Signed-off-by: Gustavo Carvalho <gustavo.carvalho@container-solutions.com>
5 KiB
AWS Authentication
Controller's Pod Identity
Note: If you are using Paramater Store replace service: SecretsManager
with service: ParamaterStore
in all examples below.
This is basicially a zero-configuration authentication method that inherits the credentials from the runtime environment using the aws sdk default credential chain.
You can attach a role to the pod using IRSA, kiam or kube2iam. When no other authentication method is configured in the Kind=Secretstore
this role is used to make all API calls against AWS Secrets Manager or SSM Parameter Store.
Based on the Pod's identity you can do a sts:assumeRole
before fetching the secrets to limit access to certain keys in your provider. This is optional.
apiVersion: external-secrets.io/v1beta1
kind: SecretStore
metadata:
name: team-b-store
spec:
provider:
aws:
service: SecretsManager
region: eu-central-1
# optional: do a sts:assumeRole before fetching secrets
role: team-b
Access Key ID & Secret Access Key
You can store Access Key ID & Secret Access Key in a Kind=Secret
and reference it from a SecretStore.
apiVersion: external-secrets.io/v1beta1
kind: SecretStore
metadata:
name: team-b-store
spec:
provider:
aws:
service: SecretsManager
region: eu-central-1
# optional: assume role before fetching secrets
role: team-b
auth:
secretRef:
accessKeyIDSecretRef:
name: awssm-secret
key: access-key
secretAccessKeySecretRef:
name: awssm-secret
key: secret-access-key
NOTE: In case of a ClusterSecretStore
, Be sure to provide namespace
in accessKeyIDSecretRef
, secretAccessKeySecretRef
with the namespaces where the secrets reside.
EKS Service Account credentials
This feature lets you use short-lived service account tokens to authenticate with AWS. You must have Service Account Volume Projection enabled - it is by default on EKS. See EKS guide on how to set up IAM roles for service accounts.
The big advantage of this approach is that ESO runs without any credentials.
apiVersion: v1
kind: ServiceAccount
metadata:
annotations:
eks.amazonaws.com/role-arn: arn:aws:iam::123456789012:role/team-a
name: my-serviceaccount
namespace: default
Reference the service account from above in the Secret Store:
apiVersion: external-secrets.io/v1beta1
kind: SecretStore
metadata:
name: secretstore-sample
spec:
provider:
aws:
service: SecretsManager
region: eu-central-1
auth:
jwt:
serviceAccountRef:
name: my-serviceaccount
NOTE: In case of a ClusterSecretStore
, Be sure to provide namespace
for serviceAccountRef
with the namespace where the service account resides.
Custom Endpoints
You can define custom AWS endpoints if you want to use regional, vpc or custom endpoints. See List of endpoints for Secrets Manager, Secure Systems Manager and Security Token Service.
Use the following environment variables to point the controller to your custom endpoints. Note: All resources managed by this controller are affected.
ENV VAR | DESCRIPTION |
---|---|
AWS_SECRETSMANAGER_ENDPOINT | Endpoint for the Secrets Manager Service. The controller uses this endpoint to fetch secrets from AWS Secrets Manager. |
AWS_SSM_ENDPOINT | Endpoint for the AWS Secure Systems Manager. The controller uses this endpoint to fetch secrets from SSM Parameter Store. |
AWS_STS_ENDPOINT | Endpoint for the Security Token Service. The controller uses this endpoint when creating a session and when doing assumeRole or assumeRoleWithWebIdentity calls. |