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---
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layout: "docs"
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page_title: "Tokens"
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sidebar_current: "docs-concepts-tokens"
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description: |-
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Tokens are a core authentication method in Vault. Concepts and important features.
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---
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# Tokens
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Tokens are the core method for _authentication_ within Vault. Tokens
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can be used directly or [authentication backends](/docs/concepts/auth.html)
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can be used to dynamically generate tokens based on external identities.
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If you've gone through the getting started guide, you probably noticed that
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`vault server -dev` (or `vault init` for a non-dev server) outputs an
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initial "root token." This is the first method of authentication for Vault.
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It is also the only authentication backend that cannot be disabled.
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As stated in the [authentication concepts](/docs/concepts/auth.html),
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all external authentication mechanisms, such as GitHub, map down to dynamically
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created tokens. These tokens have all the same properties as a normal manually
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created token.
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Within Vault, tokens map to information. The most important information mapped
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to a token is a set of one or more attached
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[policies](/docs/concepts/policies.html). These policies control what the token
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holder is allowed to do within Vault. Other mapped information includes
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metadata that can be viewed and is added to the audit log, creation time, last
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renewal time, and more.
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Read on for a deeper dive into token concepts.
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## Token Concepts
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### The Token Store
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Often in documentation or in help channels, the "token store" is referenced.
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This is the same as the [`token` authentication
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backend](https://www.vaultproject.io/docs/auth/token.html). This is a special
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backend in that it is responsible for creating and storing tokens, and cannot
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be disabled. It is also the only authentication backend that has no login
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capability -- all actions require existing authenticated tokens.
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### Root Tokens
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Root tokens are tokens that have the `root` policy attached to them. Root
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tokens can do anything in Vault. _Anything_. In addition, they are the only
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type of token within Vault that can be set to never expire without any renewal
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needed. As a result, it is purposefully hard to create root tokens; in fact, as
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of version 0.6.1, there are only three ways to create root tokens:
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1. The initial root token generated at `vault init` time -- this token has no
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expiration
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2. By using another root token; a root token with an expiration cannot create a
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root token that never expires
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3. By using `vault generate-root` with the permission of a quorum of unseal key
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holders
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Root tokens are useful in development but should be extremely carefully guarded
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in production. In fact, the Vault team recommends that root tokens are only
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used for just enough initial setup (usually, setting up authentication backends
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and policies necessary to allow administrators to acquire more limited tokens)
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or in emergencies, and are revoked immediately after they are no longer needed.
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If a new root token is needed, the `generate-root` command and associated [API
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endpoint](https://www.vaultproject.io/docs/http/sys-generate-root.html) can be
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used to generate one on-the-fly.
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It is also good security practice for there to be multiple eyes on a terminal
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whenever a root token is live. This way multiple people can verify as to the
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tasks performed with the root token, and that the token was revoked immediately
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after these tasks were completed.
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### Token Hierarchies and Orphan Tokens
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Normally, when a token holder creates new tokens, these tokens will be created
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as children of the original token; tokens they create will be children of them;
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and so on. When a parent token is revoked, all of its child tokens -- and all
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of their leases -- are revoked as well. This ensures that a user cannot escape
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revocation by simply generating a never-ending tree of child tokens.
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Often this behavior is not desired, so users with appropriate access can create
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`orphan` tokens. These tokens have no parent -- they are the root of their own
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token tree. These orphan tokens can be created:
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1. Via the `auth/token/create-orphan` endpoint
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2. By having `sudo` capability or `root` policy when accessing
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`auth/token/create` and setting the `orphan` parameter to `true`
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3. Via token store roles
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4. By logging in with any other (non-`token`) authentication backend
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Users with appropriate permissions can also use the `auth/token/revoke-orphan`
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endpoint, which revokes the given token but rather than revoke the rest of the
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tree, it instead sets the tokens' immediate children to be orphans. Use with
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caution!
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### Token Time-To-Live, Periodic Tokens, and Explicit Max TTLs
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Every non-root token has a time-to-live (TTL) associated with it, which is a
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current period of validity since either the token's creation time or last
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renewal time, whichever is more recent. (Root tokens may have a TTL associated,
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but the TTL may also be 0, indicating a token that never expires). After the
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current TTL is up, the token will no longer function -- it, and its associated
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leases, are revoked.
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If the token is renewable, Vault can be asked to extend the token validity
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period using `vault token-renew` or the appropriate renewal endpoint. At this
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time, various factors come into play. What happens depends upon whether the
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token is a periodic token (available for creation by `root`/`sudo` users, token
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store roles, or some authentication backends), has an explicit maximum TTL
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attached, or neither.
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#### The General Case
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In the general case, where there is neither a period nor explicit maximum TTL
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value set on the token, the token's lifetime since it was created will be
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compared to the maximum TTL. This maximum TTL value is dynamically generated
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and can change from renewal to renewal, so the value cannot be displayed when a
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token's information is looked up. It is based on a combination of factors:
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1. The system max TTL, which is 30 days but can be changed in Vault's
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configuration file
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2. The max TTL set on a mount using [mount
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tuning](https://www.vaultproject.io/docs/http/sys-mounts.html). This value
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is allowed to override the system max TTL -- it can be longer or shorter,
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and if set this value will be respected.
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3. A value suggested by the authentication backend that issued the token. This
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might be configured on a per-role, per-group, or per-user basis. This value
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is allowed to be less than the mount max TTL (or, if not set, the system max
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TTL), but it is not allowed to be longer.
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Note that the values in (2) and (3) may change at any given time, which is why
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a final determination about the current allowed max TTL is made at renewal time
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using the current values. It is also why it is important to always ensure that
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the TTL returned from a renewal operation is within an allowed range; if this
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value is not extending, likely the TTL of the token cannot be extended past its
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current value and the client may want to reauthenticate and acquire a new
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token. However, outside of direct operator interaction, Vault will never revoke
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a token before the returned TTL has expired.
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#### Explicit Max TTLs
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Tokens can have an explicit max TTL set on them. This value becomes a hard
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limit on the token's lifetime -- no matter what the values in (1), (2), and (3)
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from the general case are, the token cannot live past this explicitly-set
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value. This has an effect even when using periodic tokens to escape the normal
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TTL mechanism.
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#### Periodic Tokens
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In some cases, having a token be revoked would be problematic -- for instance,
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if a long-running service needs to maintain its SQL connection pool over a long
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period of time. In this scenario, a periodic token can be used. Periodic tokens
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can be created in a few ways:
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1. By having `sudo` capability or a `root` token with the `auth/token/create`
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endpoint
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2. By using token store roles
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3. By using an authentication backend that supports issuing these, such as
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AppRole
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At issue time, the TTL of a periodic token will be equal to the configured
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period. At every renewal time, the TTL will be reset back to this configured
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period, and as long as the token is successfully renewed within each of these
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periods of time, it will never expire. Outside of `root` tokens, it is
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currently the only way for a token in Vault to have an unlimited lifetime.
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The idea behind periodic tokens is that it is easy for systems and services to
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perform an action relatively frequently -- for instance, every two hours, or
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even every five minutes. Therefore, as long as a system is actively renewing
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this token -- in other words, as long as the system is alive -- the system is
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allowed to keep using the token and any associated leases. However, if the
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system stops renewing within this period (for instance, if it was shut down),
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the token will expire relatively quickly. It is good practice to keep this
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period as short as possible, and generally speaking it is not useful for humans
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to be given periodic tokens.
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There are a few important things to know when using periodic tokens:
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* When a periodic token is created via a token store role, the _current_ value of the role's period setting will be used at renewal time
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* A token with both a period and an explicit max TTL will act like a periodic token but will be revoked when the explicit max TTL is reached
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