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Hey @<1523701205467926528:profile|AgitatedDove14> , I saw this SO answer you gave about ClearML's docker-compose.yaml .

You described getting a secret key pair from the UI and feeding it back into the compose file. Does this mean it's not possible to seed the secrets in the compose file, starting from clean state? If so, that would explain why I can't get it to work.

This INFO section of Securing ClearML Server had me thinking you could place strings in the CLEARML__SECURE__CREDENTIALS__APISERVER__USER_KEY and
CLEARML__SECURE__CREDENTIALS__APISERVER__USER_SECRET of the apiserver service.
image

  
  
Posted one year ago
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Answers 19


Hi @<1541954607595393024:profile|BattyCrocodile47> , setting the initial keys for the apiserver component is indeed a part of the initial setup and works as you described, it's just that this is for internal system components, and not user entities

  
  
Posted one year ago

Does this mean that none of the credientials in this file can be used with the clearml SDK when the docker-compose.yaml starts up with a fresh state?

Is there anyway to achieve such a behavior? Or are manual steps simply required to get a working set of keys. I'm trying to prepare a docker-compose file that I can use for automated tests of our VS Code extension.

  
  
Posted one year ago

I could potentially write a selenium script to make a set of keys, but I'd prefer to avoid that 😅

  
  
Posted one year ago

I ultimately resorted to creating a selenium script combined with docker-compose. Not a beautiful solution but I can confirm that it works 😕 None

  
  
Posted one year ago

You described getting a secret key pair from the UI and feeding it back into the compose file. Does this mean it's not possible to seed the secrets in the compose file, starting from clean state? If so, that would explain why I can't get it to work.

Long story short, no. This would basically mean you have a pre-build credentials in the docker, this sounds dangerous 🙂
I'm not sure I'm following the use case here, what exactly are we trying to do?
(or maybe I missed something here?)

  
  
Posted one year ago

I don't know that you'd have to pre-build credentials into docker. If you could specify a set of credentials as environment variables to the docker run ... command or something, that would work just fine.

The goal is to be able to run docker-compose up in CI, which starts a clearml-server. And then make several API calls to the started ClearML server to prove that the VS Code extension code is working.

Examples:

  • Assert that the extension can auth with ClearML
  • Assert that the extension can create, list, and delete ClearML Sessions
    Each of these require ClearML credentials.
  
  
Posted one year ago

The goal is to be able to run

docker-compose up

in CI, which starts a clearml-server. And then make several API calls to the started ClearML server to prove that the VS Code extension code is working.

Oh I see, if this is CI workflow, why not run in offline mode ?
None

  
  
Posted one year ago

Oh I wasn’t aware of that. I don’t think it’d work for this use case though. We’re trying to test the behavior you can see here in this extension https://share.descript.com/view/g0SLQTN6kAk so basically the examples I said in that earlier message

  
  
Posted one year ago

a CI for the vscode extension ? So spin server + agent & connect to it as part of the CI?

  
  
Posted one year ago

Exactly

  
  
Posted one year ago

But the extension will need credentials to connect to it.

  
  
Posted one year ago

For now, I've written a headless selenium script to generate credentials for the fresh ClearML instance in CI.

  
  
Posted one year ago

But I actually wish the interface were more like the apiserver.conf file--specifically, that you can define hard-coded credentials in this file in advance. Except, I wish that you could define API keys this way (or some other way)

auth {
    # Fixed users login credentials
    # No other user will be able to login
    fixed_users {
        enabled: true
        pass_hashed: false
        users: [
            {
                username: "test"
                password: "test"
                name: "Test User u:test p:test"
            }
        ]
    }
}
  
  
Posted one year ago

Okay, I think this might be a bit of an overkill, but I'll entertain the idea 🙂
Try passing the user as key, and password as secret?

  
  
Posted one year ago

Oh interesting. Is the hope that doing that would somehow result in being able to use those credentials to make authenticated API calls?

  
  
Posted one year ago

Aren't they two different auth systems? One for humans and one for machines?

  
  
Posted one year ago

When you login with user/pass in the UI the same "process" happens and you get a Token to work with, this is the same as secret/key
Since in both cases you provide credentials and get back access token, it should work
(This is of course only if you are setting user/pass manually and disabling pass_hashed as you have)

  
  
Posted one year ago

Oh wow. If this works, that will be insanely cool. Like, I guess what I'm going for is that if I specify "username: test" and "password: test" in that file, that I can specify "api.access_key: test" and "api.secret_key: test" in the clearml.conf used for CI. I'll give it a try tonight!

  
  
Posted one year ago
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