Hashicorp Vault does not completely remove the secrets in a kv-v2
backend when the keys are deleted. The metadata of the keys will be
kept, and it is possible to recover the contents of the keys afterwards.
With the new `vaultDestroyKeys` configuration parameter, this behaviour
can now be selected. By default the parameter will be set to `true`,
indicating that the keys and contents should completely be destroyed.
Setting it to any other value will make it possible to recover the
deleted keys.
Signed-off-by: Niels de Vos <ndevos@redhat.com>
The new `vaultAuthNamespace` configuration parameter can be set to the
Vault Namespace where the authentication is setup in the service. Some
Hashicorp Vault deployments use sub-namespaces for their users/tenants,
with a 'root' namespace where the authentication is configured. This
requires passing of different Vault namespaces for different operations.
Example:
- the Kubernetes Auth mechanism is configured for in the Vault
Namespace called 'devops'
- a user/tenant has a sub-namespace called 'devops/website' where the
encryption passphrases can be placed in the key-value store
The configuration for this, then looks like:
vaultAuthNamespace: devops
vaultNamespace: devops/homepage
Note that Vault Namespaces are a feature of the Hashicorp Vault
Enterprise product, and not part of the Open Source version. This
prevents adding e2e tests that validate the Vault Namespace
configuration.
Signed-off-by: Niels de Vos <ndevos@redhat.com>
It seems that the version of the key/value engine can not always be
detected for Hashicorp Vault. In certain cases, it is required to
configure the `VAULT_BACKEND` (or `vaultBackend`) option so that a
successful connection to the service can be made.
The `kv-v2` is the current default for development deployments of
Hashicorp Vault (what we use for automated testing). Production
deployments default to version 1 for now.
Signed-off-by: Niels de Vos <ndevos@redhat.com>
parseTenantConfig() only allowed configuring a defined set of options,
and KMSs were not able to re-use the implementation. Now, the function
parses the ConfigMap from the Tenants Namespace and returns a map with
options that the KMS supports.
The map that parseTenantConfig() returns can be inspected by the KMS,
and applied to the vaultTenantConnection type by calling parseConfig().
Signed-off-by: Niels de Vos <ndevos@redhat.com>
Kubelet sometimes reports the following error:
failed to "StartContainer" for "vault-init-job" with CreateContainerConfigError: container has runAsNonRoot and image will run as root
Setting securityContext.runAsUser resolves this.
Signed-off-by: Niels de Vos <ndevos@redhat.com>
The ServiceAccount "ceph-csi-vault-sa" is expected to be placed in the
Namespace "tenant" so that the provisioner and node-plugin fetch the
ServiceAccount from a Namespace where Ceph-CSI is not deployed.
Signed-off-by: Niels de Vos <ndevos@redhat.com>
This commit adds e2e for user secret based metadata encryption,
adds user-secret.yaml and makes required changes in kms-connection-details,
kms-config yamls.
Signed-off-by: Rakshith R <rar@redhat.com>
The deployment of the Vault ConfigMap for the init-scripts job contains
a List with a single Item. This can be cleaned up to just be a ConfigMap
(without the list structure around it).
Signed-off-by: Niels de Vos <ndevos@redhat.com>
Testing encrypted PVCs does not work anymore since Kubernetes v1.21. It
seems that disabling the iss validation in Hashicorp Vault is a
relatively simple workaround that we can use instead of the more complex
securing of the environment like should be done in production
deployments.
Updates: #1963
See-also: external-secrets/kubernetes-external-secrets#721
Signed-off-by: Niels de Vos <ndevos@redhat.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>
Deploying Vault still fails on occasion. It seems that the
imagePullPolicy has not been configured for the container yet.
Signed-off-by: Niels de Vos <ndevos@redhat.com>
On occasion deploying Vault fails. It seems the vault-init-job batch job
does not use a full-qualified-image-name for the "vault" container.
Signed-off-by: Niels de Vos <ndevos@redhat.com>
Add "sys/mounts" so that VaultBackendKey does not need to be set. The
libopenstorage API detects the version for the key-value store in Vault
by reading "sys/mounts". Without permissions to read this endpoint, the
VaultBackendKey is required to be configured.
Signed-off-by: Niels de Vos <ndevos@redhat.com>
Docker Hub offers a way to pull official images without any project
prefix, like "docker.io/vault:latest". This does a redirect to the
images located under "docker.io/library".
By using the full qualified image name, a redirect gets removed while
pulling the images. This reduces the likelyhood of hittin Docker Hub
pull rate-limits.
Signed-off-by: Niels de Vos <ndevos@redhat.com>
Images that have an unqualified name (no explicit registry) come from
Docker Hub. This can be made explicit by adding docker.io as prefix. In
addition, the default :latest tag has been added too.
Signed-off-by: Niels de Vos <ndevos@redhat.com>
we need to provide access to the Service
account created with helm charts to access
the vault service.
Signed-off-by: Madhu Rajanna <madhupr007@gmail.com>
* moves KMS type from StorageClass into KMS configuration itself
* updates omapval used to identify KMS to only it's ID without the type
why?
1. when using multiple KMS configurations (not currently supported)
automated parsing of kms configuration will be failing because some
entries in configs won't comply with the requested type
2. less options are needed in the StorageClass and less data used to
identify the KMS
Signed-off-by: Vasyl Purchel vasyl.purchel@workday.com
Signed-off-by: Andrea Baglioni andrea.baglioni@workday.com
- adds proposal document for PVC encryption from PR448
- adds per-volume encription by generating encryption passphrase
for each volume and storing it in a KMS
- adds HashiCorp Vault integration as a KMS for encryption passphrases
- avoids encrypting volume second time if it was already encrypted but
no file system created
- avoids unnecessary checks if volume is a mapped device when encryption
was not requested
- prevents resizing encrypted volumes (it is not currently supported)
- prevents creating snapshots from encrypted volumes to prevent attack
on encryption key (security guard until re-encryption of volumes
implemented)
Signed-off-by: Vasyl Purchel vasyl.purchel@workday.com
Signed-off-by: Andrea Baglioni andrea.baglioni@workday.comFixes#420Fixes#744