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143 lines
6.6 KiB
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143 lines
6.6 KiB
Plaintext
---
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layout: docs
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page_title: Upgrading to Vault 0.5.0 - Guides
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sidebar_title: Upgrade to 0.5.0
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description: |-
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This page contains the full list of breaking changes for Vault 0.5, including
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actions you must take to facilitate a smooth upgrade path.
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---
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# Overview
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This page contains the list of breaking changes for Vault 0.5. Please read it
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carefully.
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Please note that these are changes to Vault itself. Client libraries maintained
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by HashiCorp have been updated with support for these changes, but if you are
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using community-supported libraries, you should ensure that they are ready for
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Vault 0.5 before upgrading.
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## Rekey Requires Nonce
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Vault now generates a nonce when a rekey operation is started in order to
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ensure that the operation cannot be hijacked. The nonce is output when the
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rekey operation is started and when rekey status is requested.
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The nonce must be provided as part of the request parameters when providing an
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unseal key. The nonce can be communicated from the request initiator to unseal
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key holders via side channels; the unseal key holders can then verify the nonce
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(by providing it) when they submit their unseal key.
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As a convenience, if using the CLI interactively to provide the unseal key, the
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nonce will be displayed for verification but the user will not be required to
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manually re-type it.
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## `TTL` Field in Token Lookup
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Previously, the `ttl` field returned when calling `lookup` or `lookup-self` on
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the token auth method displayed the TTL set at token creation. It
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now displays the time remaining (in seconds) for the token's validity period.
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The original behavior has been moved to a field named `creation_ttl`.
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## Grace Periods Removed
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Vault no longer uses grace periods internally for leases or token TTLs.
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Previously these were set by backends and could differ greatly from one backend
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to another, causing confusion. TTLs (the `lease_duration` field for a lease,
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or, for a token lookup, the `ttl`) are now exact.
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## `token-renew` CLI Command
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If the token given for renewal is the same as the token in use by the client,
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the `renew-self` endpoint will be used in the API rather than the `renew`
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endpoint. Since the `default` policy contains `auth/token/renew-self` this
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makes it much more likely that the request will succeed rather than somewhat
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confusingly failing due to a lack of permissions on `auth/token/renew`.
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## `status` CLI Command
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The `status` CLI command now returns an exit code of `0` for an unsealed Vault
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(as before), `2` for a sealed Vault, and `1` for an error. This keeps error
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return codes consistent across commands.
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## Transit Upsertion Behavior Uses Capabilities
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Previously, attempting to encrypt with a key that did not exist would create a
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key with default values. This was convenient but ultimately allowed a client to
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potentially escape an ACL policy restriction, albeit without any dangerous
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access. Now that Vault supports more granular capabilities in policies,
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upsertion behavior is controlled by whether the client has the `create`
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capability for the request (upsertion is allowed) or only the `update`
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capability (upsertion is denied).
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## etcd Physical Backend Uses `sync`
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The `etcd` physical backend now supports `sync` functionality and it is turned
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on by default, which maps to the upstream library's default. It can be
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disabled; see the configuration page for information.
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## S3 Physical Backend Prefers Environment Variables
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The `s3` physical backend now prefers environment variables over configuration
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file variables. This matches the behavior of the rest of the backends and of
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Vault generally.
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## Lease Default and Renewal Handling
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All backends now honor system and mount-specific default and maximum lease
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times, except when specifically overridden by backend configuration or role
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parameters, or when doing so would not make sense (e.g. AWS STS tokens cannot
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have a lifetime of greater than 1 hour).
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This allows for a _much_ more uniform approach to managing leases on both the
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operational side and the user side, and removes much ambiguity and uncertainty
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resulting from backend-hardcoded limits.
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However, also this means that the leases generated by the backends may return
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significantly different TTLs in 0.5 than in previous versions, unless they have
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been preconfigured. You can use the `mount-tune` CLI command or the
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`/sys/mounts/<mount point>/tune` endpoint to adjust default and max TTL
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behavior for any mount. This is supported in 0.4, so you can perform this
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tuning before upgrading.
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The following list details the ways in which lease handling has changed
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per-backend. In all cases the "mount TTL" means the mount-specific value for
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default or max TTL; however, if no value is set on a given mount, the system
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default/max values are used. This lists only the changes; any lease-issuing
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or renew function not listed here behaves the same as in 0.4.
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(As a refresher: the default TTL is the amount of time that the initial
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lease/token is valid for before it must be renewed; the maximum TTL is the
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amount of time a lease or token is valid for before it can no longer be renewed
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and must be reissued. A mount can be more restrictive with its maximum TTL, but
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cannot be less restrictive than the mount's maximum TTL.)
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#### Credential (Auth) Backends
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- `github` – The renewal function now uses the backend's configured maximum
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TTL, if set; otherwise, the mount maximum TTL is used.
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- `ldap` – The renewal function now uses the mount default TTL instead of always
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using one hour.
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- `token` – Tokens can no longer be renewed forever; instead, they now honor the
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mount default/max TTL.
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- `userpass` – The renew function now uses the backend's configured maximum TTL,
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if set; otherwise the mount maximum TTL is used.
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#### Secrets Engines
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- `aws` – New IAM roles no longer always have a default TTL of one hour, instead
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honoring the configured default if available and the mount default TTL if not
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(renewal always used the configured values if available). STS tokens return a
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TTL corresponding to the lifetime of the token in AWS and cannot be renewed.
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- `cassandra` – `lease_grace_period` has been removed since Vault no longer uses
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grace periods.
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- `consul` – The mount default TTL is now used as the default TTL if there is no
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backend configuration parameter. Renewal now uses the mount default and
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maximum TTLs.
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- `mysql` – The mount default TTL is now used as the default TTL if there is no
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backend configuration parameter.
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- `postgresql` – The mount default TTL is now used as the default TTL if there
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is no backend configuration parameter. In addition, there is no longer any
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grace period with the time configured for password expiration within Postgres
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itself.
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