Secrets Manager Kubernetes Operator
advertencia
The Bitwarden Secrets Manager Helm integration is currently in Beta status. Some features may not provide full functionality at this time.
The Bitwarden Secrets Manager Kubernetes Operator will allow teams to integrate Secrets Manager into Kubernetes workflows securely and efficiently. Using the operator, which is deployed using Helm package manager, secrets can be stored and retrieved from Secrets Manager.
Bitwarden Secrets Manager Kubernetes Operator
The sm-operator
uses a controller to synchronize Bitwarden secrets into Kubernetes secrets. The operator registers the Custom Resource Definition: BitwardenSecret
into the Kubernetes cluster. The cluster will listen for the newly registered BitwardenSecret
, and synchronize on a configurable interval.
To get started, an active Bitwarden organization with Secrets Manager is required. Additionally, one or more access tokens associated with a machine account are required.
Additional dependencies
Add the Bitwarden Secrets Manager chart repository:
Bashhelm repo add bitwarden https://charts.bitwarden.com/
Update information of locally available charts:
Bashhelm repo update
Create a configuration file
Create a custom values file used for deployment:
Bashhelm show values bitwarden/sm-operator --devel > my-values.yaml
Update configuration file
Locate my-values.yaml
and fill out required values. An example can be located in the Bitwarden repository. We recommend that the following values be adjusted for your setup:
Value | Description |
---|---|
| How often the secrets synchronize (in seconds). Minimum value is 180. |
| Self-hosted users set to |
| For self-hosted users only. This is the URL for your instance API. |
| For self-hosted users only. This is the URL for your instance's identity service. |
| Set to This setting is recommended for most common cases that do not require escalating privileges to make containers restrictive. See Kubernetes documentation for more information. |
nota
To use a different operate image version than the one included with the chart, update:containers.manager.image.tag
.
Once your values.yaml
file has been configured, upgrade the release to a new chart by running:
Bashhelm upgrade sm-operator bitwarden/sm-operator -i --debug -n sm-operator-system --create-namespace --values my-values.yaml --devel
This command installs or upgrades a release with the name sm-operator
, in the namespace sm-operator-system
, with the values from my-values.yaml
.
nota
To see information for the helm install
or helm upgrade
commands, run helm install --help
or helm upgrade --help
.
To synchronize secrets stored in Bitwarden Secrets Manager into Kubernetes secrets, we must create a BitwardenSecret object.
Create a Kubernetes secret to authenticate with Secrets Manager:
Bashkubectl create secret generic bw-auth-token -n <YOUR_NAMESPACE> --from-literal=token="<TOKEN_HERE>"
advertencia
This command is recorded in your shell history. To avoid exposing access token data, consider deploying with an ephemeral pipeline agent.
The BitwardenSecret
object is the synchronization setting that will be used by the operator to create and synchronize a Kubernetes secret. The Kubernetes secret belongs to a namespace and will be injected with the data that the Secrets Manager machine account has access to.
Example BitwardenSecret deployment with custom mapping:
Bashcat <<EOF | kubectl apply -n <YOUR_NAMESPACE> -f -
apiVersion: k8s.bitwarden.com/v1
kind: BitwardenSecret
metadata:
labels:
app.kubernetes.io/name: bitwardensecret
app.kubernetes.io/instance: bitwardensecret-sample
app.kubernetes.io/part-of: sm-operator
app.kubernetes.io/managed-by: kustomize
app.kubernetes.io/created-by: sm-operator
name: bitwardensecret-sample
spec:
organizationId: "a08a8157-129e-4002-bab4-b118014ca9c7"
secretName: bw-sample-secret
map:
- bwSecretId: 6c230265-d472-45f7-b763-b11b01023ca6
secretKeyName: test__secret__1
- bwSecretId: d132a5ed-12bd-49af-9b74-b11b01025d58
secretKeyName: test__secret__2
authToken:
secretName: bw-auth-token
secretKey: token
EOF
In the BitwardenSecret deployment example, the custom map
element is optional.
Setting | Description |
---|---|
| The name of the BitwardenSecret object you are deploying. |
| The Bitwarden organization ID you are pulling Secrets Manager data from. |
| The name of the Kubernetes secret that will be created and injected with Secrets Manager data. |
| The name of a secret inside of the Kubernetes namespace that the BitwardenSecrets object is being deployed into that contains the Secrets Manager machine account authorization token being used across secrets. |
advertencia
Secrets Manager does not guarantee unique secret names across projects. By default, secrets will be created with the Secrets Manager secret UUID used as the Key.
To make generated secrets easier to use, you can create a map of Bitwarden Secrets IDs to Kubernetes secret keys. The generated secret will replace the Bitwarden Secret IDs with the mapped name you provide.
Available map settings:
Setting | Description |
---|---|
| This is the UUID (universally unique identifier) of the secret in Secrets Manager. This can be found under the secret name in the Secrets Manager web portal or by using the Bitwarden Secrets Manager CLI. |
| The resulting key inside the Kubernetes secret that replaced the UUID. |
BashapiVersion: apps/v1
kind: Deployment
metadata:
name: my-deployment
labels:
app: my-deployment
spec:
selector:
matchLabels:
app: my-deployment
template:
metadata:
labels:
app: my-deployment
spec:
containers:
- name: my-deployment
image: <some-image>
imagePullSecrets:
- name: <my-secret-name>
envFrom:
- secretRef:
name: bw-sample-secret
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