mirror of
https://github.com/ceph/ceph
synced 2024-12-13 23:17:07 +00:00
25d3303698
Signed-off-by: wangyunqing <wangyunqing@inspur.com>
483 lines
16 KiB
ReStructuredText
483 lines
16 KiB
ReStructuredText
===========================
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HashiCorp Vault Integration
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===========================
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HashiCorp `Vault`_ can be used as a secure key management service for
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`Server-Side Encryption`_ (SSE-KMS).
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.. ditaa::
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+---------+ +---------+ +-------+ +-------+
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| Client | | RadosGW | | Vault | | OSD |
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+---------+ +---------+ +-------+ +-------+
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| create secret | | |
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| key for key ID | | |
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|-----------------+---------------->| |
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| | | |
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| upload object | | |
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| with key ID | | |
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|---------------->| request secret | |
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| | key for key ID | |
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| |---------------->| |
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| |<----------------| |
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| | return secret | |
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| | key | |
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| | | |
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| | encrypt object | |
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| | with secret key | |
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| |--------------+ | |
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| | | | |
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| |<-------------+ | |
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| | | |
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| | store encrypted | |
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| | object | |
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| |------------------------------>|
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#. `Vault secrets engines`_
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#. `Vault authentication`_
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#. `Vault namespaces`_
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#. `Create a key in Vault`_
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#. `Configure the Ceph Object Gateway`_
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#. `Upload object`_
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Some examples below use the Vault command line utility to interact with
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Vault. You may need to set the following environment variable with the correct
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address of your Vault server to use this utility::
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export VAULT_ADDR='https://vault-server-fqdn:8200'
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Vault secrets engines
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=====================
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Vault provides several secrets engines, which can store, generate, and encrypt
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data. Currently, the Object Gateway supports:
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- `KV secrets engine`_ version 2
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- `Transit engine`_
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KV secrets engine
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-----------------
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The KV secrets engine is used to store arbitrary key/value secrets in Vault. To
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enable the KV engine version 2 in Vault, use the following command::
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vault secrets enable -path secret kv-v2
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The Object Gateway can be configured to use the KV engine version 2 with the
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following setting::
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rgw crypt vault secret engine = kv
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Transit secrets engine
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----------------------
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The transit engine handles cryptographic functions on data in-transit. To enable
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it in Vault, use the following command::
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vault secrets enable transit
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The Object Gateway can be configured to use the transit engine with the
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following setting::
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rgw crypt vault secret engine = transit
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Vault authentication
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====================
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Vault supports several authentication mechanisms. Currently, the Object
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Gateway can be configured to authenticate to Vault using the
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`Token authentication method`_ or a `Vault agent`_.
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Most tokens in Vault have limited lifetimes and powers. The only
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sort of Vault token that does not have a lifetime are root tokens.
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For all other tokens, it is necessary to periodically refresh them,
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either by performing initial authentication, or by renewing the token.
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Ceph does not have any logic to perform either operation.
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The simplest best way to use Vault tokens with ceph is to
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also run the Vault agent and have it refresh the token file.
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When the Vault agent is used in this mode, file system permissions
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can be used to restrict who has the use of tokens.
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Instead of having Vault agent refresh a token file, it can be told
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to act as a proxy server. In this mode, Vault will add a token when
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necessary and add it to requests passed to it before forwarding them on
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to the real server. Vault agent will still handle token renewal just
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as it would when storing a token in the filesystem. In this mode, it
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is necessary to properly secure the network path rgw uses to reach the
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Vault agent, such as having the Vault agent listen only to localhost.
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Token policies for the object gateway
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-------------------------------------
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All Vault tokens have powers as specified by the polices attached
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to that token. Multiple policies may be associated with one
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token. You should only use the policy necessary for your
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configuration.
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When using the kv secret engine with the object gateway::
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vault policy write rgw-kv-policy -<<EOF
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path "secret/data/*" {
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capabilities = ["read"]
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}
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EOF
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When using the transit secret engine with the object gateway::
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vault policy write rgw-transit-policy -<<EOF
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path "transit/keys/*" {
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capabilities = [ "create", "update" ]
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denied_parameters = {"exportable" = [], "allow_plaintext_backup" = [] }
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}
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path "transit/keys/*" {
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capabilities = ["read", "delete"]
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}
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path "transit/keys/" {
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capabilities = ["list"]
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}
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path "transit/keys/+/rotate" {
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capabilities = [ "update" ]
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}
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path "transit/*" {
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capabilities = [ "update" ]
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}
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EOF
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If you had previously used an older version of ceph with the
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transit secret engine, you might need the following policy::
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vault policy write old-rgw-transit-policy -<<EOF
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path "transit/export/encryption-key/*" {
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capabilities = ["read"]
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}
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EOF
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Token authentication
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--------------------
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.. note: Never use root tokens with ceph in production environments.
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The token authentication method expects a Vault token to be present in a
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plaintext file. The Object Gateway can be configured to use token authentication
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with the following settings::
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rgw crypt vault auth = token
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rgw crypt vault token file = /run/.rgw-vault-token
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rgw crypt vault addr = https://vault-server-fqdn:8200
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Adjust these settings to match your configuration.
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For security reasons, the token file must be readable by the Object Gateway
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only.
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You might set up vault agent as follows::
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vault write auth/approle/role/rgw-ap \
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token_policies=rgw-transit-policy,default \
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token_max_ttl=60m
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Change the policy here to match your configuration.
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Get the role-id::
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vault read auth/approle/role/rgw-ap/role-id -format=json | \
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jq -r .data.role_id
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Store the output in some file, such as /usr/local/etc/vault/.rgw-ap-role-id
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Get the secret-id::
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vault read auth/approle/role/rgw-ap/role-id -format=json | \
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jq -r .data.role_id
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Store the output in some file, such as /usr/local/etc/vault/.rgw-ap-secret-id
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Create configuration for the Vault agent, such as::
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pid_file = "/run/rgw-vault-agent-pid"
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auto_auth {
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method "AppRole" {
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mount_path = "auth/approle"
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config = {
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role_id_file_path ="/usr/local/etc/vault/.rgw-ap-role-id"
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secret_id_file_path ="/usr/local/etc/vault/.rgw-ap-secret-id"
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remove_secret_id_file_after_reading ="false"
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}
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}
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sink "file" {
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config = {
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path = "/run/.rgw-vault-token"
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}
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}
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}
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vault {
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address = "https://vault-server-fqdn:8200"
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}
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Then use systemctl or another method of your choice to run
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a persistent daemon with the following arguments::
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/usr/local/bin/vault agent -config=/usr/local/etc/vault/rgw-agent.hcl
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Once the vault agent is running, the token file should be populated
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with a valid token.
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Vault agent
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-----------
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The Vault agent is a client daemon that provides authentication to Vault and
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manages token renewal and caching. It typically runs on the same host as the
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Object Gateway. With a Vault agent, it is possible to use other Vault
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authentication mechanism such as AppRole, AWS, Certs, JWT, and Azure.
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The Object Gateway can be configured to use a Vault agent with the following
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settings::
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rgw crypt vault auth = agent
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rgw crypt vault addr = http://127.0.0.1:8100
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You might set up vault agent as follows::
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vault write auth/approle/role/rgw-ap \
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token_policies=rgw-transit-policy,default \
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token_max_ttl=60m
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Change the policy here to match your configuration.
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Get the role-id:
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vault read auth/approle/role/rgw-ap/role-id -format=json | \
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jq -r .data.role_id
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Store the output in some file, such as /usr/local/etc/vault/.rgw-ap-role-id
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Get the secret-id:
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vault read auth/approle/role/rgw-ap/role-id -format=json | \
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jq -r .data.role_id
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Store the output in some file, such as /usr/local/etc/vault/.rgw-ap-secret-id
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Create configuration for the Vault agent, such as::
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pid_file = "/run/rgw-vault-agent-pid"
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auto_auth {
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method "AppRole" {
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mount_path = "auth/approle"
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config = {
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role_id_file_path ="/usr/local/etc/vault/.rgw-ap-role-id"
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secret_id_file_path ="/usr/local/etc/vault/.rgw-ap-secret-id"
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remove_secret_id_file_after_reading ="false"
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}
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}
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}
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cache {
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use_auto_auth_token = true
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}
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listener "tcp" {
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address = "127.0.0.1:8100"
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tls_disable = true
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}
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vault {
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address = "https://vault-server-fqdn:8200"
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}
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Then use systemctl or another method of your choice to run
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a persistent daemon with the following arguments::
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/usr/local/bin/vault agent -config=/usr/local/etc/vault/rgw-agent.hcl
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Once the vault agent is running, you should find it listening
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to port 8100 on localhost, and you should be able to interact
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with it using the vault command.
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Vault namespaces
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================
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In the Enterprise version, Vault supports the concept of `namespaces`_, which
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allows centralized management for teams within an organization while ensuring
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that those teams operate within isolated environments known as tenants.
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The Object Gateway can be configured to access Vault within a particular
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namespace using the following configuration setting::
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rgw crypt vault namespace = tenant1
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Create a key in Vault
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=====================
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.. note:: Keys for server-side encryption must be 256-bit long and base-64
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encoded.
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Using the KV engine
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-------------------
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A key for server-side encryption can be created in the KV version 2 engine using
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the command line utility, as in the following example::
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vault kv put secret/myproject/mybucketkey key=$(openssl rand -base64 32)
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Sample output::
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====== Metadata ======
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Key Value
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--- -----
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created_time 2019-08-29T17:01:09.095824999Z
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deletion_time n/a
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destroyed false
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version 1
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Note that in the KV secrets engine, secrets are stored as key-value pairs, and
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the Gateway expects the key name to be ``key``, i.e. the secret must be in the
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form ``key=<secret key>``.
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Using the Transit engine
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------------------------
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Keys created for use with the Transit engine should no longer be marked
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exportable. They can be created with::
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vault write -f transit/keys/mybucketkey
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The command above creates a keyring, which contains a key of type
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``aes256-gcm96`` by default. To verify that the key was correctly created, use
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the following command::
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vault read transit/mybucketkey
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Sample output::
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Key Value
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--- -----
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derived false
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exportable false
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name mybucketkey
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type aes256-gcm96
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Configure the Ceph Object Gateway
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=================================
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Edit the Ceph configuration file to enable Vault as a KMS backend for
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server-side encryption::
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rgw crypt s3 kms backend = vault
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Choose the Vault authentication method, e.g.::
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rgw crypt vault auth = token
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rgw crypt vault token file = /run/.rgw-vault-token
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rgw crypt vault addr = https://vault-server-fqdn:8200
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Or::
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rgw crypt vault auth = agent
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rgw crypt vault addr = http://localhost:8100
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Choose the secrets engine::
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rgw crypt vault secret engine = kv
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Or::
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rgw crypt vault secret engine = transit
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Optionally, set the Vault namespace where encryption keys will be fetched from::
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rgw crypt vault namespace = tenant1
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Finally, the URLs where the Gateway will retrieve encryption keys from Vault can
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be restricted by setting a path prefix. For instance, the Gateway can be
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restricted to fetch KV keys as follows::
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rgw crypt vault prefix = /v1/secret/data
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Or, when using the transit secret engine::
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rgw crypt vault prefix = /v1/transit
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In the example above, the Gateway would only fetch transit encryption keys under
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``https://vault-server:8200/v1/transit``.
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You can use custom ssl certs to authenticate with vault with help of
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following options::
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rgw crypt vault verify ssl = true
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rgw crypt vault ssl cacert = /etc/ceph/vault.ca
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rgw crypt vault ssl clientcert = /etc/ceph/vault.crt
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rgw crypt vault ssl clientkey = /etc/ceph/vault.key
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where vault.ca is CA certificate and vault.key/vault.crt are private key and ssl
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certificate generated for RGW to access the vault server. It highly recommended to
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set this option true, setting false is very dangerous and need to avoid since this
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runs in very secured environments.
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Transit engine compatibility support
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------------------------------------
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The transit engine has compatibility support for previous
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versions of ceph, which used the transit engine as a simple key store.
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There is a "compat" option which can be given to the transit
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engine to configure the compatibility support,
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To entirely disable backwards support, use::
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rgw crypt vault secret engine = transit compat=0
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This will be the default in future versions. and is safe to use
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for new installs using the current version.
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This is the normal default with the current version::
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rgw crypt vault secret engine = transit compat=1
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This enables the new engine for newly created objects,
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but still allows the old engine to be used for old objects.
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In order to access old and new objects, the vault token given
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to ceph must have both the old and new transit policies.
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To force use of only the old engine, use::
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rgw crypt vault secret engine = transit compat=2
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This mode is automatically selected if the vault prefix
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ends in export/encryption-key, which was the previously
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documented setting.
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Upload object
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=============
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When uploading an object to the Gateway, provide the SSE key ID in the request.
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As an example, for the kv engine, using the AWS command-line client::
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aws --endpoint=http://radosgw:8000 s3 cp plaintext.txt s3://mybucket/encrypted.txt --sse=aws:kms --sse-kms-key-id myproject/mybucketkey
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As an example, for the transit engine (new flavor), using the AWS command-line client::
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aws --endpoint=http://radosgw:8000 s3 cp plaintext.txt s3://mybucket/encrypted.txt --sse=aws:kms --sse-kms-key-id mybucketkey
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The Object Gateway will fetch the key from Vault, encrypt the object and store
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it in the bucket. Any request to download the object will make the Gateway
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automatically retrieve the correspondent key from Vault and decrypt the object.
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Note that the secret will be fetched from Vault using a URL constructed by
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concatenating the base address (``rgw crypt vault addr``), the (optional)
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URL prefix (``rgw crypt vault prefix``), and finally the key ID.
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In the kv engine example above, the Gateway would fetch the secret from::
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http://vaultserver:8200/v1/secret/data/myproject/mybucketkey
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In the transit engine example above, the Gateway would encrypt the secret using this key::
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http://vaultserver:8200/v1/transit/mybucketkey
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.. _Server-Side Encryption: ../encryption
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.. _Vault: https://www.vaultproject.io/docs/
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.. _Token authentication method: https://www.vaultproject.io/docs/auth/token.html
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.. _Vault agent: https://www.vaultproject.io/docs/agent/index.html
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.. _KV Secrets engine: https://www.vaultproject.io/docs/secrets/kv/
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.. _Transit engine: https://www.vaultproject.io/docs/secrets/transit
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.. _namespaces: https://www.vaultproject.io/docs/enterprise/namespaces/index.html
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