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FIPS-compliant Crossplane providers for managing Amazon Web Services (AWS) services on Kubernetes.
Chainguard Containers are regularly-updated, secure-by-default container images.
For those with access, this container image is available on cgr.dev
:
Be sure to replace the ORGANIZATION
placeholder with the name used for your organization's private repository within the Chainguard Registry.
Chainguard's Crossplane AWS providers are comparable to the official AWS Crossplane providers with the following architectural differences:
These FIPS-compliant images include OpenSSL FIPS provider and are built with FIPS-validated cryptographic modules. Key FIPS features include:
Upstream providers can be deployed individually and will automatically resolve their dependencies whereas Chainguard's providers require manual installation of dependencies. When deploying Chainguard's AWS Crossplane providers, skipDependencyResolution: true
must be set in the resource for the provider you are deploying.
This is because the Crossplane package manifest used by Crossplane providers contain references to other dependencies, including the registry and repository of the dependency. Our customers use various repositories and registries and there isn't an effective way to account for all of them.
Because of this limitation, using the Crossplane package manager with these providers is not possible.
To manage resources on AWS with Crossplane, begin by deploying Chainguard's AWS family provider:
Install the providers your deployment needs alongside the family provider. Use skipDependencyResolution: true
to prevent upstream dependencies from being automatically installed:
After installing your desired providers, configure AWS credentials using a ProviderConfig:
Once configured, you can create AWS resources. Example S3 bucket creation:
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Chainguard's free tier of Starter container images are built with Wolfi, our minimal Linux undistro.
All other Chainguard Containers are built with Chainguard OS, Chainguard's minimal Linux operating system designed to produce container images that meet the requirements of a more secure software supply chain.
The main features of Chainguard Containers include:
For cases where you need container images with shells and package managers to build or debug, most Chainguard Containers come paired with a development, or -dev
, variant.
In all other cases, including Chainguard Containers tagged as :latest
or with a specific version number, the container images include only an open-source application and its runtime dependencies. These minimal container images typically do not contain a shell or package manager.
Although the -dev
container image variants have similar security features as their more minimal versions, they include additional software that is typically not necessary in production environments. We recommend using multi-stage builds to copy artifacts from the -dev
variant into a more minimal production image.
To improve security, Chainguard Containers include only essential dependencies. Need more packages? Chainguard customers can use Custom Assembly to add packages, either through the Console, chainctl
, or API.
To use Custom Assembly in the Chainguard Console: navigate to the image you'd like to customize in your Organization's list of images, and click on the Customize image button at the top of the page.
Refer to our Chainguard Containers documentation on Chainguard Academy. Chainguard also offers VMs and Libraries — contact us for access.
This software listing is packaged by Chainguard. The trademarks set forth in this offering are owned by their respective companies, and use of them does not imply any affiliation, sponsorship, or endorsement by such companies.
Chainguard container images contain software packages that are direct or transitive dependencies. The following licenses were found in the "latest" tag of this image:
Apache-2.0
GCC-exception-3.1
GPL-3.0-or-later
LGPL-2.1-or-later
MIT
MPL-2.0
For a complete list of licenses, please refer to this Image's SBOM.
Software license agreementThis is a FIPS validated image for FedRAMP compliance.
This image is STIG hardened and scanned against the DISA General Purpose Operating System SRG with reports available.
Learn more about STIGsGet started with STIGs