Kubernetes auth method (API)
Note: This engine can use external X.509 certificates as part of TLS or signature validation. Verifying signatures against X.509 certificates that use SHA-1 is deprecated and is no longer usable without a workaround starting in Vault 1.12. See the deprecation FAQ for more information.
This is the API documentation for the Vault Kubernetes auth method plugin. To learn more about the usage and operation, see the Vault Kubernetes auth method.
This documentation assumes the Kubernetes method is mounted at the
/auth/kubernetes
path in Vault. Since it is possible to enable auth methods at
any location, please update your API calls accordingly.
Configure method
The Kubernetes auth method validates service account JWTs and verifies their existence with the Kubernetes TokenReview API. This endpoint configures the public key used to validate the JWT signature and the necessary information to access the Kubernetes API.
Method | Path |
---|---|
POST | /auth/kubernetes/config |
Parameters
kubernetes_host
(string: <required>)
- Host must be a host string, a host:port pair, or a URL to the base of the Kubernetes API server.kubernetes_ca_cert
(string: "")
- Optional PEM encoded CA cert that the TLS client can use to talk with the Kubernetes API. Every line must end with a newline\n
. Ifkubernetes_ca_cert
is unset, the TLS client uses the local CA cert if Vault is running in a Kubernetes pod. Ifkubernetes_ca_cert
is unset anddisable_local_ca_jwt
set to true, the TLS client uses the system's trusted CA certificate pool.token_reviewer_jwt
(string: "")
- A service account JWT (or other token) used as a bearer token to access the TokenReview API to validate other JWTs during login. If not set, the local service account token is used if running in a Kubernetes pod, otherwise the JWT submitted in the login payload will be used to access the Kubernetes TokenReview API.pem_keys
(array: [])
- Optional list of PEM-formatted public keys or certificates used to verify the signatures of Kubernetes service account JWTs. If a certificate is given, its public key will be extracted. Not every installation of Kubernetes exposes these keys.disable_local_ca_jwt
(bool: false)
- Disable defaulting to the local CA cert and service account JWT when running in a Kubernetes pod.use_annotations_as_alias_metadata
(bool: false)
- Use annotations from the client token's associated service account as alias metadata for the Vault entity. Only annotations with thevault.hashicorp.com/alias-metadata-
key prefix are targeted as alias metadata and your annotations must be 512 characters or less due to the Vault alias metadata value limit. For example, if you configure the annotationvault.hashicorp.com/alias-metadata-foo
, Vault saves the string "foo" along with the annotation value to the alias metadata. To save alias metadata, Vault must have permission to read service accounts from the Kubernetes API.
Deprecated parameters
The following fields have been deprecated and will be removed in a future release:
disable_iss_validation
(bool: true)
Deprecated Disable JWT issuer validation. Allows to skip ISS validation.issuer
(string: "")
Deprecated Optional JWT issuer. If no issuer is specified, then this plugin will usekubernetes/serviceaccount
as the default issuer. See these instructions for looking up the issuer for a given Kubernetes cluster.
Caveats
If Vault is running in a Kubernetes Pod, the kubernetes_ca_cert
and
token_reviewer_jwt
parameters will automatically default to the local CA cert
(/var/run/secrets/kubernetes.io/serviceaccount/ca.crt
) and local service
account JWT (/var/run/secrets/kubernetes.io/serviceaccount/token
).
If you override the default local CA cert behavior by setting disable_local_ca_jwt
to true
,
the plugin's TLS client will automatically default to using the system's trust store for TLS certificate verification.
Sample payload
Sample request
Read config
Returns the previously configured config, excluding credentials.
Method | Path |
---|---|
GET | /auth/kubernetes/config |
Sample request
Sample response
Create/Update role
Registers a role in the auth method. Role types have specific entities that can perform login operations against this endpoint. Constraints specific to the role type must be set on the role. These are applied to the authenticated entities attempting to login.
Method | Path |
---|---|
POST | /auth/kubernetes/role/:name |
Parameters
name
(string: <required>)
- Name of the role.bound_service_account_names
(array: <required>)
- List of service account names able to access this role. If set to "*" all names are allowed.bound_service_account_namespaces
(array: [])
- List of namespaces allowed to access this role. If set to "*" all namespaces are allowed.bound_service_account_namespace_selector
(string: "")
- A label selector for Kubernetes namespaces allowed to access this role. Accepts either a JSON or YAML object. The value should be of type LabelSelector. Currently, label selectors withmatchExpressions
are not supported. To use label selectors, Vault must have permission to read namespaces on the Kubernetes cluster. If set withbound_service_account_namespaces
, the conditions areOR
ed.audience
(string: "")
- Optional Audience claim to verify in the JWT.alias_name_source
(string: "serviceaccount_uid")
- Configures how identity aliases are generated. Valid choices are:serviceaccount_uid
,serviceaccount_name
Whenserviceaccount_uid
is specified, the machine generated UID from the service account will be used as the identity alias name. Whenserviceaccount_name
is specified, the service account's namespace and name will be used as the identity alias name e.gvault/vault-auth
. While it is strongly advised that you useserviceaccount_uid
, you may also useserviceaccount_name
in cases where you want to set the alias ahead of time, and the risks are mitigated or otherwise acceptable given your use case. It is very important to limit who is able to delete/create service accounts within a given cluster. See the Create an Entity Alias document which further expands on the potential security implications mentioned above.
token_ttl
(integer: 0 or string: "")
- The incremental lifetime for generated tokens. This current value of this will be referenced at renewal time.token_max_ttl
(integer: 0 or string: "")
- The maximum lifetime for generated tokens. This current value of this will be referenced at renewal time.token_policies
(array: [] or comma-delimited string: "")
- List of token policies to encode onto generated tokens. Depending on the auth method, this list may be supplemented by user/group/other values.policies
(array: [] or comma-delimited string: "")
- DEPRECATED: Please use thetoken_policies
parameter instead. List of token policies to encode onto generated tokens. Depending on the auth method, this list may be supplemented by user/group/other values.
token_bound_cidrs
(array: [] or comma-delimited string: "")
- List of CIDR blocks; if set, specifies blocks of IP addresses which can authenticate successfully, and ties the resulting token to these blocks as well.token_explicit_max_ttl
(integer: 0 or string: "")
- If set, will encode an explicit max TTL onto the token. This is a hard cap even iftoken_ttl
andtoken_max_ttl
would otherwise allow a renewal.token_no_default_policy
(bool: false)
- If set, thedefault
policy will not be set on generated tokens; otherwise it will be added to the policies set intoken_policies
.token_num_uses
(integer: 0)
- The maximum number of times a generated token may be used (within its lifetime); 0 means unlimited. If you require the token to have the ability to create child tokens, you will need to set this value to 0.token_period
(integer: 0 or string: "")
- The maximum allowed period value when a periodic token is requested from this role.token_type
(string: "")
- The type of token that should be generated. Can beservice
,batch
, ordefault
to use the mount's tuned default (which unless changed will beservice
tokens). For token store roles, there are two additional possibilities:default-service
anddefault-batch
which specify the type to return unless the client requests a different type at generation time. For machine based authentication cases, you should usebatch
type tokens.
Sample Payload 1
Sample Payload 2
Sample Request
Read role
Returns the previously registered role configuration.
Method | Path |
---|---|
GET | /auth/kubernetes/role/:name |
Parameters
name
(string: <required>)
- Name of the role.
Sample request
Sample response
List roles
Lists all the roles that are registered with the auth method.
Method | Path |
---|---|
LIST | /auth/kubernetes/role |
GET | /auth/kubernetes/role?list=true |
Sample request
Sample response
Delete role
Deletes the previously registered role.
Method | Path |
---|---|
DELETE | /auth/kubernetes/role/:role |
Parameters
role
(string: <required>)
- Name of the role.
Sample request
Login
Fetch a token. This endpoint takes a signed JSON Web Token (JWT) and a role name for some entity. It verifies the JWT signature to authenticate that entity and then authorizes the entity for the given role.
Method | Path |
---|---|
POST | /auth/kubernetes/login |
Parameters
role
(string: <required>)
- Name of the role against which the login is being attempted.jwt
(string: <required>)
- Signed JSON Web Token (JWT) for authenticating a service account.
Sample payload
Sample request
Sample response