Warning: master may be broken whilst this repo is upgraded for k/v v2 and newer Vault version upgrades! Please use the 0.1.0 tagged release in the meantime. This message will be removed and a 1.0.0 breaking release will be tagged on the Forge in the future.
This is a back end function for Hiera 5 that allows lookup to be sourced from Hashicorp's Vault.
Vault secures, stores, and tightly controls access to tokens, passwords, certificates, API keys, and other secrets in modern computing. Vault handles leasing, key revocation, key rolling, and auditing. Vault presents a unified API to access multiple backends: HSMs, AWS IAM, SQL databases, raw key/value, and more.
For an example repo of it in action, check out the hashicorp/webinar-vault-hiera-puppet repo and webinar 'How to Use HashiCorp Vault with Hiera 5 for Secret Management with Puppet'
- This moduel is only compatible with Hiera 5 (ships with Puppet 4.9+) and Vault KV engine version 2 (Vault 0.10+)
The vault
gem must be installed and loadable from Puppet
# /opt/puppetlabs/puppet/bin/gem install vault
# puppetserver gem install vault
On Puppetserver <= 5, you will need to switch Puppetserver to use the new JRuby 9K, as the gem requires Ruby 2+, and Puppetserver uses the 1.9.2 JRuby
Some example Puppetcode to do so:
ini_setting { "Change jruby to 9k":
ensure => present,
setting => 'JRUBY_JAR',
path => "/etc/sysconfig/puppetserver",
key_val_separator => '=',
section => '',
value => '"/opt/puppetlabs/server/apps/puppetserver/jruby-9k.jar"',
show_diff => true,
notify => Service['puppetserver']
}
package { 'vault-puppetserver-gem':
ensure => 'present',
name => 'vault',
provider => 'puppetserver_gem',
}
->
package { 'vault-puppetpath-gem':
ensure => 'present',
name => 'vault',
provider => 'puppet_gem',
}
->
package { 'debouncer-puppetserver-gem':
ensure => 'present',
name => 'debouncer',
provider => 'puppetserver_gem',
}
->
package { 'debouncer-puppetpath-gem':
ensure => 'present',
name => 'debouncer',
provider => 'puppet_gem',
}
~> Service['puppetserver']
On Puppetserver >= 6, this is not needed as the default has been moved to the newer JRuby.
The data provider is available by installing the petems/hiera_vault
module into your environment:
This will avaliable on the forge, and installable with the module command:
# puppet module install petems/hiera_vault
You can also download the module directly:
git clone https://github.com/petems/petems-hiera_vault /etc/puppetlabs/code/environments/production/modules/hiera_vault
Or add it to your Puppetfile
mod 'hiera_vault',
:git => 'https://github.com/petems/petems-hiera_vault'
See The official Puppet documentation for more details on configuring Hiera 5.
The following is an example Hiera 5 hiera.yaml configuration for use with hiera-vault
---
version: 5
hierarchy:
- name: "Hiera-vault lookup"
lookup_key: hiera_vault
options:
confine_to_keys:
- '^vault_.*'
- '^.*_password$'
- '^password.*'
ssl_verify: false
address: https://vault.foobar.com:8200
token: <insert-your-vault-token-here>
default_field: value
mounts:
puppet:
- %{::trusted.certname}
- common
The following mandatory Hiera 5 options must be set for each level of the hierarchy.
name
: A human readable name for the lookup
lookup_key
: This option must be set to hiera_vault
The following are optional configuration parameters supported in the options
hash of the Hiera 5 config
address
: The address of the Vault server, also read as ENV["VAULT_ADDR"]
token
: The token to authenticate with Vault, also read as ENV["VAULT_TOKEN"]
or a full path to the file with the token (eg. /etc/vault_token.txt
). When bootstrapping, you can set this token as IGNORE-VAULT
and the backend will be stubbed, which can be useful when bootstrapping.
confine_to_keys:
: Only use this backend if the key matches one of the regexes in the array, to avoid constantly reaching out to Vault for every parameter lookup
confine_to_keys:
- "application.*"
- "apache::.*"
default_field:
: The default field within data to return. If not present, the lookup will be the full contents of the secret data.
mounts:
: The list of mounts you want to do lookups against. This is treated as the backend hiearchy for lookup. It is recomended you use Trusted Facts within the hierachy to ensure lookups are restricted to the correct hierachy points. See Mounts
:ssl_verify
: Specify whether to verify SSL certificates (default: true)
puppet lookup vault_notify --explain --compile --node=node1.vm
Searching for "vault_notify"
Global Data Provider (hiera configuration version 3)
Using configuration "/etc/puppetlabs/code/hiera.yaml"
Hierarchy entry "yaml"
Path "/etc/puppetlabs/code/environments/production/hieradata/node1.yaml"
Original path: "%{::hostname}"
No such key: "vault_notify"
Path "/etc/puppetlabs/code/environments/production/hieradata/common.yaml"
Original path: "common"
Path not found
Environment Data Provider (hiera configuration version 5)
Using configuration "/etc/puppetlabs/code/environments/production/hiera.yaml"
Hierarchy entry "Hiera-vault lookup"
Found key: "vault_notify" value: "hello123"
NOTE: Currently only kv version 1 is supported by hiera_vault
. Support for v2 will require some changes upstream in the vault
gem.
It is recomended to have a specific mount for your Puppet secrets, to avoid conflicts with an existing secrets backend.
From the command line:
vault secrets enable -version=1 -path=puppet kv
We will then configure this in our hiera config:
mounts:
puppet:
- %{::trusted.certname}
- common
Then when a hiera call is made with lookup on a machine with the certname of foo.example.com
:
$cool_key = lookup({"name" => "cool_key", "default_value" => "No Vault Secret Found"})
Secrets will then be looked up with the following path: http://vault.example.com:8200/v1/puppet/foo.example.com/cool_key
- Original - David Alden [email protected]
- Transfered and maintained by Peter Souter