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git-iamguarded-fips

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Chainguard Container for git-iamguarded-fips

A minimal Git image for use with Iamguarded charts.

Chainguard Containers are regularly-updated, secure-by-default container images.

Download this Container Image

For those with access, this container image is available on cgr.dev:

docker pull cgr.dev/ORGANIZATION/git-iamguarded-fips:latest

Be sure to replace the ORGANIZATION placeholder with the name used for your organization's private repository within the Chainguard Registry.

Usage

Chainguard's Git Iamguarded Image allows you to run ordinary Git commands in CI/CD pipelines and also locally via Docker, and is compatible with Iamguarded charts.

Docker Setup

To make sure you have the latest version of the Image available, start by running a docker pull command:

docker pull cgr.dev/ORGANIZATION/git-iamguarded-fips

Then, run the Image with the --version flag to make sure the Image is functional:

docker run -it --rm cgr.dev/ORGANIZATION/git-iamguarded-fips --version

You will receive output similar to this:

git version 2.43.0

Cloning a Repository Locally

Because your local system user's unique identifier might differ from that of the container, you'll need to set up special permissions for the target directory if you want to use this Image to clone repositories locally. Once you've configured these permissions, you'll be able to set up a volume and have the contents of the cloned repository replicated on your host machine.

First, create a target directory somewhere in your home folder and set the required permissions:

mkdir ~/workspace
chmod go+wrx ~/workspace

Now you can use docker run to execute the git clone command, using the directory you just set up as a volume shared between your local machine and the container Image:

docker run -it -v ~/workspace:/home/git --rm cgr.dev/ORGANIZATION/git-iamguarded-fips clone https://github.com/chainguard-images/.github.git

Here, the volume is mounted to the /home/git directory in the container.

This will return output like the following:

Cloning into '.github'...
remote: Enumerating objects: 251, done.
remote: Counting objects: 100% (33/33), done.
remote: Compressing objects: 100% (23/23), done.
remote: Total 251 (delta 15), reused 22 (delta 10), pack-reused 218
Receiving objects: 100% (251/251), 216.59 KiB | 1.04 MiB/s, done.
Resolving deltas: 100% (88/88), done.

You can now check the contents of your workspace directory, where you will find the cloned repository:

ls -a ~/workspace/
.  ..  .github

If you do not want to make the destination directory world-writable, you can run the git executable inside the container with your UID, thus giving it access to the directory:

docker run -it -v ~/workspace:/home/git -u $(id -u) --rm cgr.dev/ORGANIZATION/git-iamguarded-fips clone https://github.com/chainguard-images/.github.git

What are Chainguard Containers?

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.

Need additional packages?

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.

Learn More

Refer to our Chainguard Containers documentation on Chainguard Academy. Chainguard also offers VMs and Librariescontact us for access.

Trademarks

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.

Licenses

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

  • BSD-3-Clause

  • GCC-exception-3.1

  • GPL-2.0-or-later

  • GPL-3.0-or-later

  • ISC

  • LGPL-2.0-or-later

For a complete list of licenses, please refer to this Image's SBOM.

Software license agreement

Compliance

This 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

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