You cannot select more than 25 topics Topics must start with a letter or number, can include dashes ('-') and can be up to 35 characters long.
flux2/docs/guides/mozilla-sops.md

192 lines
5.5 KiB
Markdown

# 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 <stefanprodan@users.noreply.github.com>"
```
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 `flux-system` namespace:
```sh
gpg --export-secret-keys \
--armor 1F3D1CED2F865F5E59CA564553241F147E7C5FA4 |
kubectl create secret generic sops-gpg \
--namespace=flux-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
flux create source git my-secrets \
--url=https://github.com/my-org/my-secrets
```
Create a kustomization for reconciling the secrets on the cluster:
```sh
flux 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.
### AWS/Azure/GCP
When using AWS/GCP KMS, you'll have to bind an IAM Role with access to the KMS
keys to the `default` service account of the `flux-system` namespace for
kustomize-controller to be able to fetch keys from KMS.
AWS IAM Role example:
```json
{
"Version": "2012-10-17",
"Statement": [
{
"Action": [
"kms:Encrypt",
"kms:Decrypt",
"kms:ReEncrypt*",
"kms:GenerateDataKey*",
"kms:DescribeKey"
],
"Effect": "Allow",
"Resource": "arn:aws:kms:eu-west-1:XXXXX209540:key/4f581f5b-7f78-45e9-a543-83a7022e8105"
}
]
}
```
When using Azure Key Vault you need to authenticate the kustomize controller either by passing
[Service Principal credentials as environment variables](https://github.com/mozilla/sops#encrypting-using-azure-key-vault)
or with [add-pod-identity](https://github.com/Azure/aad-pod-identity).
## 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: flux-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: flux-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 `flux create <kind> --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