Ansible modules for Hashicorp Vault.
Install this Ansible module:
- via
pip
:
pip install ansible-modules-hashivault
- via
ansible-galaxy
(requireshvac>=2.1.0
):
ansible-galaxy install 'git+https://github.com/TerryHowe/ansible-modules-hashivault.git'
Note: The hashicorp
lookup plugin does not work with this last install method (ansible/ansible#28770).
You can fallback to the build-in lookup plugin: hashi_vault
In most cases the Hashicorp Vault modules should be run on localhost.
The following variables need to be exported to the environment where you run ansible in order to authenticate to your HashiCorp Vault instance:
- VAULT_ADDR: url for vault
- VAULT_SKIP_VERIFY=true: if set, do not verify presented TLS certificate before communicating with Vault server. Setting this variable is not recommended except during testing
- VAULT_AUTHTYPE: authentication type to use: token, userpass, github, ldap, approle
- VAULT_LOGIN_MOUNT_POINT: mount point for login defaults to auth type
- VAULT_TOKEN: token for vault
- VAULT_ROLE_ID: (required by approle)
- VAULT_SECRET_ID: (required by approle)
- VAULT_USER: username to login to vault
- VAULT_PASSWORD: password to login to vault
- VAULT_CLIENT_KEY: path to an unencrypted PEM-encoded private key matching the client certificate
- VAULT_CLIENT_CERT: path to a PEM-encoded client certificate for TLS authentication to the Vault server
- VAULT_CACERT: path to a PEM-encoded CA cert file to use to verify the Vault server TLS certificate
- VAULT_CAPATH: path to a directory of PEM-encoded CA cert files to verify the Vault server TLS certificate
- VAULT_AWS_HEADER: X-Vault-AWS-IAM-Server-ID Header value to prevent replay attacks
- VAULT_NAMESPACE: specify the Vault Namespace, if you have one
There are a few simple examples in this document, but the full documentation can be found at:
https://terryhowe.github.io/ansible-modules-hashivault/modules/list_of_hashivault_modules.html
The following example writes the giant secret with two values and then reads the fie value. The hashivault_secret module is kv2 by default:
--- - hosts: localhost tasks: - hashivault_secret: secret: giant data: foo: foe fie: fum - hashivault_read: secret: giant key: fie version: 2 register: vault_read
The lookup plugin:
- set_fact: looky: "{{lookup('hashivault', 'giant', 'foo', version=2)}}"
The hashivault_write, hashivault_read and the lookup plugin assume the /secret mount point. If you are accessing another mount point, use mount_point:
--- - hosts: localhost tasks: - hashivault_secret_engine: name: stories backend: generic - hashivault_write: mount_point: /stories secret: stuart data: last: 'little' - hashivault_read: mount_point: /stories secret: stuart key: last - set_fact: book: "{{lookup('hashivault', 'stuart', 'last', mount_point='/stories')}}"
Version 2 of KV secret engine is also supported, just add version: 2:
--- - hashivault_read: mount_point: /stories version: 2 secret: stuart key: last - set_fact: book: "{{lookup('hashivault', 'stuart', 'last', mount_point='/stories', version=2)}}"
The real strength of this module is all the administrative functions you can do. See the documentation mentioned above for more, but here is a small sample.
You may init the vault:
--- - hosts: localhost tasks: - hashivault_init: register: vault_init
You may also seal and unseal the vault:
--- - hosts: localhost vars: vault_keys: "{{ lookup('env','VAULT_KEYS') }}" tasks: - hashivault_status: register: vault_status - block: - hashivault_seal: register: vault_seal when: "{{vault_status.status.sealed}} == False" - hashivault_unseal: keys: '{{vault_keys}}'
If you are not using the VAULT_ADDR and VAULT_TOKEN environment variables, you may be able to simplify your playbooks with an action plugin. This can be some somewhat similar to this example action plugin.
One of the complicated problems with development and testing of this module is
ansible/module_utils/hashivault.py
is not a directory in itself which
in my opinion is a problem with ansible. Because of this limitation with
ansible, pip install -e .
does not work like it would for other
projects. Two potential ways to work around this issue are either use the
link.sh
script in the top level directory or run for every change:
rm -rf dist; python setup.py sdist pip install ./dist/ansible-modules-hashivault-*.tar.gz
MIT.