apiVersion: v1
kind: Secret
metadata:
name: test-secret
namespace: my-namespace
type: Opaque (1)
data: (2)
username: dmFsdWUtMQ0K (3)
password: dmFsdWUtMg0KDQo=
stringData: (4)
hostname: myapp.mydomain.com (5)
This topic discusses important properties of secrets and provides an overview on how developers can use them.
The Secret
object type provides a mechanism to hold sensitive information such
as passwords, OpenShift Container Platform client configuration files, dockercfg
files,
private source repository credentials, and so on. Secrets decouple sensitive
content from the pods. You can mount secrets into containers using a volume
plug-in or the system can use secrets to perform actions on behalf of a pod.
apiVersion: v1
kind: Secret
metadata:
name: test-secret
namespace: my-namespace
type: Opaque (1)
data: (2)
username: dmFsdWUtMQ0K (3)
password: dmFsdWUtMg0KDQo=
stringData: (4)
hostname: myapp.mydomain.com (5)
1 | Indicates the structure of the secret’s key names and values. |
2 | The allowable format for the keys in the data field must meet the
guidelines in the DNS_SUBDOMAIN value in
the
Kubernetes identifiers glossary. |
3 | The value associated with keys in the the data map must be base64 encoded. |
4 | The value associated with keys in the the stringData map is made up of
plain text strings. |
5 | Entries in the stringData map are converted to base64
and the entry will then be moved to the data map automatically. This field
is write-only; the value will only be returned via the data field.
|
apiVersion: v1
kind: Secret
metadata:
name: mysecret
type: Opaque (1)
data:
username: dXNlci1uYW1l
password: cGFzc3dvcmQ=
1 | Specifies an opaque secret. |
apiVersion: v1
kind: Secret
metadata:
name: aregistrykey
namespace: myapps
type: kubernetes.io/dockerconfigjson (1)
data:
.dockerconfigjson:bm5ubm5ubm5ubm5ubm5ubm5ubm5ubmdnZ2dnZ2dnZ2dnZ2dnZ2dnZ2cgYXV0aCBrZXlzCg== (2)
1 | Specifies that the secret is using a Docker configuration JSON file. |
2 | The output of a base64-encoded the Docker configuration JSON file |
Key properties include:
Secret data can be referenced independently from its definition.
Secret data volumes are backed by temporary file-storage facilities (tmpfs) and never come to rest on a node.
Secret data can be shared within a namespace.
You must create a secret before creating the pods that depend on that secret.
When creating secrets:
Create a secret object with secret data.
Update the pod’s service account to allow the reference to the secret.
Create a pod, which consumes the secret as an environment variable or as a file
(using a secret
volume).
You can use the create command to create a secret object from a JSON or YAML file:
$ oc create -f <filename>
The value in the type
field indicates the structure of the secret’s key names and values. The type can be used to
enforce the presence of user names and keys in the secret object. If you do not want validation, use the opaque type,
which is the default.
Specify one of the following types to trigger minimal server-side validation to ensure the presence of specific key names in the secret data:
kubernetes.io/service-account-token
. service account token.
kubernetes.io/dockercfg
. Uses the .dockercfg file
for required Docker credentials.
kubernetes.io/dockerconfigjson
. Uses the .docker/config.json file
for required Docker credentials.
kubernetes.io/basic-auth
. Use with Basic Authentication.
kubernetes.io/ssh-auth
. Use with SSH Key Authentication.
kubernetes.io/tls
. Use with TLS certificate authorities
Specify type= Opaque
if you do not want validation, which means the secret does not claim to conform to any convention for key names or values.
An opaque secret, allows for unstructured key:value
pairs that can contain arbitrary values.
You can specify other arbitrary types, such as |
For examples of differet secret types, see the code samples in Using Secrets.
When you modify the value of a secret, the value (used by an already running pod) will not dynamically change. To change a secret, you must delete the original pod and create a new pod (perhaps with an identical PodSpec).
Updating a secret follows the same workflow as deploying a new container image.
You can use the kubectl rolling-update
command.
The resourceVersion
value in a secret is not specified when it is referenced.
Therefore, if a secret is updated at the same time as pods are starting, then
the version of the secret will be used for the pod will not be defined.
Currently, it is not possible to check the resource version of a secret object
that was used when a pod was created. It is planned that pods will report this
information, so that a controller could restart ones using a old
|
See examples of YAML files with secret data.
After you create a secret, you can:
Create the pod to reference your secret:
$ oc create -f <your_yaml_file>.yaml
Get the logs:
$ oc logs secret-example-pod
Delete the pod:
$ oc delete pod secret-example-pod
See Using Image Pull Secrets for more information.
See Build Inputs for more information about using source clone secrets during a build.
Service serving certificate secrets are intended to support complex middleware applications that need out-of-the-box certificates. It has the same settings as the server certificates generated by the administrator tooling for nodes and masters.
To secure communication to your service, have the cluster generate a signed
serving certificate/key pair into a secret in your namespace. To do this, set
the service.alpha.openshift.io/serving-cert-secret-name
annotation on your
service with the value set to the name you want to use for your secret. Then,
your PodSpec can mount that secret. When it is available, your pod will run.
The certificate will be good for the internal service DNS name,
<service.name>.<service.namespace>.svc
.
The certificate and key are in PEM format, stored in tls.crt
and tls.key
respectively. The certificate/key pair is automatically replaced when it gets
close to expiration. View the expiration date in the
service.alpha.openshift.io/expiry
annotation on the secret, which is in
RFC3339 format.
Other pods can trust cluster-created certificates (which are only signed for internal DNS names), by using the CA bundle in the /var/run/secrets/kubernetes.io/serviceaccount/service-ca.crt file that is automatically mounted in their pod.
The signature algorithm for this feature is x509.SHA256WithRSA
. To manually
rotate, delete the generated secret. A new certificate is created.
To use a secret, a pod needs to reference the secret. A secret can be used with a pod in three ways:
to populate environment variables for containers.
as files in a volume mounted on one or more of its containers.
by kubelet when pulling images for the pod.
Volume type secrets write data into the container as a file using the volume mechanism. imagePullSecrets use service accounts for the automatic injection of the secret into all pods in a namespaces.
When a template contains a secret definition, the only way for the template to
use the provided secret is to ensure that the secret volume sources are
validated and that the specified object reference actually points to an object
of type Secret
. Therefore, a secret needs to be created before any pods that
depend on it. The most effective way to ensure this is to have it get injected
automatically through the use of a service account.
Secret API objects reside in a namespace. They can only be referenced by pods in that same namespace.
Individual secrets are limited to 1MB in size. This is to discourage the creation of large secrets that would exhaust apiserver and kubelet memory. However, creation of a number of smaller secrets could also exhaust memory.
apiVersion: v1
kind: Secret
metadata:
name: test-secret
data:
username: dmFsdWUtMQ0K (1)
password: dmFsdWUtMQ0KDQo= (2)
stringData:
hostname: myapp.mydomain.com (3)
secret.properties: |- (4)
property1=valueA
property2=valueB
1 | File contains decoded values. |
2 | File contains decoded values. |
3 | File contains the provided string. |
4 | File contains the provided data. |
apiVersion: v1
kind: Pod
metadata:
name: secret-example-pod
spec:
containers:
- name: secret-test-container
image: busybox
command: [ "/bin/sh", "-c", "cat /etc/secret-volume/*" ]
volumeMounts:
# name must match the volume name below
- name: secret-volume
mountPath: /etc/secret-volume
readOnly: true
volumes:
- name: secret-volume
secret:
secretName: test-secret
restartPolicy: Never
apiVersion: v1
kind: Pod
metadata:
name: secret-example-pod
spec:
containers:
- name: secret-test-container
image: busybox
command: [ "/bin/sh", "-c", "export" ]
env:
- name: TEST_SECRET_USERNAME_ENV_VAR
valueFrom:
secretKeyRef:
name: test-secret
key: username
restartPolicy: Never
apiVersion: v1
kind: BuildConfig
metadata:
name: secret-example-bc
spec:
strategy:
sourceStrategy:
env:
- name: TEST_SECRET_USERNAME_ENV_VAR
valueFrom:
secretKeyRef:
name: test-secret
key: username
If a service certificate generations
fails with (service’s
service.alpha.openshift.io/serving-cert-generation-error
annotation
contains):
secret/ssl-key references serviceUID 62ad25ca-d703-11e6-9d6f-0e9c0057b608, which does not match 77b6dd80-d716-11e6-9d6f-0e9c0057b60
The service that generated the certificate no longer exists, or has a different
serviceUID
. You must force certificates regeneration by removing the old
secret, and clearing the following annotations on the service
service.alpha.openshift.io/serving-cert-generation-error
,
service.alpha.openshift.io/serving-cert-generation-error-num
:
$ oc delete secret <secret_name> $ oc annotate service <service_name> service.alpha.openshift.io/serving-cert-generation-error- $ oc annotate service <service_name> service.alpha.openshift.io/serving-cert-generation-error-num-
The command removing annotation has a |