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ruby-on-railsamazon-s3carrierwaverails-enginesfog

Access to main app secrets from Rails engine initializer


I have been trying (unsuccessfully) to access the main app's application secrets from within my Rails mountable engine. The whole point of a mountable engine is to provide modularity. Therefore a common pattern would be to provide configurable parameters, some of which need to be secret, in the main app, which would then be used by the engine.

In my specific case, I am using carrierwave and fog in my engine to upload files to an AWS bucket. The exact bucket and AWS credentials are not specified in the engine, but in the main app, since they will vary providing which app is mounting the engine.

However, the initializer for carrierwave when mounted in the engine fails as it cannot find the Rails.application.secrets for the main app:

require 'carrierwave'
require 'carrierwave/storage/fog'

CarrierWave.configure do |config|
  config.fog_provider = 'fog/aws'

  config.fog_credentials = {
    :provider               => 'AWS',
  :aws_access_key_id      => Rails.application.secrets.S3_AWS_ACCESS_KEY_ID,
  :aws_secret_access_key  => Rails.application.secrets.S3_AWS_SECRET_ACCESS_KEY
  }
  config.fog_directory  = Rails.application.secrets.CARRIERWAVE_CONFIG_FOG_DIRECTORY
  config.storage = :fog
end

This fails when engine is started with

Missing required arguments: aws_access_key_id, aws_secret_access_key (ArgumentError)

as in fact Rails.application.secrets.S3_AWS_ACCESS_KEY_ID (and the others) evaluates to nil in the initializer. It does evaluate correctly inside the engine's controllers once the app is running, but in the initializer it is nil.

I have modified this like the following:

:aws_access_key_id      => Rails.application.secrets.S3_AWS_ACCESS_KEY_ID || ENV["S3_AWS_ACCESS_KEY_ID"]

and exported the ENV VARIABLE in each production environment for use with the engine, but this is less than ideal. Any solution would be appreciated.


Solution

    1. In your engine's initializer (config/initializers/engine_name.rb), define a configuration option to store the AWS credentials and fog directory:
    # config/initializers/engine_name.rb
    EngineName.configure do |config|
      config.aws_access_key_id = nil
      config.aws_secret_access_key = nil
      config.fog_directory = nil
    end
    
    
    1. In the main app, provide the values for these configuration options in an initializer:
    # config/initializers/engine_name.rb
    EngineName.configure do |config|
      config.aws_access_key_id = Rails.application.secrets.S3_AWS_ACCESS_KEY_ID
      config.aws_secret_access_key = Rails.application.secrets.S3_AWS_SECRET_ACCESS_KEY
      config.fog_directory = Rails.application.secrets.CARRIERWAVE_CONFIG_FOG_DIRECTORY
    end
    
    
    1. Modify your carrier wave initializer in the engine to use the configuration options:
    # engine_name/config/initializers/carrierwave.rb
    require 'carrierwave'
    require 'carrierwave/storage/fog'
    
    CarrierWave.configure do |config|
      config.fog_provider = 'fog/aws'
    
      config.fog_credentials = {
        provider: 'AWS',
        aws_access_key_id: EngineName.configuration.aws_access_key_id,
        aws_secret_access_key: EngineName.configuration.aws_secret_access_key
      }
    
      config.fog_directory = EngineName.configuration.fog_directory
      config.storage = :fog
    end
    
    

    By using this approach, you allow the main app to provide the necessary secrets through the engine's configuration, which avoids the issue of accessing the main app's secrets directly from the engine.