3-add-example-for-periodic-orphan-token #4

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hygienic-books merged 7 commits from 3-add-example-for-periodic-orphan-token into master 2023-04-25 00:23:44 +00:00
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@ -32,37 +32,42 @@ Log out. Never again use the `root` token unless there's a good reason.
Get the Vault command-line client via [vaultproject.io/downloads](https://www.vaultproject.io/downloads). It'll install the Vault service itself along with the command-line client. Just ignore the service or keep it disabled via `systemctl disable --now vault.service`. You only need the `vault` binary.
* Authenticate against Vault:
```
export VAULT_ADDR='https://fully.qualified.domain.name/'
vault login
### Authenticate against Vault:
```
export VAULT_ADDR='https://fully.qualified.domain.name/'
vault login
# Which will prompt for:
Token (will be hidden):
```
Enter your personal alias' token, do not ever again use the `root` token.
# Which will prompt for:
Token (will be hidden):
```
Enter your personal alias' token, do not ever again use the `root` token.
* Enable audit file device (in non-Vault-speak "the audit log file"):
```
# Enable
vault audit enable file file_path=/vault/logs/audit.log
### Auditing
# Expected output:
Success! Enabled the file audit device at: file/
```
Confirm:
```
# Confirm
vault audit list
Enable audit file device (in non-Vault-speak "the audit log file"):
```
# Enable
vault audit enable file file_path=/vault/logs/audit.log
# Expected output
Path Type Description
---- ---- -----------
file/ file n/a
```
* We're going to allow all human users to change their own `userpass` password. The policy to do so is at [policies/human/change-own-password.hcl](policies/human/change-own-password.hcl). For a hands-on example of an actual password change via HTTP API see [Hands-on](#hands-on) but first:
# Expected output:
Success! Enabled the file audit device at: file/
```
Confirm:
```
# Confirm
vault audit list
* Before you can load the policy into Vault you need to replace the string `ACCESSOR` in it with _your_ particular `userpass` accessor. Get it like so:
# Expected output
Path Type Description
---- ---- -----------
file/ file n/a
```
### Humans may change their own password
We're going to allow all human users to change their own `userpass` password. The policy to do so is at [policies/human/change-own-password.hcl](policies/human/change-own-password.hcl). For a hands-on example of an actual password change via HTTP API see [Hands-on](#hands-on) but first:
* Before you can load the policy into Vault you need to replace the string `ACCESSOR` in it with _your_ particular `userpass` accessor. Get it like so:
```
# List auth methods
vault auth list
@ -75,8 +80,8 @@ Get the Vault command-line client via [vaultproject.io/downloads](https://www.va
```
Over in [policies/human/change-own-password.hcl](policies/human/change-own-password.hcl) replace `ACCESSOR` with what you're seeing here in the Accessor column. Feel free to read up on [templated policies](https://www.vaultproject.io/docs/concepts/policies#templated-policies) for more info.
* Load the policy
* Create a group for humans and assign the policy `change-own-password` to it.
* Load the policy
* Create a group for humans and assign the policy `change-own-password` to it.
```
# Create group
vault write identity/group name="humans" policies="change-own-password"
@ -94,37 +99,43 @@ Get the Vault command-line client via [vaultproject.io/downloads](https://www.va
```
Entity IDs are coming from `vault list identity/entity/id` and/or `vault read identity/entity/name/<name>`.
* Optionally [policies/cfgmgmt/cfgmgmt.hcl](policies/cfgmgmt/cfgmgmt.hcl) gets you started with read-only secrets access for example for a config management tool like Ansible.
### Ready-only secrets access
You'll want to create an Ansible entity and a `userpass` alias. Think of the alias as glue that ties an auth method to an entity. This in turn allows you to specify policy that applies to the entity, gets inherited by aliases and lastly inherited by auth methods.
Optionally [policies/cfgmgmt/cfgmgmt.hcl](policies/cfgmgmt/cfgmgmt.hcl) gets you started with read-only secrets access for example for a config management tool like Ansible.
In this simple use case create create a user in the `userpass` auth method, use the same name used from both the entity and its alias. Use that user to authenticate against Vault and retrieve a token. You'll likely want a distinct group where your Ansible entity becomes a member and which uses a policy such as the example at [policies/cfgmgmt/cfgmgmt.hcl](policies/cfgmgmt/cfgmgmt.hcl).
You'll want to create an Ansible entity and a `userpass` alias. Think of the alias as glue that ties an auth method to an entity. This in turn allows you to specify policy that applies to the entity, gets inherited by aliases and lastly inherited by auth methods.
From here on out it's just more of what you already did, feel free to make this fit your own approach.
In this simple use case create create a user in the `userpass` auth method, use the same name used from both the entity and its alias. Use that user to authenticate against Vault and retrieve a token. You'll likely want a distinct group where your Ansible entity becomes a member and which uses a policy such as the example at [policies/cfgmgmt/cfgmgmt.hcl](policies/cfgmgmt/cfgmgmt.hcl).
* Optionally from [policies/kv-writer/kv-writer.hcl](policies/kv-writer/kv-writer.hcl) load a policy that allows affected entities to create `kv` secrets, create new versions for existing secrets and to traverse the UI directory structure of secrets. Entities with this policy will not be able to read secrets nor see if versions exist at a given location.
From here on out it's just more of what you already did, feel free to make this fit your own approach.
Permission to also read/view secrets is commented out in the policy file in case you do need this feature.
### Write-only access
Assign the policy to a group as needed.
Optionally from [policies/kv-writer/kv-writer.hcl](policies/kv-writer/kv-writer.hcl) load a policy that allows affected entities to create `kv` secrets, create new versions for existing secrets and to traverse the UI directory structure of secrets. Entities with this policy will not be able to read secrets nor see if versions exist at a given location.
* As a similar narrowly scoped use case consider a Zabbix monitoring instance that may need access to credentials, session IDs, tokens or other forms of authentication to monitor machines and services.
Permission to also read/view secrets is commented out in the policy file in case you do need this feature.
Here's one suggestion to set up the basics for Zabbix.
Assign the policy to a group as needed.
In Vault with a user that has sufficient permissions:
* Create an entity `zabbix` without a policy.
* Add an alias of type `userpass` to the entity.
* Within the `userpass` auth method create a user (an account if you will) with the same name as the alias you just created so in this case `zabbix`, set a password for the account
### Zabbix credentials storage
Now tie it all together by creating a group named `rbacgroup_zabbix`. Add the `zabbix` entity to it and make it use the policy `zabbix`. At this point the policy does not yet exist which is fine, you can set a policy name and Vault will offer to `Add new policy`, see screenshot below. Don't worry, this will not actually add a new policy - empty, broken or otherwise. Vault will simply link your group to the policy `zabbix` which does not exist. You'll get to that in a minute.
As a similar narrowly scoped use case consider a Zabbix monitoring instance that may need access to credentials, session IDs, tokens or other forms of authentication to monitor machines and services.
Like so:
![Vault 1.11.3 Create Group menu](https://i.imgur.com/3Ni53BE.png)
Here's one suggestion to set up the basics for Zabbix.
Next up check out [policies/zabbix/zabbix.hcl](policies/zabbix/zabbix.hcl). Do some light replacement before importing it into Vault. The policy file contains a few occurrences of the string `GROUPID`, replace them with the group ID of `rbacgroup_zabbix`.
* Via Vault's UI you can get the group ID at `Access > Groups > rbacgroup_zabbix`.
* Via the `vault` command-line client you can do it like so where the `id` value is what you're after:
In Vault with a user that has sufficient permissions:
* Create an entity `zabbix` without a policy.
* Add an alias of type `userpass` to the entity.
* Within the `userpass` auth method create a user (an account if you will) with the same name as the alias you just created so in this case `zabbix`, set a password for the account
Now tie it all together by creating a group named `rbacgroup_zabbix`. Add the `zabbix` entity to it and make it use the policy `zabbix`. At this point the policy does not yet exist which is fine, you can set a policy name and Vault will offer to `Add new policy`, see screenshot below. Don't worry, this will not actually add a new policy - empty, broken or otherwise. Vault will simply link your group to the policy `zabbix` which does not exist. You'll get to that in a minute.
Like so:
![Vault 1.11.3 Create Group menu](https://i.imgur.com/3Ni53BE.png)
Next up check out [policies/zabbix/zabbix.hcl](policies/zabbix/zabbix.hcl). Do some light replacement before importing it into Vault. The policy file contains a few occurrences of the string `GROUPID`, replace them with the group ID of `rbacgroup_zabbix`.
* Via Vault's UI you can get the group ID at `Access > Groups > rbacgroup_zabbix`.
* Via the `vault` command-line client you can do it like so where the `id` value is what you're after:
```
# Get 'rbacgroup_zabbix' group metadata
vault kv get /identity/group/name/rbacgroup_zabbix
@ -140,36 +151,36 @@ Get the Vault command-line client via [vaultproject.io/downloads](https://www.va
id 88560da7-e180-3d2e-9053-dc0ee4ba7fbe
...
```
With your ID in hand and [policies/zabbix/zabbix.hcl](policies/zabbix/zabbix.hcl) updated import it as a new policy. You're going to want to save it with the same policy name you assigned earlier to `rbacgroup_zabbix` which was `zabbix`. This role will grant read-only access to secrets underneath a folder `for_rbacgroup_zabbix` which in our example lives inside a `kv` version 2 secrets engine mounted at its default location `kv`.
With your ID in hand and [policies/zabbix/zabbix.hcl](policies/zabbix/zabbix.hcl) updated import it as a new policy. You're going to want to save it with the same policy name you assigned earlier to `rbacgroup_zabbix` which was `zabbix`. This role will grant read-only access to secrets underneath a folder `for_rbacgroup_zabbix` which in our example lives inside a `kv` version 2 secrets engine mounted at its default location `kv`.
Now whenever your Zabbix instance needs access to something store secrets underneath `kv/for_rbacgroup_zabbix`. The policy will make sure only the group with correct ID will have access to secrets underneath that directory.
Now whenever your Zabbix instance needs access to something store secrets underneath `kv/for_rbacgroup_zabbix`. The policy will make sure only the group with correct ID will have access to secrets underneath that directory.
Log in to Vault with `userpass` and the `zabbix` account from above, get the account's token and lastly double-check that `zabbix` with its token can read a secret:
```
curl --silent --location --header 'X-Vault-Token: <token>' \
Log in to Vault with `userpass` and the `zabbix` account from above, get the account's token and lastly double-check that `zabbix` with its token can read a secret:
```
curl --silent --location --header 'X-Vault-Token: <token>' \
'https://f.q.d.n/v1/kv/data/for_rbacgroup_zabbix/some/secret' \
| jq '.data.data'
```
```
Configure Zabbix with its own Vault token and enjoy no longer having to store any secrets in Zabbix itself.
Configure Zabbix with its own Vault token and enjoy no longer having to store any secrets in Zabbix itself.
Side note, if your token regularly expires you may want to store the token itself in Vault and let Zabbix monitor token expiry via the Zabbix equivalent of:
```
# Look up a token's own attributes
curl --silent --location --header 'X-Vault-Token: <token>' \
Side note, if your token regularly expires you may want to store the token itself in Vault and let Zabbix monitor token expiry via the Zabbix equivalent of:
```
# Look up a token's own attributes
curl --silent --location --header 'X-Vault-Token: <token>' \
'https://f.q.d.n/v1/auth/token/lookup-self' \
| jq '.data.ttl'
# .data.ttl will show remaining validity in secs:
2754536
```
# .data.ttl will show remaining validity in secs:
2754536
```
Users wishing to browse the `rbacgroup_zabbix` directory structure via Vault's UI will need to manually begin their browsing at `kv/list/for_rbacgroup_zabbix`. Users with higher privileges such as administrators will be able to list all directories underneath the root `kv` object in Vault's web UI. This will include not only `zabbix`-specific data but also directories intended for other users which is why `kv/list` access is not granted to `rbacgroup_zabbix`.
Users wishing to browse the `rbacgroup_zabbix` directory structure via Vault's UI will need to manually begin their browsing at `kv/list/for_rbacgroup_zabbix`. Users with higher privileges such as administrators will be able to list all directories underneath the root `kv` object in Vault's web UI. This will include not only `zabbix`-specific data but also directories intended for other users which is why `kv/list` access is not granted to `rbacgroup_zabbix`.
Their `list` permission only begins one lever deeper at `kv/list/for_rbacgroup_zabbix`. It may make sense to communicate an entrypoint link to end users that - in this case - will look like:
```
https://f.q.d.n/ui/vault/secrets/kv/list/for_rbacgroup_zabbix
```
Their `list` permission only begins one lever deeper at `kv/list/for_rbacgroup_zabbix`. It may make sense to communicate an entrypoint link to end users that - in this case - will look like:
```
https://f.q.d.n/ui/vault/secrets/kv/list/for_rbacgroup_zabbix
```
## Clean-up