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<strong>secrets</strong> | Developer Guide | OpenShift Enterprise 3.0
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Overview

The Secret object type provides a mechanism to hold sensitive information such as passwords, OpenShift client config files, dockercfg files, etc. secrets decouple sensitive content from the pods that use it and can be mounted into containers using a volume plug-in or used by the system to perform actions on behalf of a pod. This topic discusses important properties of secrets and provides an overview on how developers can use them.

{
  "apiVersion": "v1",
  "kind": "Secret",
  "metadata": {
    "name": "mysecret"
  },
  "namespace": "myns",
  "data": { (1)
    "username": "dmFsdWUtMQ0K",
    "password": "dmFsdWUtMg0KDQo="
    }
}
1 The allowable format for the keys in the data field must meet the guidelines in the DNS_SUBDOMAIN value in the Kubernetes identifiers glossary.

Properties of secrets

Key properties include:

  • Secret data can be referenced independently from its definition.

  • Secret data never comes to rest on the node. Volumes are backed by temporary file-storage facilities (tmpfs).

  • Secret data can be shared within a namespace.

secrets and the Pod Lifecycle

A secret must be created before the pods that depend on it.

Containers read the secret from the files. If a secret is expected to be stored in an environment variable, then you must modify the image to populate the environment variable from the file before running the main program.

Once a pod is created, its secret volumes do not change, even if the secret resource is modified. To change the secret used, the original pod must be deleted, and a new pod (perhaps with an identical PodSpec) must be created. An exception to this is when a node is rebooted and the secret data must be re-read from the API server. Updating a secret follows the same workflow as deploying a new container image. The kubectl rollingupdate command can be used.

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 resourceVersion. In the interim, do not update the data of existing secrets, but create new ones with distinct names.

Creating and Using secrets

When creating secrets:

  • Create a secret object with secret data

  • Create a pod with a volume of type secret and a container to mount the volume

  • Update the pod’s service account to allow the reference to the secret.

Creating secrets

To create a secret object, use the following command, where the json file is a predefined secret:

$ oc create -f secret.json

secrets in Volumes

See Examples.

Image Pull secrets

See the Image Pull secrets topic for more information.

Restrictions

Secret volume sources are validated to ensure that the specified object reference points to a Secret object. Therefore, a secret needs to be created before the pods that depend on it.

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.

Currently, when mounting a secret, the service account for a pod must have the secret in the list of mountable secrets. If a template contains a secret definition and pods that consume it, the pods will be rejected until the service account is updated.

Secret Data Keys

Secret keys must be in a DNS subdomain.

Examples

Example 1. YAML of a Pod Consuming Data in a Volume
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