Consul Secrets Engine
The Consul secrets engine generates Consul API tokens dynamically based on Consul ACL policies.
Setup
Most secrets engines must be configured in advance before they can perform their functions. These steps are usually completed by an operator or configuration management tool.
Enable the Consul secrets engine:
By default, the secrets engine will mount at the name of the engine. To enable the secrets engine at a different path, use the
-path
argument.Bootstrap the Consul ACL system if not already done. To begin configuring the secrets engine, we must give Vault the necessary credentials to manage Consul.
In Consul versions below 1.4, acquire a management token from Consul using the
acl_master_token
from your Consul configuration file, or another management token:Vault must have a "management" type token so that it can create and revoke ACL tokens. The response will return a new token:
For Consul 1.4 and above, use the command line to generate a token with the appropriate policy:
Configure Vault to connect and authenticate to Consul:
Configure a role that maps a name in Vault to a Consul ACL policy. Depending on your Consul version, you will either provide a policy document and a token_type, or a set of policies. When users generate credentials, they are generated against this role.
For Consul versions below 1.4, the policy must be base64-encoded. The policy language is documented by Consul.
Write a policy and proceed to link it to the role:
For Consul versions 1.4 and above, generate a policy in Consul, and proceed to link it to the role:
For Consul versions 1.5 and above, generate a role in Consul, and proceed to link it to the role:
Token lease duration: If you do not specify a value for
ttl
(orlease
for Consul versions below 1.4) the tokens created using Vault's Consul secrets engine are created with a Time To Live (TTL) of 30 days. You can change the lease duration by passing-ttl=<duration>
to the command above with "duration" being a string with a time suffix like "30s" or "1h".For Enterprise users, you may further limit a role's access by adding the optional parameters
consul_namespace
and/orpartition
. Please refer to Consul's namespace documentation and admin partition documentation for further information about these features.For Consul versions 1.7 and above, link a Consul namespace to the role:
For Consul version 1.11 and above, link an admin partition to a role:
Usage
After the secrets engine is configured and a user/machine has a Vault token with the proper permission, it can generate credentials.
Generate a new credential by reading from the /creds
endpoint with the name
of the role:
Expired token rotation: Once a token's TTL expires, then Consul operations will no longer be allowed with it.
This requires you to have an external process to rotate tokens. At this time, the recommended approach for operators
is to rotate the tokens manually by creating a new token using the vault read consul/creds/my-role
command. Once
the token is synchronized with Consul, apply the token to the agents using the Consul API or CLI.
tutorials
Refer to Administer Consul Access Control Tokens with Vault for a step-by-step tutorial.
API
The Consul secrets engine has a full HTTP API. Please see the Consul secrets engine API for more details.