Operations grimoire/Vault

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Revision as of 11:36, 23 January 2023 by Dereckson (talk | contribs) (→‎Certificates: Draft procedures)

In July 2016, we selected Vault to store credentials.

Vault reference

kv engine

The kv engine contains the following paths:

 * ops/secrets: credentials like passwords, API tokens, private keys deployed to servers - a reference for machines
 * ops/internal: credentials to third-party services internally shared amongst ops - a reference for humans
 * ops/privacy: privacy information

Secrets

Secrets are directly and manually managed in Vault. If we need to run a disaster recovery procedure, we'll roll any secret by defining them again and deploy from rOPS those new secrets.

Privacy data

Personal identity information (PII) shared inside the Nasqueron Operations squad are more convenient to manage as a repository.

Such access to the repository is restricted to commit data, and ensure this data is deployed to the servers needing it. Any other use isn't allowed.

Information to the repository is then published in Vault, and referred in rOPS as Vault credentials.

Note: The ops/privacy path is only intended for PII of current or previous members of the Ops SIG, like IP addresses allowed to connect to restricted resources like the ops VPN. This is not acceptable to put 3rd party information in this repository.

pki engine

Services listening to private IPs use the Vault PKI to generate certificates:

Certificates should be issued short-term and frequently renewed by automated services.

transit engine

Encryption as a service is available for applications under /transit path.

See https://learn.hashicorp.com/tutorials/vault/eaas-transit.

Applications should use a policy restricting to a subpath for that app, not to the whole engine.

Salt configuration

Get a secret through Salt

The information in the ops/secrets and ops/privacy kv engines are integrated in the Salt pillar:

ext_pillar:
  # Credentials to deploy to servers
  - vault:
       conf: path=ops/secrets
       nesting_key: credentials

  # Personal identity information from Nasqueron Operations SIG members
  - vault:
       conf: path=ops/privacy
       nesting_key: privacy

You can then access to this information in Salt states using the following references:

Access to Salt data
Category Example of path in Vault Example of pillar key in Salt
Secrets ops/secrets/foo pillar['credentials']['foo']
Privacy data ops/privacy/ops-cidr pillar['privacy']['ops-cidr']

The ops/internal paths aren't accessible through Vault.

Policies

DRP

Any step we need to do to configure the engines should be added to the rOPS: roles/vault/bootstrap unit.

If we need to recover Vault, two solutions are available:

  • restore the storage, to keep data (credentials, certificates including the root CA one)
  • recreate it from scratch through the roles/vault/bootstrap unit

Troubleshoot

Connecting to Vault

Access to web UI

Vault isn't listening any public IP, but accept connections from internal network, so you can open a SSH tunnel against complector:8200 and then browse https://localhost:8200:

ssh -L 8200:complector:8200 router-001.nasqueron.org

curl: (60) SSL certificate problem

Curl is compiled against a certificate bundle (curl-config --ca for the path). That bundle doesn't contain the pki_root certificate. We deploy this certificate in /etc/ssl/certs, but curl won't check there if not instructed to.

If you build an immutable environment like a container, add the certificate to the bundle.

On other machines, create a curl configuration file in ~/.curlrc (it doesn't seem currently possible to create a system one) with capath=/etc/ssl/certs.

If you've still the issue after that, check two things:

  • with curl -v, the path should correctly there: * CApath: /etc/ssl/certs in addition to a CAfile.
  • with file /etc/ssl/certs/* | grep -i nasqueron you should have a result ; if not, put the certificate in /usr/local/share/certs and relaunch the tool to link it in /etc/ssl/certs, for example certctl rehash on FreeBSD (needs root access).

Certificates

How to unseal when certificate have expired?

Use the web UI through SSH tunnel.

Renew Vault HTTP certificates

Vault uses TLS certificates managed by its own CA. That can create a chicken/egg issue if certificates have expired to connect to it, as the Vault client strictly requires valid TLS certificated to issue commands to renew certificates.

Connect to the web UI works as your browser is able to bypass certificate requirement. Opening a SSH tunnel with -L 8200:complector:8200 should work for that.

Certificates configuration is available at D2639.

The web UI doesn't offer a comprehensive sets of widgets to generate certificates. You can instead use the Vault Browser CLI to run Vault CLI commands from the web UI. The signing operation can be done through endpoint configuration UI.

Based on current D2639 state (2023-01), you can do the following:

  • Has intermediate authority certificate expired?
    • Web console: write -format=json pki_vault/intermediate/generate/internal common_name="nasqueron.drake Intermediate Authority"
    • At https://localhost:8200/ui/vault/settings/secrets/configure/pki_root/cert you can use the sign intermediate button to sign it, don't forget to fill CSR and common name ("nasqueron.drake Intermediate Authority")
    • Follow the warning instructions: "If using this for an Intermediate CA in Vault, copy the certificate below and write it to the PKI mount being used as an intermediate using the `Set signed Intermediate` endpoint."

CSR uses line1\nline2\nline3 format in JSON. You can use a Python REPL with print("...") to print the CSR in several lines. CSR isn't confidential information, key is protected in Vault and never exposed.

Current status

  • Secrets in pillar/credentials/zr.sls have been migrated to Vault under ops/secrets/<key>