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systemd-vaultd - load vault credentials with systemd units

Mostly written in a train

  • Jörg Thalheim

systemd-vaultd is a proxy between systemd and vault agent. It provides a unix socket that can be used in systemd services in the LoadCredential option and then waits for vault agent to write these secrets in json format at /run/systemd-vaultd/<service_name>.service.json.

This project's goal is to simplify the loading of HashiCorp Vault secrets from systemd units.

Problem statement

Systemd has an option called LoadCredentials that allows to provide credentials to a service:

# myservice.service
[Service]
ExecStart=/usr/bin/myservice.sh
LoadCredential=foobar:/etc/myfoobarcredential.txt

In this case systemd will load credential the file /etc/myfoobarcredential.txt and provide it to the service at $CREDENTIAL_PATH/foobar.

It's handy because it bypasses file permission issues. /etc/myfoobarcredential.txt can be owned by root, and the unit run as a different or dynamic user.

While vault agent also supports writing these secrets, a major issue is that the consumer service may be started before vault agent was able to retrieve secrets from vault. In that case, systemd would fail to start the service.

The solution

In order to do so, I wrote a systemd-vaultd service which acts as a proxy between systemd and vault agent that is running on the machine. It provides a unix socket that can be used in systemd services in the LoadCredential option and then waits for vault agent to write these secrets at /run/systemd-vaultd/<service_name>.json.

We take advantage that in addition to normal paths, systemd also supports loading credentials from unix sockets.

With systemd-vaultd the service myservice.service would look like this:

[Service]
ExecStart=/usr/bin/myservice.sh
LoadCredential=foobar:/run/systemd-vaultd/sock

vault agent is then expected to write secrets to /run/systemd-vaultd/ in json format.

template {
  # this exposes all secrets in `secret/my-secret` to the service
  contents = "#{{ with secret \"secret/my-secret\" }}{{ .Data.data | toJSON }}{{ end }}"

  # an alternative is to expose only selected secrets like this:
  #  contents = <<EOF
  #  {{ with secret "secret/my-secret" }}{{ scratch.MapSet "secrets" "foobar" .Data.data.foo }}{{ end }}
  #  {{ scratch.Get "foobar" | explodeMap | toJSON }}
  #  EOF

  destination  = "/run/systemd-vaultd/secrets/myservice.service.json"
}

When myservice is started, systemd will open a connection to systemd-vaultd's socket. systemd-vaultd then either serve the secrets from /run/systemd-vaultd/secrets/myservice.service.json or it waits with inotify on secret directory for vault agent to write the secret.

Once the file /run/systemd-vaultd/secrets/myservice.service.json is present, systemd-vaultd will parse it into a json map and lookup the keys specified in LoadCredential.

Installation

The installation requires a go compiler and make to be installed.

This command will install the systemd-vaultd binary to /usr/bin/systemd-vaultd as well as installing a following systemd unit files: systemd-vaultd.service, systemd-vaultd.socket:

make install

Known limitations

systemd's LoadCredential option will not update credentials if a service is reloaded. However systemd-vaultd called systemd-vaultd-update-secrets comes with a helper program that can write secrets from the json file generated by systemd-vaultd to a directory readable by the service. Checkout systemd-vaultd/nix/checks/systemd-vaultd-test.nix for more details.

License

Copyright (c) 2022 Jörg Thalheim and contributors.

This project is free software, and may be redistributed under the terms specified in the LICENSE file.

About

This project is maintained by Numtide.

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