# Manage Kubernetes secrets with Mozilla SOPS In order to store secrets safely in a public or private Git repository, you can use Mozilla's [SOPS](https://github.com/mozilla/sops) CLI to encrypt Kubernetes secrets with OpenPGP, AWS KMS, GCP KMS and Azure Key Vault. ## Prerequisites To follow this guide you'll need a Kubernetes cluster with the GitOps toolkit controllers installed on it. Please see the [get started guide](../get-started/index.md) or the [installation guide](installation.md). Install [gnupg](https://www.gnupg.org/) and [sops](https://github.com/mozilla/sops): ```sh brew install gnupg sops ``` ## Generate a GPG key Generate a GPG key with OpenPGP without specifying a passphrase: ```console $ gpg --full-generate-key Real name: stefanprodan Email address: stefanprodan@users.noreply.github.com Comment: You selected this USER-ID: "stefanprodan " ``` Retrieve the GPG key ID (second row of the sec column): ```console $ gpg --list-secret-keys stefanprodan@users.noreply.github.com sec rsa3072 2020-09-06 [SC] 1F3D1CED2F865F5E59CA564553241F147E7C5FA4 ``` Export the public and private keypair from your local GPG keyring and create a Kubernetes secret named `sops-gpg` in the `gotk-system` namespace: ```sh gpg --export-secret-keys \ --armor 1F3D1CED2F865F5E59CA564553241F147E7C5FA4 | kubectl create secret generic sops-gpg \ --namespace=gotk-system \ --from-file=sops.asc=/dev/stdin ``` ## Encrypt secrets Generate a Kubernetes secret manifest with kubectl: ```sh kubectl -n default create secret generic basic-auth \ --from-literal=user=admin \ --from-literal=password=change-me \ --dry-run=client \ -o yaml > basic-auth.yaml ``` Encrypt the secret with sops using your GPG key: ```sh sops --encrypt \ --pgp=1F3D1CED2F865F5E59CA564553241F147E7C5FA4 \ --encrypted-regex '^(data|stringData)$' \ --in-place basic-auth.yaml ``` !!! hint Note that you should encrypt only the `data` section. Encrypting the Kubernetes secret metadata, kind or apiVersion is not supported by kustomize-controller. You can now commit the encrypted secret to your Git repository. ## Configure secrets decryption Registry the Git repository on your cluster: ```sh gotk create source git my-secrets \ --url=https://github.com/my-org/my-secrets ``` Create a kustomization for reconciling the secrets on the cluster: ```sh gotk create kustomization my-secrets \ --source=my-secrets \ --prune=true \ --interval=10m \ --decryption-provider=sops \ --decryption-secret=sops-gpg ``` Note that the `sops-gpg` can contain more than one key, sops will try to decrypt the secrets by iterating over all the private keys until it finds one that works. !!! hint KMS When using AWS/GCP KMS or Azure Key Vault, you'll have to bind an IAM Role with read access to the KMS keys to the `default` service account of the `gotk-system` namespace for kustomize-controller to be able to fetch keys from KMS. ## GitOps workflow A cluster admin should create the Kubernetes secret with the PGP keys on each cluster and add the GitRepository/Kustomization manifests to the fleet repository. Git repository manifest: ```yaml apiVersion: source.toolkit.fluxcd.io/v1beta1 kind: GitRepository metadata: name: my-secrets namespace: gotk-system spec: interval: 1m url: https://github.com/my-org/my-secrets ``` Kustomization manifest: ```yaml apiVersion: kustomize.toolkit.fluxcd.io/v1beta1 kind: Kustomization metadata: name: my-secrets namespace: gotk-system spec: interval: 10m0s sourceRef: kind: GitRepository name: my-secrets path: ./ prune: true decryption: provider: sops secretRef: name: sops-gpg ``` !!! hint You can generate the above manifests using `gotk create --export > manifest.yaml`. Assuming a team member wants to deploy an application that needs to connect to a database using a username and password, they'll be doing the following: * create a Kubernetes Secret manifest locally with the db credentials e.g. `db-auth.yaml` * encrypt the secret `data` field with sops * create a Kubernetes Deployment manifest for the app e.g. `app-deployment.yaml` * add the Secret to the Deployment manifest as a [volume mount or env var](https://kubernetes.io/docs/concepts/configuration/secret/#using-secrets) * commit the manifests `db-auth.yaml` and `app-deployment.yaml` to a Git repository that's being synced by the GitOps toolkit controllers Once the manifests have been pushed to the Git repository, the following happens: * source-controller pulls the changes from Git * kustomize-controller loads the GPG keys from the `sops-pgp` secret * kustomize-controller decrypts the Kubernetes secrets with sops and applies them on the cluster * kubelet creates the pods and mounts the secret as a volume or env variable inside the app container