**Caution:** Using s3proxy outside Constellation is insecure as the connection between the key management service (KMS) and s3proxy is protected by Constellation's WireGuard VPN.
The VPN is a feature of Constellation and will not be present by default in other environments.
- Within `constellation/build`: `bazel run //:devbuild`
- Copy the container name displayed for the s3proxy image. Look for the line starting with `[@//bazel/release:s3proxy_push]`.
- Replace the image key in `deployment-s3proxy.yaml` with the image value you just copied. Use the sha256 hash instead of the tag to make sure you use the latest image.
- Replace the `replaceme` values with valid AWS credentials. The s3proxy uses those credentials to access S3.
- Run `kubectl apply -f deployment-s3proxy.yaml`
# Deploying Filestash
Filestash is a demo application that can be used to see s3proxy in action.
To deploy Filestash, first deploy s3proxy as described above.
Then run the below commands:
```sh
$ cat <<EOF> "deployment-filestash.yaml"
apiVersion: apps/v1
kind: Deployment
metadata:
name: filestash
spec:
replicas: 1
selector:
matchLabels:
app: filestash
template:
metadata:
labels:
app: filestash
spec:
hostAliases:
- ip: $(kubectl get svc s3proxy-service -o=jsonpath='{.spec.clusterIP}')
hostnames:
- "s3.eu-west-1.amazonaws.com"
containers:
- name: filestash
image: machines/filestash:latest
ports:
- containerPort: 8334
volumeMounts:
- name: ca-cert
mountPath: /etc/ssl/certs/kube-ca.crt
subPath: kube-ca.crt
volumes:
- name: ca-cert
secret:
secretName: s3proxy-tls
items:
- key: ca.crt
path: kube-ca.crt
EOF
$ kubectl apply -f deployment-filestash.yaml
```
Afterwards you can use a port forward to access the Filestash pod: