Vault
KV Secrets Engine - Version 2
The kv
secrets engine is used to store arbitrary secrets within the
configured physical storage for Vault.
Key names must always be strings. If you write non-string values directly via the CLI, they will be converted into strings. However, you can preserve non-string values by writing the key/value pairs to Vault from a JSON file or using the HTTP API.
This secrets engine honors the distinction between the create
and update
capabilities inside ACL policies.
Setup
Most secrets engines must be configured in advance before they can perform their functions. These steps are usually completed by an operator or configuration management tool.
A v2 kv
secrets engine can be enabled by:
$ vault secrets enable -version=2 kv
Or, you can pass kv-v2
as the secrets engine type:
$ vault secrets enable kv-v2
Additionally, when running a dev-mode server, the v2 kv
secrets engine is enabled by default at the
path secret/
(for non-dev servers, it is currently v1). It can be disabled, moved, or enabled multiple times at
different paths. Each instance of the KV secrets engine is isolated and unique.
Upgrading from Version 1
An existing version 1 kv store can be upgraded to a version 2 kv store via the CLI or API, as shown below. This will start an upgrade process to upgrade the existing key/value data to a versioned format. The mount will be inaccessible during this process. This process could take a long time, so plan accordingly.
Once upgraded to version 2, the former paths at which the data was accessible will no longer suffice. You will need to adjust user policies to add access to the version 2 paths as detailed in the ACL Rules section below. Similarly, users/applications will need to update the paths at which they interact with the kv data once it has been upgraded to version 2.
An existing version 1 kv can be upgraded to a version 2 KV store with the CLI command:
$ vault kv enable-versioning secret/
Success! Tuned the secrets engine at: secret/
or via the API:
$ cat payload.json
{
"options": {
"version": "2"
}
}
$ curl \
--header "X-Vault-Token: ..." \
--request POST \
--data @payload.json \
http://127.0.0.1:8200/v1/sys/mounts/secret/tune
ACL Rules
The version 2 kv store uses a prefixed API, which is different from the version 1 API. Before upgrading from a version 1 kv the ACL rules should be changed. Also different paths in the version 2 API can be ACL'ed differently.
Writing and reading versions are prefixed with the data/
path. This policy
that worked for the version 1 kv:
path "secret/dev/team-1/*" {
capabilities = ["create", "update", "read"]
}
Should be changed to:
path "secret/data/dev/team-1/*" {
capabilities = ["create", "update", "read"]
}
There are different levels of data deletion for this backend. To grant a policy the permissions to delete the latest version of a key:
path "secret/data/dev/team-1/*" {
capabilities = ["delete"]
}
To allow the policy to delete any version of a key:
path "secret/delete/dev/team-1/*" {
capabilities = ["update"]
}
To allow a policy to undelete data:
path "secret/undelete/dev/team-1/*" {
capabilities = ["update"]
}
To allow a policy to destroy versions:
path "secret/destroy/dev/team-1/*" {
capabilities = ["update"]
}
To allow a policy to list keys:
path "secret/metadata/dev/team-1/*" {
capabilities = ["list"]
}
To allow a policy to view metadata for each version:
path "secret/metadata/dev/team-1/*" {
capabilities = ["read"]
}
To allow a policy to permanently remove all versions and metadata for a key:
path "secret/metadata/dev/team-1/*" {
capabilities = ["delete"]
}
The allowed_parameters
, denied_parameters
, and required_parameters
fields are
not supported for policies used with the version 2 kv store. See the Policies Concepts
for a description of these parameters.
See the API Specification for more information.
Usage
After the secrets engine is configured and a user/machine has a Vault token with
the proper permission, it can generate credentials. The kv
secrets engine
allows for writing keys with arbitrary values.
Writing/Reading arbitrary data
Write arbitrary data:
$ vault kv put secret/my-secret my-value=s3cr3t Key Value --- ----- created_time 2019-06-19T17:20:22.985303Z deletion_time n/a destroyed false version 1
Read arbitrary data:
$ vault kv get secret/my-secret ====== Metadata ====== Key Value --- ----- created_time 2019-06-19T17:20:22.985303Z deletion_time n/a destroyed false version 1 ====== Data ====== Key Value --- ----- my-value s3cr3t
Write another version, the previous version will still be accessible. The
-cas
flag can optionally be passed to perform a check-and-set operation. If not set the write will be allowed. If set to-cas=0
a write will only be allowed if the key doesn’t exist. If the index is non-zero the write will only be allowed if the key’s current version matches the version specified in the cas parameter.$ vault kv put -cas=1 secret/my-secret my-value=new-s3cr3t e - Z a e 2
Reading now will return the newest version of the data:
$ vault kv get secret/my-secret ====== Metadata ====== Key Value --- ----- created_time 2019-06-19T17:22:23.369372Z deletion_time n/a destroyed false version 2 ====== Data ====== Key Value --- ----- my-value new-s3cr3t
Previous versions can be accessed with the
-version
flag:$ vault kv get -version=1 secret/my-secret ====== Metadata ====== Key Value --- ----- created_time 2019-06-19T17:20:22.985303Z deletion_time n/a destroyed false version 1 ====== Data ====== Key Value --- ----- my-value s3cr3t
Deleting and Destroying Data
When deleting data the standard vault kv delete
command will perform a
soft delete. It will mark the version as deleted and populate a deletion_time
timestamp. Soft deletes do not remove the underlying version data from storage,
which allows the version to be undeleted. The vault kv undelete
command
handles undeleting versions.
A version's data is permanently deleted only when the key has more versions than
are allowed by the max-versions setting, or when using vault kv destroy
. When
the destroy command is used the underlying version data will be removed and the
key metadata will be marked as destroyed. If a version is cleaned up by going
over max-versions the version metadata will also be removed from the key.
See the commands below for more information:
The latest version of a key can be deleted with the delete command, this also takes a
-versions
flag to delete prior versions:$ vault kv delete secret/my-secret t
Versions can be undeleted:
$ vault kv undelete -versions=2 secret/my-secret Success! Data written to: secret/undelete/my-secret $ vault kv get secret/my-secret ====== Metadata ====== Key Value --- ----- created_time 2019-06-19T17:23:21.834403Z deletion_time n/a destroyed false version 2 ====== Data ====== Key Value --- ----- my-value short-lived-s3cr3t
Destroying a version permanently deletes the underlying data:
$ vault kv destroy -versions=2 secret/my-secret Success! Data written to: secret/destroy/my-secret
Key Metadata
All versions and key metadata can be tracked with the metadata command & API. Deleting the metadata key will cause all metadata and versions for that key to be permanently removed.
See the commands below for more information:
All metadata and versions for a key can be viewed:
$ vault kv metadata get secret/my-secret ========== Metadata ========== Key Value --- ----- cas_required false created_time 2019-06-19T17:20:22.985303Z current_version 2 delete_version_after 0s max_versions 0 oldest_version 0 updated_time 2019-06-19T17:22:23.369372Z ====== Version 1 ====== Key Value --- ----- created_time 2019-06-19T17:20:22.985303Z deletion_time n/a destroyed false ====== Version 2 ====== Key Value --- ----- created_time 2019-06-19T17:22:23.369372Z deletion_time n/a destroyed true
The metadata settings for a key can be configured:
$ vault kv metadata put -max-versions 2 -delete-version-after="3h25m19s" secret/my-secret Success! Data written to: secret/metadata/my-secret
Delete-version-after settings will apply only to new versions. Max versions changes will be applied on next write:
$ vault kv put secret/my-secret my-value=newer-s3cr3t Key Value --- ----- created_time 2019-06-19T17:31:16.662563Z deletion_time 2019-06-19T20:56:35.662563Z destroyed false version 4
Once a key has more versions than max versions the oldest versions are cleaned up:
$ vault kv metadata get secret/my-secret ========== Metadata ========== Key Value --- ----- cas_required false created_time 2019-06-19T17:20:22.985303Z current_version 4 delete_version_after 3h25m19s max_versions 2 oldest_version 3 updated_time 2019-06-19T17:31:16.662563Z ====== Version 3 ====== Key Value --- ----- created_time 2019-06-19T17:23:21.834403Z deletion_time n/a destroyed true ====== Version 4 ====== Key Value --- ----- created_time 2019-06-19T17:31:16.662563Z deletion_time 2019-06-19T20:56:35.662563Z destroyed false
Permanently delete all metadata and versions for a key:
$ vault kv metadata delete secret/my-secret Success! Data deleted (if it existed) at: secret/metadata/my-secret
Learn
Refer to the Versioned Key/Value Secrets Engine guide for a step-by-step tutorial.
API
The KV secrets engine has a full HTTP API. Please see the KV secrets engine API for more details.