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Secrets Management
A secret is any sensitive piece of information required for API gateway operations. Secrets may be part of the core Kong Gateway configuration, they may be used in plugins, or they might be part of configuration associated with APIs serviced by the gateway.
Some of the most common types of secrets used by Kong Gateway include:
- Data store usernames and passwords, used with PostgreSQL and Redis
- Private X.509 certificates
- API keys
- Sensitive plugin configuration fields, generally used for authentication, hashing, signing, or encryption.
Kong Gateway lets you store certain values in a vault.
By storing sensitive values as secrets, you ensure that they are not
visible in plaintext throughout the platform, in places such as kong.conf
,
in declarative configuration files, logs, or in the Kong Manager UI. Instead,
you can reference each secret with a vault
reference.
For example, the following reference resolves to the environment variable MY_SECRET_POSTGRES_PASSWORD
:
{vault://env/my-secret-postgres-password}
In this way, secrets management becomes centralized.
Referenceable values
A secret reference points to a string value. No other data types are currently supported.
The vault backend may store multiple related secrets inside an object, but the reference should always point to a key that resolves to a string value. For example, the following reference:
{vault://hcv/pg/username}
Would point to a secret object called pg
inside a HashiCorp Vault, which may return the following value:
{
"username": "john",
"password": "doe"
}
Kong receives the payload and extracts the "username"
value of "john"
for the secret reference of
{vault://hcv/pg/username}
.
If you have a single value secret with identifier pg/username
, you need to add /
as a suffix
to a reference so that it is properly sent to the vault API:
{vault://hcv/pg/username/}
What can be stored as a secret?
Most of the Kong configuration values
can be stored as a secret, such as pg_user
and
pg_password
.
You can even store the default certificates in vaults, e.g.:
SSL_CERT=$(cat cluster.crt) \
SSL_CERT_KEY=$(cat cluster.key) \
KONG_SSL_CERT={vault://env/ssl-cert} \
KONG_SSL_CERT_KEY={vault://env/ssl-cert-key} \
kong prepare
The Kong license, usually configured with
a KONG_LICENSE_DATA
environment variable, can be stored as a secret.
The Kong Admin API certificate object can be stored as a secret.
Referenceable plugin fields
Some plugins have fields that can be stored as secrets in a
vault backend. These fields are labelled as referenceable
.
The following plugins support vault references for specific fields. See each plugin’s documentation for more information on each field:
Plugin | Referenceable fields |
---|---|
ACME |
config.account_email
config.eab_kid
config.eab_hmac_key
config.storage_config.redis.auth
config.storage_config.consul.token
config.storage_config.vault.token
|
AWS Lambda |
config.aws_key
config.aws_secret
config.aws_assume_role_arn
|
Azure Functions |
config.apikey
config.clientid
|
Datadog |
config.host
|
Forward Proxy Advanced |
config.auth_username
config.auth_password
|
GraphQL Rate Limiting Advanced |
config.redis.username
config.redis.password
config.redis.sentinel_username
config.redis.sentinel_password
|
HTTP Log |
config.http_endpoint
config.headers
|
Kafka Log |
config.authentication.user
config.authentication.password
|
Kafka Upstream |
config.authentication.user
config.authentication.password
|
LDAP Authentication Advanced |
config.ldap_password
config.bind_dn
|
Loggly |
config.key
|
OpenID Connect |
config.client_id
config.client_secret
config.client_jwk.k
config.client_jwk.d
config.client_jwk.p
config.client_jwk.q
config.client_jwk.dp
config.client_jwk.dq
config.client_jwk.qi
config.client_jwk.oth
config.client_jwk.r
config.client_jwk.t
config.session_secret
config.session_redis_username
config.session_redis_password
|
OpenTelemetry |
config.endpoint
config.headers
|
Proxy Caching Advanced |
config.redis.username
config.redis.password
config.redis.sentinel_username
config.redis.sentinel_password
|
Rate Limiting |
config.redis_password
config.redis_username
|
Rate Limiting Advanced |
config.redis.username
config.redis.password
config.redis.sentinel_username
config.redis.sentinel_password
|
Request Transformer Advanced |
config.rename.body
config.rename.headers
config.rename.querystring
config.replace.body
config.replace.headers
config.replace.querystring
config.add.body
config.add.headers
config.add.querystring
config.append.body
config.append.headers
config.append.querystring
|
Response Rate Limiting |
config.redis_password
config.redis_username
|
SAML |
config.idp_certificate
config.response_encryption_key
config.request_signing_key
config.request_signing_certificate
config.session_secret
config.session_redis_username
config.session_redis_password
|
Session |
config.secret
|
Note: The Vault plugin interacts with the
vaults
andvault_credentials
entities. For these entities, thevaults.vault_token
andvault_credentials.secret_token
parameters are referenceable.
Supported backends
Kong Gateway supports the following vault backends:
- Environment variables
- AWS Secrets Manager
- GCP Secret Manager
- Azure Key Vaults
- HashiCorp Vault
See the backends overview for more information about each option.
Get started
For further information on secrets management, see the following topics: