Kubernetes and Secrets Management In The Cloud
The kube-secrets-init
is a Kubernetes mutating admission webhook, that mutates any K8s Pod that is using specially prefixed environment variables, directly or from Kubernetes as Secret or ConfigMap.
The kube-secrets-init
injects a copy-secrets-init
initContainer
into a target Pod, mounts /helper/bin
(default; can be changed with the volume-path
flag) and copies the secrets-init
tool into the mounted volume. It also modifies Pod entrypoint
to secrets-init
init system, following original command and arguments, extracted either from Pod specification or from Docker image.
The kube-secrets-init
can be configured to skip injection for all Pods in the specific Namespace by adding the admission.secrets-init/ignore
label to the Namespace.
secrets-init
runs as PID 1
, acting like a simple init system. It launches a single process and then proxies all received signals to a session rooted at that child process.
secrets-init
also passes almost all environment variables without modification, replacing secret variables with values from secret management services.
User can put AWS secret ARN as environment variable value. The secrets-init
will resolve any environment value, using specified ARN, to referenced secret value.
# environment variable passed to `secrets-init`
MY_DB_PASSWORD=arn:aws:secretsmanager:$AWS_REGION:$AWS_ACCOUNT_ID:secret:mydbpassword-cdma3
# environment variable passed to child process, resolved by `secrets-init`
MY_DB_PASSWORD=very-secret-password
It is possible to use AWS Systems Manager Parameter Store to store application parameters and secrets.
User can put AWS Parameter Store ARN as environment variable value. The secrets-init
will resolve any environment value, using specified ARN, to referenced parameter value.
# environment variable passed to `secrets-init`
MY_API_KEY=arn:aws:ssm:$AWS_REGION:$AWS_ACCOUNT_ID:parameter/api/key
# environment variable passed to child process, resolved by `secrets-init`
MY_API_KEY=key-123456789
User can put Google secret name (prefixed with gcp:secretmanager:
) as environment variable value. The secrets-init
will resolve any environment value, using specified name, to referenced secret value.
# environment variable passed to `secrets-init`
MY_DB_PASSWORD=gcp:secretmanager:projects/$PROJECT_ID/secrets/mydbpassword
# OR versioned secret (with version or 'latest')
MY_DB_PASSWORD=gcp:secretmanager:projects/$PROJECT_ID/secrets/mydbpassword/versions/2
# environment variable passed to child process, resolved by `secrets-init`
MY_DB_PASSWORD=very-secret-password
In order to resolve AWS secrets from AWS Secrets Manager and Parameter Store, secrets-init
should run under IAM role that has permission to access desired secrets.
This can be achieved by assigning IAM Role to Kubernetes Pod. It's possible to assign IAM Role to EC2 instance, where container is running, but this option is less secure.
In order to resolve Google secrets from Google Secret Manager, secrets-init
should run under IAM role that has permission to access desired secrets. For example, you can assign the following 2 predefined Google IAM roles to a Google Service Account: Secret Manager Viewer
and Secret Manager Secret Accessor
role.
This can be achieved by assigning IAM Role to Kubernetes Pod with Workload Identity. It's possible to assign IAM Role to GCE instance, where container is running, but this option is less secure.
Uncomment --provider=google
flag in the deployment.yaml file.
Consider using the kube-secrets-init
Helm Chart, authored and managed by Márk Sági-Kazár.
helm repo add skm https://charts.sagikazarmark.dev
helm install --generate-name --wait skm/kube-secrets-init
Check chart GitHub repository
- To deploy the
kube-secrets-init
server, we need to create a webhook service and a deployment in our Kubernetes cluster. It’s pretty straightforward, except one thing, which is the server’s TLS configuration. If you’d care to examine the deployment.yaml file, you’ll find that the certificate and corresponding private key files are read from command line arguments, and that the path to these files comes from a volume mount that points to a Kubernetes secret:
[...]
args:
[...]
- --tls-cert-file=/etc/webhook/certs/cert.pem
- --tls-private-key-file=/etc/webhook/certs/key.pem
volumeMounts:
- name: webhook-certs
mountPath: /etc/webhook/certs
readOnly: true
[...]
volumes:
- name: webhook-certs
secret:
secretName: secrets-init-webhook-certs
The most important thing to remember is to set the corresponding CA certificate later in the webhook configuration, so the apiserver
will know that it should be accepted. For now, we’ll reuse the script originally written by the Istio team to generate a certificate signing request. Then we’ll send the request to the Kubernetes API, fetch the certificate, and create the required secret from the result.
First, run webhook-create-signed-cert.sh script and check if the secret holding the certificate and key has been created:
./deployment/webhook-create-signed-cert.sh
creating certs in tmpdir /var/folders/vl/gxsw2kf13jsf7s8xrqzcybb00000gp/T/tmp.xsatrckI71
Generating RSA private key, 2048 bit long modulus
.........................+++
....................+++
e is 65537 (0x10001)
certificatesigningrequest.certificates.k8s.io/secrets-init-webhook-svc.default created
NAME AGE REQUESTOR CONDITION
secrets-init-webhook-svc.default 1s [email protected] Pending
certificatesigningrequest.certificates.k8s.io/secrets-init-webhook-svc.default approved
secret/secrets-init-webhook-certs configured
Note For the GKE Autopilot, run the webhook-create-self-signed-cert.sh script to generate a self-signed certificate.
Export the CA Bundle as a new environment variable CA_BUNDLE
:
export CA_BUNDLE=[output value of the previous script "Encoded CA:"]
Once the secret is created, we can create deployment and service. These are standard Kubernetes deployment and service resources. Up until this point we’ve produced nothing but an HTTP server that’s accepting requests through a service on port 443
:
kubectl create -f deployment/deployment.yaml
kubectl create -f deployment/service.yaml
Now that our webhook server is running, it can accept requests from the apiserver
. However, we should create some configuration resources in Kubernetes first. Let’s start with our validating webhook, then we’ll configure the mutating webhook later. If you take a look at the webhook configuration, you’ll notice that it contains a placeholder for CA_BUNDLE
:
[...]
service:
name: secrets-init-webhook-svc
namespace: default
path: "/pods"
caBundle: ${CA_BUNDLE}
[...]
There is a small script that substitutes the CA_BUNDLE placeholder in the configuration with this CA. Run this command before creating the validating webhook configuration:
cat ./deployment/mutatingwebhook.yaml | ./deployment/webhook-patch-ca-bundle.sh > ./deployment/mutatingwebhook-bundle.yaml
Create mutating webhook configuration:
kubectl create -f deployment/mutatingwebhook-bundle.yaml
Create Kubernetes Service Account to be used with secrets-init-webhook
:
kubectl create -f deployment/service-account.yaml
Define RBAC permission for webhook service account:
# create a cluster role
kubectl create -f deployment/clusterrole.yaml
# define a cluster role binding
kubectl create -f deployment/clusterrolebinding.yaml