apiVersion: v1
kind: Secret
metadata:
name: test-secret
namespace: my-namespace
type: Opaque (1)
data: (2)
username: <username> (3)
password: <password>
stringData: (4)
hostname: myapp.mydomain.com (5)
Some applications need sensitive information, such as passwords and user names, that you do not want developers to have.
As an administrator, you can use Secret
objects to provide this information without exposing that information in clear text.
The Secret
object type provides a mechanism to hold sensitive information such
as passwords, OKD client configuration files,
private source repository credentials, and so on. Secrets decouple sensitive
content from the pods. You can mount secrets into containers using a volume
plugin or the system can use secrets to perform actions on behalf of a pod.
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.
Secret
object definitionapiVersion: v1
kind: Secret
metadata:
name: test-secret
namespace: my-namespace
type: Opaque (1)
data: (2)
username: <username> (3)
password: <password>
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 data map must be base64 encoded. |
4 | 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. |
5 | The value associated with keys in the stringData map is made up of
plain text strings. |
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).
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
. Uses a service account token.
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 different secret types, see the code samples in Using Secrets.
When a service account is created, a service account token secret is automatically generated for it. This service account token secret, along with an automatically generated docker configuration secret, is used to authenticate to the internal OKD registry. Do not rely on these automatically generated secrets for your own use; they might be removed in a future OKD release.
Prior to OKD 4.11, a second service account token secret was generated when a service account was created. This service account token secret was used to access the Kubernetes API. Starting with OKD 4.11, this second service account token secret is no longer created. This is because the After upgrading to 4.11, any existing service account token secrets are not deleted and continue to function. |
Workloads are automatically injected with a projected volume to obtain a bound service account token. If your workload needs an additional service account token, add an additional projected volume in your workload manifest. Bound service account tokens are more secure than service account token secrets for the following reasons:
Bound service account tokens have a bounded lifetime.
Bound service account tokens contain audiences.
Bound service account tokens can be bound to pods or secrets and the bound tokens are invalidated when the bound object is removed.
For more information, see Configuring bound service account tokens using volume projection.
You can also manually create a service account token secret to obtain a token, if the security exposure of a non-expiring token in a readable API object is acceptable to you. For more information, see Creating a service account token secret.
For information about requesting bound service account tokens, see Using bound service account tokens
For information about creating a service account token secret, see Creating a service account token secret.
As an administrator you must create a secret before developers can create the pods that depend on that secret.
When creating secrets:
Create a secret object that contains the data you want to keep secret. The specific data required for each secret type is descibed in the following sections.
apiVersion: v1
kind: Secret
metadata:
name: test-secret
type: Opaque (1)
data: (2)
username: <username>
password: <password>
stringData: (3)
hostname: myapp.mydomain.com
secret.properties: |
property1=valueA
property2=valueB
1 | Specifies the type of secret. |
2 | Specifies encoded string and data. |
3 | Specifies decoded string and data. |
Use either the data
or stringdata
fields, not both.
Update the pod’s service account to reference the secret:
apiVersion: v1
kind: serviceAccount
...
secrets:
- name: test-secret
Create a pod, which consumes the secret as an environment variable or as a file
(using a secret
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: (1)
- name: secret-volume
mountPath: /etc/secret-volume (2)
readOnly: true (3)
volumes:
- name: secret-volume
secret:
secretName: test-secret (4)
restartPolicy: Never
1 | Add a volumeMounts field to each container that needs the secret. |
2 | Specifies an unused directory name where you would like the secret to appear. Each key in the secret data map becomes the filename under mountPath . |
3 | Set to true . If true, this instructs the driver to provide a read-only volume. |
4 | Specifies the name of the secret. |
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: (1)
name: test-secret
key: username
restartPolicy: Never
1 | Specifies the environment variable that consumes the secret key. |
apiVersion: build.openshift.io/v1
kind: BuildConfig
metadata:
name: secret-example-bc
spec:
strategy:
sourceStrategy:
env:
- name: TEST_SECRET_USERNAME_ENV_VAR
valueFrom:
secretKeyRef: (1)
name: test-secret
key: username
from:
kind: ImageStreamTag
namespace: openshift
name: 'cli:latest'
1 | Specifies the environment variable that consumes the secret key. |
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. Image pull secrets use service accounts for the automatic injection of the secret into all pods in a namespace.
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 a Secret
object. 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 could exhaust apiserver and kubelet memory. However, creation of a number of smaller secrets could also exhaust memory.
As an administrator, you can create an opaque secret, which allows you to store unstructured key:value
pairs that can contain arbitrary values.
Create a Secret
object in a YAML file on a control plane node.
For example:
apiVersion: v1
kind: Secret
metadata:
name: mysecret
type: Opaque (1)
data:
username: <username>
password: <password>
1 | Specifies an opaque secret. |
Use the following command to create a Secret
object:
$ oc create -f <filename>.yaml
To use the secret in a pod:
Update the pod’s service account to reference the secret, as shown in the "Understanding how to create secrets" section.
Create the pod, which consumes the secret as an environment variable or as a file (using a secret
volume), as shown in the "Understanding how to create secrets" section.
For more information on using secrets in pods, see Understanding how to create secrets.
As an administrator, you can create a service account token secret, which allows you to distribute a service account token to applications that must authenticate to the API.
It is recommended to obtain bound service account tokens using the TokenRequest API instead of using service account token secrets. The tokens obtained from the TokenRequest API are more secure than the tokens stored in secrets, because they have a bounded lifetime and are not readable by other API clients. You should create a service account token secret only if you cannot use the TokenRequest API and if the security exposure of a non-expiring token in a readable API object is acceptable to you. See the Additional resources section that follows for information on creating bound service account tokens. |
Create a Secret
object in a YAML file on a control plane node:
secret
object:apiVersion: v1
kind: Secret
metadata:
name: secret-sa-sample
annotations:
kubernetes.io/service-account.name: "sa-name" (1)
type: kubernetes.io/service-account-token (2)
1 | Specifies an existing service account name. If you are creating both the serviceAccount and the Secret objects, create the serviceAccount object first. |
2 | Specifies a service account token secret. |
Use the following command to create the Secret
object:
$ oc create -f <filename>.yaml
To use the secret in a pod:
Update the pod’s service account to reference the secret, as shown in the "Understanding how to create secrets" section.
Create the pod, which consumes the secret as an environment variable or as a file (using a secret
volume), as shown in the "Understanding how to create secrets" section.
For more information on using secrets in pods, see Understanding how to create secrets.
For information on requesting bound service account tokens, see Using bound service account tokens
For information on creating service accounts, see Understanding and creating service accounts.
As an administrator, you can create a basic authentication secret, which allows you to store the credentials needed for basic authentication. When using this secret type, the data
parameter of the Secret
object must contain the following keys encoded in the base64 format:
username
: the user name for authentication
password
: the password or token for authentication
You can use the |
Create a Secret
object in a YAML file on a control plane node:
secret
objectapiVersion: v1
kind: Secret
metadata:
name: secret-basic-auth
type: kubernetes.io/basic-auth (1)
data:
stringData: (2)
username: admin
password: <password>
1 | Specifies a basic authentication secret. |
2 | Specifies the basic authentication values to use. |
Use the following command to create the Secret
object:
$ oc create -f <filename>.yaml
To use the secret in a pod:
Update the pod’s service account to reference the secret, as shown in the "Understanding how to create secrets" section.
Create the pod, which consumes the secret as an environment variable or as a file (using a secret
volume), as shown in the "Understanding how to create secrets" section.
For more information on using secrets in pods, see Understanding how to create secrets.
As an administrator, you can create an SSH authentication secret, which allows you to store data used for SSH authentication. When using this secret type, the data
parameter of the Secret
object must contain the SSH credential to use.
Create a Secret
object in a YAML file on a control plane node:
secret
object:apiVersion: v1
kind: Secret
metadata:
name: secret-ssh-auth
type: kubernetes.io/ssh-auth (1)
data:
ssh-privatekey: | (2)
MIIEpQIBAAKCAQEAulqb/Y ...
1 | Specifies an SSH authentication secret. |
2 | Specifies the SSH key/value pair as the SSH credentials to use. |
Use the following command to create the Secret
object:
$ oc create -f <filename>.yaml
To use the secret in a pod:
Update the pod’s service account to reference the secret, as shown in the "Understanding how to create secrets" section.
Create the pod, which consumes the secret as an environment variable or as a file (using a secret
volume), as shown in the "Understanding how to create secrets" section.
As an administrator, you can create a Docker configuration secret, which allows you to store the credentials for accessing a container image registry.
kubernetes.io/dockercfg
. Use this secret type to store your local Docker configuration file. The data
parameter of the secret
object must contain the contents of a .dockercfg
file encoded in the base64 format.
kubernetes.io/dockerconfigjson
. Use this secret type to store your local Docker configuration JSON file. The data
parameter of the secret
object must contain the contents of a .docker/config.json
file encoded in the base64 format.
Create a Secret
object in a YAML file on a control plane node.
secret
objectapiVersion: v1
kind: Secret
metadata:
name: secret-docker-cfg
namespace: my-project
type: kubernetes.io/dockerconfig (1)
data:
.dockerconfig:bm5ubm5ubm5ubm5ubm5ubm5ubm5ubmdnZ2dnZ2dnZ2dnZ2dnZ2dnZ2cgYXV0aCBrZXlzCg== (2)
1 | Specifies that the secret is using a Docker configuration file. |
2 | The output of a base64-encoded Docker configuration file |
secret
objectapiVersion: v1
kind: Secret
metadata:
name: secret-docker-json
namespace: my-project
type: kubernetes.io/dockerconfig (1)
data:
.dockerconfigjson:bm5ubm5ubm5ubm5ubm5ubm5ubm5ubmdnZ2dnZ2dnZ2dnZ2dnZ2dnZ2cgYXV0aCBrZXlzCg== (2)
1 | Specifies that the secret is using a Docker configuration JSONfile. |
2 | The output of a base64-encoded Docker configuration JSON file |
Use the following command to create the Secret
object
$ oc create -f <filename>.yaml
To use the secret in a pod:
Update the pod’s service account to reference the secret, as shown in the "Understanding how to create secrets" section.
Create the pod, which consumes the secret as an environment variable or as a file (using a secret
volume), as shown in the "Understanding how to create secrets" section.
For more information on using secrets in pods, see Understanding how to create secrets.
You can create secrets using the web console.
Navigate to Workloads → Secrets.
Click Create → From YAML.
Edit the YAML manually to your specifications, or drag and drop a file into the YAML editor. For example:
apiVersion: v1
kind: Secret
metadata:
name: example
namespace: <namespace>
type: Opaque (1)
data:
username: <base64 encoded username>
password: <base64 encoded password>
stringData: (2)
hostname: myapp.mydomain.com
1 | This example specifies an opaque secret; however, you may see other secret types such as service account token secret, basic authentication secret, SSH authentication secret, or a secret that uses Docker configuration. |
2 | 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. |
Click Create.
Click Add Secret to workload.
From the drop-down menu, select the workload to add.
Click Save.
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, the version of the secret that is used for the pod is not 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 an old |
As an administrator, you can create a service account token secret. This allows you to distribute a service account token to applications that must authenticate to the API.
Create a service account in your namespace by running the following command:
$ oc create sa <service_account_name> -n <your_namespace>
Save the following YAML example to a file named service-account-token-secret.yaml
. The example includes a Secret
object configuration that you can use to generate a service account token:
apiVersion: v1
kind: Secret
metadata:
name: <secret_name> (1)
annotations:
kubernetes.io/service-account.name: "sa-name" (2)
type: kubernetes.io/service-account-token (3)
1 | Replace <secret_name> with the name of your service token secret. |
2 | Specifies an existing service account name. If you are creating both the serviceAccount and the Secret objects, create the serviceAccount object first. |
3 | Specifies a service account token secret type. |
Generate the service account token by applying the file:
$ oc apply -f service-account-token-secret.yaml
Get the service account token from the secret by running the following command:
$ oc get secret <sa_token_secret> -o jsonpath='{.data.token}' | base64 --decode (1)
ayJhbGciOiJSUzI1NiIsImtpZCI6IklOb2dtck1qZ3hCSWpoNnh5YnZhSE9QMkk3YnRZMVZoclFfQTZfRFp1YlUifQ.eyJpc3MiOiJrdWJlcm5ldGVzL3NlcnZpY2VhY2NvdW50Iiwia3ViZXJuZXRlcy5pby9zZXJ2aWNlYWNjb3VudC9uYW1lc3BhY2UiOiJkZWZhdWx0Iiwia3ViZXJuZXRlcy5pby9zZXJ2aWNlYWNjb3VudC9zZWNyZXQubmFtZSI6ImJ1aWxkZXItdG9rZW4tdHZrbnIiLCJrdWJlcm5ldGVzLmlvL3NlcnZpY2VhY2NvdW50L3NlcnZpY2UtYWNjb3VudC5uYW1lIjoiYnVpbGRlciIsImt1YmVybmV0ZXMuaW8vc2VydmljZWFjY291bnQvc2VydmljZS1hY2NvdW50LnVpZCI6IjNmZGU2MGZmLTA1NGYtNDkyZi04YzhjLTNlZjE0NDk3MmFmNyIsInN1YiI6InN5c3RlbTpzZXJ2aWNlYWNjb3VudDpkZWZhdWx0OmJ1aWxkZXIifQ.OmqFTDuMHC_lYvvEUrjr1x453hlEEHYcxS9VKSzmRkP1SiVZWPNPkTWlfNRp6bIUZD3U6aN3N7dMSN0eI5hu36xPgpKTdvuckKLTCnelMx6cxOdAbrcw1mCmOClNscwjS1KO1kzMtYnnq8rXHiMJELsNlhnRyyIXRTtNBsy4t64T3283s3SLsancyx0gy0ujx-Ch3uKAKdZi5iT-I8jnnQ-ds5THDs2h65RJhgglQEmSxpHrLGZFmyHAQI-_SjvmHZPXEc482x3SkaQHNLqpmrpJorNqh1M8ZHKzlujhZgVooMvJmWPXTb2vnvi3DGn2XI-hZxl1yD2yGH1RBpYUHA
1 | Replace <sa_token_secret> with the name of your service token secret. |
Use your service account token to authenticate with the API of your cluster:
$ curl -X GET <openshift_cluster_api> --header "Authorization: Bearer <token>" (1) (2)
1 | Replace <openshift_cluster_api> with the OpenShift cluster API. |
2 | Replace <token> with the service account token that is output in the preceding command. |
To secure communication to your service, you can configure OKD to generate a signed serving certificate/key pair that you can add into a secret in a project.
A service serving certificate secret is 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.
Pod
spec configured for a service serving certificates secret.apiVersion: v1
kind: service
metadata:
name: registry
annotations:
service.beta.openshift.io/serving-cert-secret-name: registry-cert(1)
# ...
1 | Specify the name for the certificate |
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 signed serving certificate/key pair with a pod, create or edit the service to add
the service.beta.openshift.io/serving-cert-secret-name
annotation, then add the secret to the pod.
To create a service serving certificate secret:
Edit the Pod
spec for your service.
Add the service.beta.openshift.io/serving-cert-secret-name
annotation
with the name you want to use for your secret.
kind: service
apiVersion: v1
metadata:
name: my-service
annotations:
service.beta.openshift.io/serving-cert-secret-name: my-cert (1)
spec:
selector:
app: MyApp
ports:
- protocol: TCP
port: 80
targetPort: 9376
The certificate and key are in PEM format, stored in tls.crt
and tls.key
respectively.
Create the service:
$ oc create -f <file-name>.yaml
View the secret to make sure it was created:
View a list of all secrets:
$ oc get secrets
NAME TYPE DATA AGE
my-cert kubernetes.io/tls 2 9m
View details on your secret:
$ oc describe secret my-cert
Name: my-cert
Namespace: openshift-console
Labels: <none>
Annotations: service.beta.openshift.io/expiry: 2023-03-08T23:22:40Z
service.beta.openshift.io/originating-service-name: my-service
service.beta.openshift.io/originating-service-uid: 640f0ec3-afc2-4380-bf31-a8c784846a11
service.beta.openshift.io/expiry: 2023-03-08T23:22:40Z
Type: kubernetes.io/tls
Data
====
tls.key: 1679 bytes
tls.crt: 2595 bytes
Edit your Pod
spec with that secret.
apiVersion: v1
kind: Pod
metadata:
name: my-service-pod
spec:
containers:
- name: mypod
image: redis
volumeMounts:
- name: my-container
mountPath: "/etc/my-path"
volumes:
- name: my-volume
secret:
secretName: my-cert
items:
- key: username
path: my-group/my-username
mode: 511
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/key pair is automatically replaced when it gets
close to expiration. View the expiration date in the
service.beta.openshift.io/expiry
annotation on the secret, which is in
RFC3339 format.
In most cases, the service DNS name
|
If a service certificate generation fails with (service’s
service.beta.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.beta.openshift.io/serving-cert-generation-error
,
service.beta.openshift.io/serving-cert-generation-error-num
:
Delete the secret:
$ oc delete secret <secret_name>
Clear the annotations:
$ oc annotate service <service_name> service.beta.openshift.io/serving-cert-generation-error-
$ oc annotate service <service_name> service.beta.openshift.io/serving-cert-generation-error-num-
The command removing annotation has a |