. Please use some kind of authentication.

Security

Code injection: When compiling dynamic commands with templating, you make yourself vulnerable to code injection, since the compiled commands are executed by the system shell. If you plan on using templating and publicly exposing your service, please use some kind of authentication.

  1. You can use a secret to verify the payload with a signature (Github's authentication method). Anyway, this method is a bit annoying to implement, if you write your own implementation.
  2. You can use basic auth.
  3. If you want to be super safe, you can require both authentication methods.

SSL: Especially when using Basic Auth or templating it's highly recommended to use SSL encryption. This can be either done by your proxy web server (nginx, apache, caddy) or directly in the application. Otherwise your credentials or your template payload could leak to anybody listening.

An example cert and key can be created like this openssl req -nodes -new -x509 -keyout test.pem -out test.pem.
If you need a password input for the private key, please create an issue or PR (much appreciated).