6.1 KiB
sops-nix
Atomic secret provisioning for NixOS based on sops.
How it works
Sops-nix decrypts secrets sops files on the target machine to files specified in the NixOS configuration at activation time. It also adjusts file permissions/owner/group. It uses either host ssh keys or GPG keys for decryption. In future we will also support cloud key management APIs such as AWS KMS, GCP KMS, Azure Key Vault.
Features
- Compatible with all NixOS deployment frameworks: NixOps, nixos-rebuild, krops, morph
- Version-control friendly: Since all files are encrypted they can directly committed to version control. The format is readable in diffs and there are also ways of showing git diffs in cleartext
- CI friendly: Since nixops files can be added to the nix store as well without leaking secrets, machine definition can be build as a whole.
- Atomic upgrades: New secrets are written to a new directory which replaces the old directory in an atomic step.
- Rollback support: If sops files are added to Nix store, old secrets can be rolled back. This is optional.
- Fast: Unlike solutions implemented by NixOps, krops and morph there is no extra step required to upload secrets
- Different storage formats: Secrets can be stored in Yaml, JSON or binary.
Usage example
1. Install nix-sops
TODO
2. Generate a GPG key for yourself
First generate yourself a GPG key or use nix-sops conversion tool to convert an existing ssh key (we only support RSA keys right now):
$ nix-shell -p ssh-to-pgp
$ ssh-to-pgp -private-key -i $HOME/.ssh/id_rsa | gpg --import --quiet
2504791468b153b8a3963cc97ba53d1919c5dfd4
# This exports the public key
$ ssh-to-pgp -i $HOME/.ssh/id_rsa -o $USER.asc
2504791468b153b8a3963cc97ba53d1919c5dfd4
If you get:
ssh-to-pgp: failed to parse private ssh key: ssh: this private key is passphrase protected
then your ssh key is encrypted with your password and you need to create a encrypted copy temporarily:
$ cp $HOME/.ssh/id_rsa /tmp/id_rsa
$ ssh-keygen -p -N "" -f /tmp/id_rsa
$ ssh-to-pgp -private-key -i /tmp/id_rsa | gpg --import --quiet
The hex string printed here is your GPG fingerprint that can be exported to SOPS_PGP_FP
.
export SOPS_PGP_FP=2504791468b153b8a3963cc97ba53d1919c5dfd4
If you have generated a gnupg key directly you can get your fingerprint like this:
gpg --list-secret-keys --fingerprint
/tmp/tmp.JA07D1aVRD/pubring.kbx
-------------------------------
sec rsa2048 1970-01-01 [SCE]
9F89 C5F6 9A10 281A 8350 14B0 9C3D C61F 7520 87EF
uid [ unknown] root <root@localhost>
The fingerprint here is 9F89 C5F6 9A10 281A 8350 14B0 9C3D C61F 7520 87EF
, you
need to remove the space in-between manually.
3. Get a PGP Public key for your machine
The easiest way to add new hosts is using ssh host keys (requires openssh to be enabled). Since sops does not natively supports ssh keys yet, nix-sops supports a conversion tool to store them as gpg keys.
$ nix-shell -p ssh-to-pgp
$ ssh root@server01 "cat /etc/ssh/ssh_host_rsa_key" | ssh-to-pgp -o server01.asc
# or with sudo
$ ssh youruser@server01 "sudo cat /etc/ssh/ssh_host_rsa_key" | ssh-to-pgp -o server01.asc
0fd60c8c3b664aceb1796ce02b318df330331003
# Or just read them locally (or in a ssh session)
$ ssh-to-pgp -i /etc/ssh/ssh_host_rsa_key -o server01.asc
0fd60c8c3b664aceb1796ce02b318df330331003
Also the hex string here is the fingerprint of your server's gpg key that can be exported
append to SOPS_PGP_FP
:
export SOPS_PGP_FP=${SOPS_PGP_FP}:2504791468b153b8a3963cc97ba53d1919c5dfd4
If you prefer having a separate gnupg key, sops-nix also comes with a helper tool:
$ nix-shell -p sops-init-gpg-key
$ sops-init-gpg-key --hostname server01 --gpghome /tmp/newkey
You can use the following command to save it to a file:
cat > server01.asc <<EOF
-----BEGIN PGP PUBLIC KEY BLOCK-----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=uvIf
-----END PGP PUBLIC KEY BLOCK-----
EOF
fingerprint: E4CA86768F176AEB6C01554153AF8D7F149613B1
In this case you need to make upload the gpg key directory /tmp/newkey
to your server.
4. Create a sops file
To create a sops file you need to set export SOPS_PGP_FP
to include both the fingerprint
of your personal gpg key (and your colleagues) and your servers:
export SOPS_PGP_FP="2504791468b153b8a3963cc97ba53d1919c5dfd4,2504791468b153b8a3963cc97ba53d1919c5dfd4"
sops-nix automates that with a hook for nix-shell and also takes care of importing all keys, allowing public keys to be stored in git:
# shell.nix
with import <nixpkgs> {};
mkShell {
# imports all files ending in .asc/.gpg and sets $SOPS_PGP_FP.
sopsGPGKeyDirs = [
"./keys/hosts"
"./keys/users"
];
# Also single files can be imported.
#sopsGPGKeys = [
# "./keys/users/mic92.asc"
# "./keys/hosts/server01.asc"
#];
nativeBuildInputs = [
(pkgs.callPackage <sops-nix> {}).sops-shell-hook
sops
## you may also need gnupg
# gnupg
];
}
After that you can create a new file with sops
sops secrets.yaml