if the kms encryption configmap is not mounted
as a volume to the CSI pods, add the code to
read the configuration from the kubernetes. Later
the code to fetch the configmap will be moved to
the new sidecar which is will talk to respective
CO to fetch the encryption configurations.
The k8s configmap uses the standard vault spefic
names to add the configurations. this will be converted
back to the CSI configurations.
Signed-off-by: Madhu Rajanna <madhupr007@gmail.com>
A tenant can place a ConfigMap in their Kubernetes Namespace with
configuration options that differ from the global (by the Storage Admin
set) values.
The ConfigMap needs to be located in the Tenants namespace, as described
in the documentation
See-also: docs/design/proposals/encryption-with-vault-tokens.md
Signed-off-by: Niels de Vos <ndevos@redhat.com>
Added a option to pass the client certificate
and the client certificate key for the vault token
based encryption.
Signed-off-by: Madhu Rajanna <madhupr007@gmail.com>
Tenants (Kubernetes Namespaces) can use their own Vault Token to manage
the encryption keys for PVCs. The working is documented in #1743.
See-also: #1743Closes: #1500
Signed-off-by: Niels de Vos <ndevos@redhat.com>
In order to fetch the Kubernetes Secret with the Vault Token for a
Tenant, the ClusterRole needs to allow reading Secrets from all
Kubernetes Namespaces (each Tenant has their own Namespace).
Signed-off-by: Niels de Vos <ndevos@redhat.com>
Add a new method to the EncryptionKMS interface so that resources can be
freed when EncryptionKMS instances get freed.
With the move to using the libopenstorage API, a temporary file needs to
store the optional CA certificate. The Destroy() method of the
vaultConnection type now removes this file.
The rbdVolume uses the EncryptionKMS type now, so call the new Destroy()
method from withing rbdVolume.Destroy().
Signed-off-by: Niels de Vos <ndevos@redhat.com>
Make it possible to calle initConnection() multiple times. This enables
the VaultTokensKMS type to override global settings with options from a
per-tenant configuration.
Signed-off-by: Niels de Vos <ndevos@redhat.com>
This makes it possible to pass a more complex configuration to the
initialize functions for KMS's. The upcoming VaultTokensKMS can use
overrides for configiration options on a per tenant basis. Without this
change, it would not be possible to consume the JSON configuration file.
See-also: #1743
Signed-off-by: Niels de Vos <ndevos@redhat.com>
The yaml files for RBD encryption are located in examples/kms/vault, and
not in the examples/rbd directory.
Signed-off-by: Niels de Vos <ndevos@redhat.com>
In addition to the Vault KMS support (uses Kubernetes ServiceAccount),
there is the new Vault Tokens KMS feature.
Signed-off-by: Niels de Vos <ndevos@redhat.com>
Design for adding a new KMS type "VaultTokens" that can be used to
configure a Hashicorp Vault service where each tenant has their own
personal token to manage encryptions keys for PVCs.
Signed-off-by: Niels de Vos <ndevos@redhat.com>
The csi.volume.owner should get stored when the csi-provisioner sidecar
passes additional metadata. This option is now enabled by default, so
the owner (Kubernetes Namespace) of RBD images is expected to be
available.
Signed-off-by: Niels de Vos <ndevos@redhat.com>
The Owner of an RBD image (Kubernetes Namespace, tenant) can be used to
identify additional configuration options. This will be used for
fetching the right Vault Token when encrypting/decrypting volumes.
Signed-off-by: Niels de Vos <ndevos@redhat.com>
This argument in csi-provisioner sidecar allows us to receive pv/pvc
name/namespace metadata in the createVolume() request.
For ex:
csi.storage.k8s.io/pvc/name
csi.storage.k8s.io/pvc/namespace
csi.storage.k8s.io/pv/name
This is a useful information which can be used depend on the use case we
have at our driver. The features like vault token enablement for multi
tenancy, RBD mirroring ..etc can consume this based on the need.
Refer: #1305
Signed-off-by: Humble Chirammal <hchiramm@redhat.com>
Signed-off-by: Niels de Vos <ndevos@redhat.com>
While deploying Rook, there can be issues when the environment is not
completely settled yet. On occasion the 1st kubectl command fails with
The connection to the server ... was refused - did you specify the right host or port?
This would set the 'ret' variable to a non-zero value, before the next
retry of the kubectl command is done. In case the kubectl command
succeeds, the 'ret' variable still contains the old non-zero value, and
kubectl_retry returns the incorrect result.
By setting the 'ret' variable to 0 before calling kubectl again, this
problem is prevented.
Signed-off-by: Niels de Vos <ndevos@redhat.com>