kubespray/docs/vault.md

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Hashicorp Vault Role

Overview

The Vault role is a two-step process:

  1. Bootstrap

You cannot start your certificate management service securely with SSL (and the datastore behind it) without having the certificates in-hand already. This presents an unfortunate chicken and egg scenario, with one requiring the other. To solve for this, the Bootstrap step was added.

This step spins up a temporary instance of Vault to issue certificates for Vault itself. It then leaves the temporary instance running, so that the Etcd role can generate certs for itself as well. Eventually, this may be improved to allow alternate backends (such as Consul), but currently the tasks are hardcoded to only create a Vault role for Etcd.

  1. Cluster

This step is where the long-term Vault cluster is started and configured. Its first task, is to stop any temporary instances of Vault, to free the port for the long-term. At the end of this task, the entire Vault cluster should be up and read to go.

Keys to the Kingdom

The two most important security pieces of Vault are the root_token and unsealing_keys. Both of these values are given exactly once, during the initialization of the Vault cluster. For convenience, they are saved to the vault_secret_dir (default: /etc/vault/secrets) of every host in the vault group.

It is highly recommended that these secrets are removed from the servers after your cluster has been deployed, and kept in a safe location of your choosing. Naturally, the seriousness of the situation depends on what you're doing with your Kubespray cluster, but with these secrets, an attacker will have the ability to authenticate to almost everything in Kubernetes and decode all private (HTTPS) traffic on your network signed by Vault certificates.

For even greater security, you may want to remove and store elsewhere any CA keys generated as well (e.g. /etc/vault/ssl/ca-key.pem).

Vault by default encrypts all traffic to and from the datastore backend, all resting data, and uses TLS for its TCP listener. It is recommended that you do not change the Vault config to disable TLS, unless you absolutely have to.

Usage

To get the Vault role running, you must to do two things at a minimum:

  1. Assign the vault group to at least 1 node in your inventory
  2. Change cert_management to be vault instead of script

Nothing else is required, but customization is possible. Check roles/vault/defaults/main.yml for the different variables that can be overridden, most common being vault_config, vault_port, and vault_deployment_type.

Also, if you intend to use a Root or Intermediate CA generated elsewhere, you'll need to copy the certificate and key to the hosts in the vault group prior to running the vault role. By default, they'll be located at /etc/vault/ssl/ca.pem and /etc/vault/ssl/ca-key.pem, respectively.

Additional Notes:

  • groups.vault|first is considered the source of truth for Vault variables
  • vault_leader_url is used as pointer for the current running Vault
  • Each service should have its own role and credentials. Currently those credentials are saved to /etc/vault/roles/<role>/. The service will need to read in those credentials, if they want to interact with Vault.

Potential Work

  • Change the Vault role to not run certain tasks when root_token and unseal_keys are not present. Alternatively, allow user input for these values when missing.
  • Add the ability to start temp Vault with Host, Rkt, or Docker
  • Add a dynamic way to change out the backend role creation during Bootstrap, so other services can be used (such as Consul)
  • Segregate Server Cert generation from Auth Cert generation (separate CAs). This work was partially started with the auth_cert_backend tasks, but would need to be further applied to all roles (particularly Etcd and Kubernetes).