The general steps are as follows:
-
A client requests a page from the web app.
-
The original URL in the content is parsed.
-
An HMAC signature of the URL is generated.
-
The URL and hmac are encoded.
-
The encoded URL and hmac are placed into the expected format, creating the signed URL.
-
The signed URL replaces the original image URL.
-
The web app returns the content to the client.
-
The client requests the signed URL from Go-Camo.
-
Go-Camo validates the HMAC, decodes the URL, then requests the content from the origin server and streams it to the client.
+----------+ request +-------------+
| |----------------------------->| |
| | | |
| | | web-app |
| | img src=https://go-camo/url | |
| |<-----------------------------| |
| | +-------------+
| client |
| | https://go-camo/url +-------------+ http://some/img
| |----------------------------->| |--------------->
| | | |
| | | go-camo |
| | img data | | img data
| |<-----------------------------| |<---------------
| | +-------------+
+----------+
Go-Camo supports both hex and base64 encoded urls at the same time.
encoding | tradeoffs |
---|---|
hex |
longer, case insensitive, slightly faster |
base64 |
shorter, case sensitive, slightly slower |
Benchmark results with go1.12.7:
BenchmarkHexEncoder-4 1000000 1364 ns/op
BenchmarkB64Encoder-4 1000000 1447 ns/op
BenchmarkHexDecoder-4 1000000 1312 ns/op
BenchmarkB64Decoder-4 1000000 1379 ns/op
For examples of url generation, see the examples directory.
While Go-Camo will support proxying HTTPS images as well, for performance reasons you may choose to filter HTTPS requests out from proxying, and let the client simply fetch those as they are. The linked code examples do this.
Note that it is recommended to front Go-Camo with a CDN when possible.
-
Go-Camo supports 'Path Format' url format only. Camo’s "Query String Format" is not supported.
-
Go-Camo supports some optional "allow/deny" origin filters.
-
Go-Camo supports client http keep-alives.
-
Go-Camo provides native SSL support.
-
Go-Camo provides native HTTP/2 support
-
Go-Camo supports using more than one os thread (via GOMAXPROCS) without the need of multiple instances or additional proxying.
-
Go-Camo builds to a static binary. This makes deploying to large numbers of servers a snap.
-
Go-Camo supports both Hex and Base64 urls. Base64 urls are smaller, but case sensitive.
-
Go-Camo supports HTTP HEAD requests.
-
Go-Camo allows custom default headers to be added — useful for things like adding HSTS headers.
Download the tarball appropriate for your OS/ARCH from binary releases.
Extract, and copy files to desired locations.
Building requires:
-
make
-
posix compatible shell (sh)
-
git
-
go (latest version recommended. At least version >= 1.21)
-
asciidoctor (for building man pages only)
Building:
# first clone the repo
$ git clone [email protected]:cactus/go-camo
$ cd go-camo
# show make targets
$ make
Available targets:
help this help
clean clean up
all build binaries and man pages
check run checks and validators
test run tests
cover run tests with cover output
build build all binaries
man build all man pages
tar build release tarball
cross-tar cross compile and build release tarballs
# build all binaries (into ./bin/) and man pages (into ./man/)
# strips debug symbols by default
$ make all
# do not strip debug symbols
$ make all GOBUILD_LDFLAGS=""
$ go-camo -k "somekey"
# run the gc less frequently (a bit better performance, uses more memory)
$ env GOGC=300 go-camo -k "somekey"
Go-Camo does not daemonize on its own. For production usage, it is recommended to launch in a process supervisor, and drop privileges as appropriate.
Examples of supervisors include: daemontools, runit, upstart, launchd, systemd, and many more.
For the reasoning behind lack of daemonization, see daemontools/why. In addition, the code is much simpler because of it.
In order to use this on Heroku with the provided Procfile, you need to:
-
Create an app specifying the github.com/kr/heroku-buildpack-go buildpack
-
Set
GOCAMO_HMAC
to the key you are using
go-camo will generally do what you tell it to with regard to fetching signed urls. There is some limited support for trying to prevent dns rebinding attacks.
go-camo will attempt to reject any address matching an rfc1918 network block, or a private scope ipv6 address, be it in the url or via resulting hostname resolution.
Please note, however, that this does not provide protection for a network that uses public address space (ipv4 or ipv6), or some of the more exotic ipv6 addresses.
The list of networks rejected includes…
Network | Description |
---|---|
|
loopback |
|
ipv4 link local |
|
rfc1918 |
|
rfc1918 |
|
rfc1918 |
|
ipv6 loopback |
|
ipv6 link local |
|
deprecated ipv6 site-local |
|
ipv6 ULA |
|
IPv4-mapped IPv6 address |
More generally, it is recommended to either:
-
Run go-camo on an isolated instance (physical, vlans, firewall rules, etc).
-
Run a local resolver for go-camo that returns NXDOMAIN responses for addresses in deny-listed ranges (e.g. unbound’s
private-address
functionality). This is also useful to help prevent dns rebinding in general.
-
GOCAMO_HMAC
- HMAC key to use. -
HTTPS_PROXY
- Configure an outbound proxy for HTTPS requests.
Either a complete URL or ahost[:port]
, in which case an HTTP scheme is assumed. See Upstream Http Proxying notes for more information. -
HTTP_PROXY
- Configure an outbound proxy for HTTP requests.
Either a complete URL or ahost[:port]
, in which case an HTTP scheme is assumed. See Upstream Http Proxying notes for more information.
$ go-camo -h
Usage: go-camo
An image proxy that proxies non-secure images over SSL/TLS
Flags:
-h, --help Show context-sensitive help.
-k, --key=STRING HMAC key
-H, --header=HEADER,... Add additional header to each response. This option can
be used multiple times to add multiple headers.
--listen="0.0.0.0:8080" Address:Port to bind to for HTTP
--ssl-listen=STRING Address:Port to bind to for HTTPS/SSL/TLS
--socket-listen=STRING Path for unix domain socket to bind to for HTTP
--quic Enable http3/quic. Binds to the same port number as
ssl-listen but udp+quic.
--automaxprocs Set GOMAXPROCS automatically to match Linux container CPU
quota/limits.
--ssl-key=STRING ssl private key (key.pem) path
--ssl-cert=STRING ssl cert (cert.pem) path
--max-size=INT-64 Max allowed response size (KB)
--max-size-redirect URL to redirect to when max-size is exceeded
--timeout=4s Upstream request timeout
--max-redirects=3 Maximum number of redirects to follow
--metrics Enable Prometheus compatible metrics endpoint
--no-debug-vars Disable the /debug/vars/ metrics endpoint. This option has
no effects when the metrics are not enabled.
--no-log-ts Do not add a timestamp to logging
--log-json Log in JSON format
--no-fk Disable frontend http keep-alive support
--no-bk Disable backend http keep-alive support
--allow-content-video Additionally allow 'video/*' content
--allow-content-audio Additionally allow 'audio/*' content
--allow-credential-urls Allow urls to contain user/pass credentials
--filter-ruleset=STRING Text file containing filtering rules (one per line)
--server-name="go-camo" Value to use for the HTTP server field
--expose-server-version Include the server version in the HTTP server response
header
--enable-xfwd4 Enable x-forwarded-for passthrough/generation
-v, --verbose Show verbose (debug) log level output
-V, --version Print version and exit; specify twice to show
license information.
A few notes about specific flags:
-
--filter-ruleset
If a
filter-ruleset
file is defined, that file is read and each line is converted into a filter rule. Seego-camo-filtering(5)
for more information regarding the format for the filter file itself.Regarding evaluation: The ruleset is NOT evaluated in-order. The rules process in two phases: "allow rule phase" where the allow rules are evaluated, and the "deny rule phase" where the deny rules are evaluated. First match in each phase "wins" that phase.
In the "allow phase", an origin request must match at least one allow rule. The first rule to match "wins" and the request moves on to the next phase. If there are no allow rules supplied, this phase is skipped.
In the deny rule phase, any rule that matches results in a rejection. The first match "wins" and the request is failed. If there are no deny rules supplied, this phase is skipped.
💡It is always preferable to do filtering at the point of URL generation and signing. The
filter-ruleset
functionality (both allow and deny) is supplied predominantly as a fallback safety measure, for cases where you have previously generated a URL and you need a quick temporary fix, or where rolling keys takes a while and/or is difficult. -
--max-size
The
--max-size
value is defined in KB. Set to0
to disable size restriction. The default is0
. -
--metrics
If the
metrics
flag is provided, then the service will expose a Prometheus/metrics
endpoint and a/debug/vars
endpoint from the goexpvar
package. -
--no-debug-vars
If the
no-debug-vars
flag is provided along with themetrics
flag, the/debug/vars
endpoint is removed. -
-k
,--key
If the HMAC key is provided on the command line, it will override (if present), an HMAC key set in the environment var.
-
-H, --header
Additional default headers (sent on every response) can also be set. This argument may be specified many times.
The list of default headers sent are:
X-Content-Type-Options: nosniff X-XSS-Protection: 1; mode=block Content-Security-Policy: default-src 'none'; img-src data:; style-src 'unsafe-inline'
As an example, if you wanted to return a
Strict-Transport-Security
header by default, you could add this to the command line:-H "Strict-Transport-Security: max-age=16070400"
Care should be taken when using upstream http proxy support. go-camo has several protections against SSRF vectors, for example:
-
Checking http redirect chains against rfc1918 addresses.
-
Limits to maximum number of redirects.
-
Protection against self-redirect loops.
-
Various other protections.
The use of an upstream http proxy may subvert several of these protections, as go-camo will be required to offload certain operations to the upstream http proxy.
Some examples (list is not exhaustive):
-
The upstream http proxy itself may be responsible for following redirects (depending on configuration). As such, go-camo may not have visibility into the redirect chain. This could result in resource exhaustion (redirect loops), or SSRF (redirects to internal URLs).
-
The upstream http proxy itself will be responsible for connecting to external servers, and would need to be configured for any request size limits. While go-camo would still limit request sizes based on its own configuration, the upstream http proxy may still fetch the content before handoff.
-
There may be other chances for "configuration confusion" — where two services are configured together in such a way, that introduces issues not possible when operating standalone.
Proper configuration of the upstream http proxy may mitigate these issues.
Test your configurations and monitor carefully!
When the --metrics
flag is used,
the service will expose a Prometheus-compatible /metrics
endpoint.
This can be used by monitoring systems to gather data.
The endpoint includes all of the default go_
and process_
.
In addition, a number of custom metrics.
Name | Type | Help |
---|---|---|
camo_response_duration_seconds |
Histogram |
A histogram of latencies for proxy responses. |
camo_response_size_bytes |
Histogram |
A histogram of sizes for proxy responses. |
camo_proxy_content_length_exceeded_total |
Counter |
The number of requests where the content length was exceeded. |
camo_proxy_reponses_failed_total |
Counter |
The number of responses that failed to send to the client. |
camo_proxy_reponses_truncated_total |
Counter |
The number of responses that were too large to send. |
camo_responses_total |
Counter |
Total HTTP requests processed by the go-camo, excluding scrapes. |
It also includes a camo_build_info
metric that exposes the version.
In addition, you can expose some extra data to metrics via env vars, if desired:
-
Revision via
APP_INFO_REVISION
-
Branch via
APP_INFO_BRANCH
-
BuildDate via
APP_INFO_BUILD_DATE
-
You can also override the version by setting
APP_INFO_VERSION
A /debug/vars
endpoint is also included with --metrics
by default.
This endpoint returns memstats and some additional data. This endpoint can be
disabled by additionally supplying the --no-debug-vars
flag.
Go-Camo includes a couple of additional tools.
The url-tool
utility provides a simple way to generate signed URLs
from the command line.
$ url-tool -h
Usage:
url-tool [OPTIONS] <decode | encode>
Application Options:
-k, --key= HMAC key
-p, --prefix= Optional URL prefix used by encode output
Help Options:
-h, --help Show this help message
Available commands:
decode Decode a URL and print result
encode Encode a URL and print result
Example usage:
# hex
$ url-tool -k "test" encode -p "https://img.example.org" "http://golang.org/doc/gopher/frontpage.png"
https://img.example.org/0f6def1cb147b0e84f39cbddc5ea10c80253a6f3/687474703a2f2f676f6c616e672e6f72672f646f632f676f706865722f66726f6e74706167652e706e67
$ url-tool -k "test" decode "https://img.example.org/0f6def1cb147b0e84f39cbddc5ea10c80253a6f3/687474703a2f2f676f6c616e672e6f72672f646f632f676f706865722f66726f6e74706167652e706e67"
http://golang.org/doc/gopher/frontpage.png
# base64
$ url-tool -k "test" encode -b base64 -p "https://img.example.org" "http://golang.org/doc/gopher/frontpage.png"
https://img.example.org/D23vHLFHsOhPOcvdxeoQyAJTpvM/aHR0cDovL2dvbGFuZy5vcmcvZG9jL2dvcGhlci9mcm9udHBhZ2UucG5n
$ url-tool -k "test" decode "https://img.example.org/D23vHLFHsOhPOcvdxeoQyAJTpvM/aHR0cDovL2dvbGFuZy5vcmcvZG9jL2dvcGhlci9mcm9udHBhZ2UucG5n"
http://golang.org/doc/gopher/frontpage.png
There are containers built automatically from version tags, pushed to both docker hub and github packages.
These containers are untested and provided only for those with specific containerization requirements. When in doubt, prefer the statically compiled binary releases, unless you specifically need a container.
See CHANGELOG.
Released under the MIT license. See LICENSE file for details.