A very simple elixir client that authenticates, reads, writes and deletes secrets from HashiCorp's Vault. As listed on Vault Libraries.
The package can be installed as:
- Add vaultex to your list of dependencies in
mix.exs:
def deps do
[{:vaultex, "~> 0.8"}]
end- Ensure vaultex is started before your application:
def application do
[applications: [:vaultex]]
endYou can configure your vault endpoint with a single environment variable:
VAULT_ADDR
Or a single application variable:
:vaultex, :vault_addr
An example value for VAULT_ADDR is http://127.0.0.1:8200.
Alternatively the vault endpoint can be specified with environment variables:
VAULT_HOSTVAULT_PORTVAULT_SCHEME
Or application variables:
:vaultex, :host:vaultex, :port:vaultex, :scheme
These default to localhost, 8200, http respectively.
You can skip SSL certificate verification with :vaultex, vault_ssl_verify: true option
or VAULT_SSL_VERIFY=true environment variable.
If you do want to use SSL verification, set the VAULT_CACERT environment variable to the SSL certificate location. (See the Vault documentaion for more details.)
To read a secret you must provide the path to the secret and the authentication backend and credentials you will use to login. See the Vaultex.Client.auth/2 docs for supported auth backends.
...
iex> Vaultex.Client.auth(:app_id, {app_id, user_id})
iex> Vaultex.Client.auth(:userpass, {username, password})
iex> Vaultex.Client.auth(:ldap, {username, password})
iex> Vaultex.Client.auth(:github, {github_token})
iex> Vaultex.Client.auth(:approle, {role_id, secret_id})
iex> Vaultex.Client.auth(:token, {token})
iex> Vaultex.Client.auth(:kubernetes, %{jwt: "jwt", role: "role"})
iex> Vaultex.Client.auth(:radius, %{username: "user", password: "password"})
iex> Vaultex.Client.auth(:aws_iam, {role, server})
...
iex> Vaultex.Client.read "secret/bar", :github, {github_token} #returns {:ok, %{"value" => bar"}}
...
iex> Vaultex.Client.read_dynamic "secret/dynamic/bar", :github, {github_token} #returns {:ok, %{"data" => %{"value" => "bar"}, "lease_duration" => 60, "lease_id" => "secret/dynamic/foo/b4z", "renewable" => true}}
...
iex> Vaultex.Client.renew_lease("secret/dynamic/foo/b4z", 100, :github, {github_token}) #returns {:ok, %{"lease_id" => "secret/dynamic/foo/b4z", "lease_duration" => 160, "renewable" => true}}
...
iex> Vaultex.Client.write "secret/foo", %{"value" => "bar"}, :app_id, {app_id, user_id}
...
iex> Vaultex.Client.delete "secret/foo", :app_id, {app_id, user_id}The AWS IAM authentication method requires you to have ExAws installed as a dependency and correctly configured. No additional ExAws modules are required. For more details see the Vault AWS docs.
- If
roleid set tonilVault will try to infer the vault role to use. servermay be set tonilor to the value to pass in theX-Vault-AWS-IAM-Server-IDheader.
To release you need to bump the version and add some changes to the change log, you can do this with:
mix eliver.bump