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Secret |
Secrets refer to any sensitive information required during the running process of APISIX, which may be part of the core configuration (such as the etcd's password) or some sensitive information in the plugin. Common types of Secrets in APISIX include:
- username, the password for some components (etcd, Redis, Kafka, etc.)
- the private key of the certificate
- API key
- Sensitive plugin configuration fields, typically used for authentication, hashing, signing, or encryption
APISIX Secret allows users to store secrets through some secrets management services (Vault, etc.) in APISIX, and read them according to the key when using them to ensure that Secrets do not exist in plain text throughout the platform.
Its working principle is shown in the figure:
APISIX currently supports storing secrets in the following ways:
You can use APISIX Secret functions by specifying format variables in the consumer configuration of the following plugins, such as key-auth
.
:::note
If a key-value pair key: "$ENV://ABC"
is configured in APISIX and the value of $ENV://ABC
is unassigned in the environment variable, $ENV://ABC
will be interpreted as a string literal, instead of nil
.
:::
Using environment variables to manage secrets means that you can save key information in environment variables, and refer to environment variables through variables in a specific format when configuring plugins. APISIX supports referencing system environment variables and environment variables configured through the Nginx env
directive.
$ENV://$env_name/$sub_key
- env_name: environment variable name
- sub_key: get the value of a property when the value of the environment variable is a JSON string
If the value of the environment variable is of type string, such as:
export JACK_AUTH_KEY=abc
It can be referenced as follows:
$ENV://JACK_AUTH_KEY
If the value of the environment variable is a JSON string like:
export JACK={"auth-key":"abc","openid-key": "def"}
It can be referenced as follows:
# Get the auth-key of the environment variable JACK
$ENV://JACK/auth-key
# Get the openid-key of the environment variable JACK
$ENV://JACK/openid-key
Step 1: Create environment variables before the APISIX instance starts
export JACK_AUTH_KEY=abc
Step 2: Reference the environment variable in the key-auth
plugin
curl http://127.0.0.1:9180/apisix/admin/consumers \
-H 'X-API-KEY: edd1c9f034335f136f87ad84b625c8f1' -X PUT -d '
{
"username": "jack",
"plugins": {
"key-auth": {
"key": "$ENV://JACK_AUTH_KEY"
}
}
}'
Through the above steps, the key
configuration in the key-auth
plugin can be saved in the environment variable instead of being displayed in plain text when configuring the plugin.
Using Vault to manage secrets means that you can store secrets information in the Vault service and refer to it through variables in a specific format when configuring plugins. APISIX currently supports Vault KV engine version V1.
$secret://$manager/$id/$secret_name/$key
- manager: secrets management service, could be the Vault, AWS, etc.
- id: APISIX Secrets resource ID, which needs to be consistent with the one specified when adding the APISIX Secrets resource
- secret_name: the secret name in the secrets management service
- key: the key corresponding to the secret in the secrets management service
Step 1: Create the corresponding key in the Vault, you can use the following command:
vault kv put apisix/jack auth-key=value
Step 2: Add APISIX Secrets resources through the Admin API, configure the Vault address and other connection information:
curl http://127.0.0.1:9180/apisix/admin/secrets/vault/1 \
-H 'X-API-KEY: edd1c9f034335f136f87ad84b625c8f1' -X PUT -d '
{
"uri": "https://127.0.0.1:8200",
"prefix": "apisix",
"token": "root"
}'
If you use APISIX Standalone mode, you can add the following configuration in apisix.yaml
configuration file:
secrets:
- id: vault/1
prefix: apisix
token: root
uri: 127.0.0.1:8200
Step 3: Reference the APISIX Secrets resource in the key-auth
plugin and fill in the key information:
curl http://127.0.0.1:9180/apisix/admin/consumers \
-H 'X-API-KEY: edd1c9f034335f136f87ad84b625c8f1' -X PUT -d '
{
"username": "jack",
"plugins": {
"key-auth": {
"key": "$secret://vault/1/jack/auth-key"
}
}
}'
Through the above two steps, when the user request hits the key-auth
plugin, the real value of the key in the Vault will be obtained through the APISIX Secret component.