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New to KubeVault? Please start here.
Manage Elasticsearch credentials using the KubeVault operator
Elasticsearch is one of the supported plugins for the database secrets engine. This plugin generates database credentials dynamically based on configured roles for the Elasticsearch database. You can easily manage Elasticsearch secret engine using the KubeVault operator.
You need to be familiar with the following CRDs:
Before you begin
- Install KubeVault operator in your cluster from here.
To keep things isolated, we are going to use a separate namespace called demo
throughout this tutorial.
$ kubectl create ns demo
namespace/demo created
In this tutorial, we are going to create a role using Elasticsearch and issue credential using SecretAccessRequest.
Vault Server
If you don’t have a Vault Server, you can deploy it by using the KubeVault operator.
The KubeVault operator can manage policies and secret engines of Vault servers which are not provisioned by the KubeVault operator. You need to configure both the Vault server and the cluster so that the KubeVault operator can communicate with your Vault server.
Now, we have the AppBinding that contains connection and authentication information about the Vault server.
$ kubectl get appbinding -n demo
NAME AGE
vault 50m
$ kubectl get appbinding -n demo vault -o yaml
apiVersion: appcatalog.appscode.com/v1alpha1
kind: AppBinding
metadata:
creationTimestamp: "2021-08-16T08:23:38Z"
generation: 1
labels:
app.kubernetes.io/instance: vault
app.kubernetes.io/managed-by: kubevault.com
app.kubernetes.io/name: vaultservers.kubevault.com
name: vault
namespace: demo
ownerReferences:
- apiVersion: kubevault.com/v1alpha1
blockOwnerDeletion: true
controller: true
kind: VaultServer
name: vault
uid: 6b405147-93da-41ff-aad3-29ae9f415d0a
resourceVersion: "602898"
uid: b54873fd-0f34-42f7-bdf3-4e667edb4659
spec:
clientConfig:
service:
name: vault
port: 8200
scheme: http
parameters:
apiVersion: config.kubevault.com/v1alpha1
kind: VaultServerConfiguration
kubernetes:
serviceAccountName: vault
tokenReviewerServiceAccountName: vault-k8s-token-reviewer
usePodServiceAccountForCSIDriver: true
path: kubernetes
vaultRole: vault-policy-controller
Enable and Configure Elasticsearch Secret Engine
When a SecretEngine crd object is created, the KubeVault operator will enable a secret engine on specified path and configure the secret engine with given configurations.
A sample SecretEngine object for the Elasticsearch secret engine:
apiVersion: engine.kubevault.com/v1alpha1
kind: SecretEngine
metadata:
name: es-engine
namespace: demo
spec:
vaultRef:
name: vault
elasticsearch:
databaseRef:
name: elasticsearch
namespace: demo
pluginName: "elasticsearch-database-plugin"
Let’s deploy SecretEngine:
$ kubectl apply -f docs/examples/guides/secret-engines/elasticsearch/secretengine.yaml
secretengine.engine.kubevault.com/es-engine created
Wait till the status become Success
:
$ kubectl get secretengines -n demo
NAME STATUS AGE
es-engine Success 10s
Since the status is Success
, the Elasticsearch secret engine is enabled and successfully configured. You can use kubectl describe secretengine -n <namepsace> <name>
to check for error events, if any.
Create Elasticsearch Role
By using ElasticsearchRole, you can create a role on the Vault server in Kubernetes native way.
A sample ElasticsearchRole object is given below:
apiVersion: engine.kubevault.com/v1alpha1
kind: ElasticsearchRole
metadata:
name: es-superuser-role
namespace: demo
spec:
secretEngineRef:
name: es-secret-engine
creationStatements:
- '{"elasticsearch_roles": ["superuser"]}'
defaultTTL: 1h
maxTTL: 24h
Let’s deploy ElasticsearchRole:
$ kubectl apply -f docs/examples/guides/secret-engines/elasticsearch/secretenginerole.yaml
elasticsearchrole.engine.kubevault.com/es-superuser-role created
$ kubectl get elasticsearchrole -n demo
NAME STATUS AGE
es-superuser-role Success 34m
You can also check from Vault that the role is created.
To resolve the naming conflict, name of the role in Vault will follow this format: k8s.{clusterName}.{metadata.namespace}.{metadata.name}
.
Don’t have Vault CLI? Download and configure it as described here
$ vault list your-database-path/roles
Keys
----
k8s.-.demo.es-superuser-role
$ vault read your-database-path/roles/k8s.-.demo.es-superuser-role
Key Value
--- -----
creation_statements [{"elasticsearch_roles": ["superuser"]}]
db_name k8s.-.demo.elasticsearch
default_ttl 1h
max_ttl 24h
renew_statements []
revocation_statements []
rollback_statements []
If we delete the ElasticsearchRole, then the respective role will be deleted from the Vault.
$ kubectl delete elasticsearchrole -n demo es-superuser-role
elasticsearchrole.engine.kubevault.com "es-superuser-role" deleted
Check from Vault whether the role exists:
$ vault read your-database-path/roles/k8s.-.demo.es-superuser-role
No value found at your-database-path/roles/k8s.-.demo.es-superuser-role
$ vault list your-database-path/roles
No value found at your-database-path/roles/
Generate Elasticsearch credentials
Here, we are going to make a request to Vault for Elasticsearch credentials by creating es-cred-rqst
SecretAccessRequest in demo
namespace.
apiVersion: engine.kubevault.com/v1alpha1
kind: SecretAccessRequest
metadata:
name: es-cred-rqst
namespace: demo
spec:
roleRef:
kind: ElasticsearchRole
name: es-superuser-role
subjects:
- kind: ServiceAccount
name: demo-sa
namespace: demo
Here, spec.roleRef
is the reference of Elasticsearch against which credentials will be issued. spec.subjects
is the reference to the object or user identities a role binding applies to it will have read access of the credential secret.
Now, we are going to create SecretAccessRequest.
$ kubectl apply -f docs/examples/guides/secret-engines/elasticsearch/elasticaccessrequest.yaml
secretaccessrequest.engine.kubevault.com/es-cred-rqst created
$ kubectl get secretaccessrequest -n demo
NAME AGE
es-cred-rqst 72m
Database credentials will not be issued until it is approved. The KubeVault operator will watch for the approval in the status.conditions[].type
field of the request object. You can use KubeVault CLI, a kubectl plugin, to approve or deny SecretAccessRequest.
# using KubeVault CLI as kubectl plugin to approve request
$ kubectl vault approve secretaccessrequest es-cred-rqst -n demo
approved
$ kubectl get secretaccessrequest -n demo es-cred-rqst -o yaml
apiVersion: engine.kubevault.com/v1alpha1
kind: SecretAccessRequest
metadata:
name: es-cred-rqst
namespace: demo
spec:
roleRef:
kind: ElasticsearchRole
name: es-superuser-role
namespace: demo
subjects:
- kind: ServiceAccount
name: demo-sa
namespace: demo
status:
conditions:
- lastUpdateTime: "2020-11-18T06:41:57Z"
message: This was approved by kubectl vault approve secreteaccessrequest
reason: KubectlApprove
type: Approved
lease:
duration: 1h0m0s
id: your-database-path/creds/k8s.-.demo.es-superuser-role/ni3TCo2HkSwCUb8kmQuvIDdx
renewable: true
secret:
name: es-cred-rqst-gy66wq
Once SecretAccessRequest is approved, the KubeVault operator will issue credentials from Vault and create a secret containing the credential. It will also create a role and rolebinding so that spec.subjects
can access secret. You can view the information in the status
field.
$ kubectl get secretaccessrequest es-cred-rqst -n demo -o json | jq '.status'
{
"conditions": [
{
"lastUpdateTime": "2019-11-18T06:41:57Z",
"message": "This was approved by kubectl vault approve secretaccessrequest",
"reason": "KubectlApprove",
"type": "Approved"
}
],
"lease": {
"duration": "1h0m0s",
"id": "your-database-path/creds/k8s.-.demo.es-superuser-role/ni3TCo2HkSwCUb8kmQuvIDdx",
"renewable": true
},
"secret": {
"name": "es-cred-rqst-gy66wq"
}
}
$ kubectl get secret -n demo es-cred-rqst-gy66wq -o yaml
apiVersion: v1
data:
password: QTFhLVBkZGlsZFFxa0o1cnlvR20=
username: di1rdWJlcm5ldGVzLWRlbW8TE1NzQwNTkzMTc=
kind: Secret
metadata:
name: es-cred-rqst-gy66wq
namespace: demo
ownerReferences:
- apiVersion: engine.kubevault.com/v1alpha1
controller: true
kind: SecretAccessRequest
name: es-cred-rqst
uid: 54ce63ca-d0e7-4b97-9085-b52eb3cb334f
type: Opaque
If SecretAccessRequest is deleted, then credential lease (if any) will be revoked.
$ kubectl delete secretaccessrequest -n demo es-cred-rqst
secretaccessrequest.engine.kubevault.com "es-cred-rqst" deleted
If SecretAccessRequest is Denied
, then the KubeVault operator will not issue any credential.
$ kubectl vault deny secretaccessrequest es-cred-rqst -n demo
Denied
Note: Once SecretAccessRequest is
Approved
, you cannot changespec.roleRef
andspec.subjects
field.