open-vault/website/source/guides/operations/autounseal-aws-kms.html.md
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[Guide] Tokens & Leases guide **Correction** (#5375)
* Added Azure Key Vault

* Corrected the info about orphan token creation
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guides Vault Auto-unseal using AWS KMS - Guides guides-operations-autounseal-aws-kms In this guide, we'll show an example of how to use Terraform to provision an instance that can utilize an encryption key from AWS Key Management Services to unseal Vault.

Vault Auto-unseal using AWS Key Management Service

~> Enterprise Only: Vault auto-unseal feature is a part of Vault Enterprise Pro.

When a Vault server is started, it starts in a sealed state and it does not know how to decrypt data. Before any operation can be performed on the Vault, it must be unsealed. Unsealing is the process of constructing the master key necessary to decrypt the data encryption key.

Unseal with Shamir's Secret Sharing

This guide demonstrates an example of how to use Terraform to provision an instance that can utilize an encryption key from AWS Key Management Services (KMS) to unseal Vault.

Reference Material

Estimated Time to Complete

10 minutes

Personas

The steps described in this guide are typically performed by operations persona.

Challenge

Vault unseal operation requires a quorum of existing unseal keys split by Shamir's Secret sharing algorithm. This is done so that the "keys to the kingdom" won't fall into one person's hand. However, this process is manual and can become painful when you have many Vault clusters as there are now many different key holders with many different keys.

Solution

Vault Enterprise supports opt-in automatic unsealing via cloud technologies: Amazon KMS, Azure Key Vault or GCP Cloud KMS. This feature enables operators to delegate the unsealing process to trusted cloud providers to ease operations in the event of partial failure and to aid in the creation of new or ephemeral clusters.

Unseal with AWS KMS

Prerequisites

This guide assumes the following:

  • Access to Vault Enterprise 0.9.0 or later
  • A URL to download Vault Enterprise from (an Amazon S3 bucket will suffice)
  • AWS account for provisioning cloud resources
  • Terraform installed and basic understanding of its usage

Download demo assets

Clone or download the demo assets from the hashicorp/vault-guides GitHub repository to perform the steps described in this guide.

Steps

This guide demonstrates how to implement and use the Auto-unseal feature using AWS KMS. Included is a Terraform configuration that has the following:

  • Ubuntu 16.04 LTS with Vault Enterprise
  • An instance profile granting the Amazon EC2 instance to an AWS KMS key
  • Vault configured with access to an AWS KMS key

YouTube

You are going to perform the following steps:

  1. Provision the Cloud Resources
  2. Test the Auto-unseal Feature
  3. Clean Up

Step 1: Provision the Cloud Resources

Task 1: Be sure to set your working directory to where the /operations/aws-kms-unseal/terraform-aws folder is located.

The working directory should contain the provided Terraform files:

~/git/vault-guides/operations/aws-kms-unseal/terraform$ tree
.
├── README.md
├── instance-profile.tf
├── instance.tf
├── main.tf
├── ssh-key.tf
├── terraform.tfvars.example
├── userdata.tpl
└── variables.tf

Task 2: Set your AWS credentials as environment variables:

$ export AWS_ACCESS_KEY_ID = "<YOUR_AWS_ACCESS_KEY_ID>"

$ export AWS_SECRET_ACCESS_KEY = "<YOUR_AWS_SECRET_ACCESS_KEY>"

Create a file named terraform.tfvars and specify your Vault Enterprise binary download URL.

Example:

vault_url = "https://s3-us-west-2.amazonaws.com/hc-enterprise-binaries/vault/ent/0.10.3/vault-enterprise_0.10.3%2Bent_linux_amd64.zip"

Task 3: Perform a terraform init to pull down the necessary provider resources. Then terraform plan to verify your changes and the resources that will be created. If all looks good, then perform a terraform apply to provision the resources.

$ terraform init
Initializing provider plugins...
...
Terraform has been successfully initialized!


$ terraform plan
...
Plan: 15 to add, 0 to change, 0 to destroy.


$ terraform apply
...
Apply complete! Resources: 15 added, 0 changed, 0 destroyed.

Outputs:

connections = Connect to Vault via SSH   ssh ubuntu@192.0.2.1 -i private.key
Vault Enterprise web interface  http://192.0.2.1:8200/ui

NOTE: The Terraform output will display the public IP address to SSH into your server as well as the Vault Enterprise web interface address.

Step 2: Test the Auto-unseal Feature

SSH into the provisioned EC2 instance.

$ ssh ubuntu@192.0.2.1 -i private.key
...
Are you sure you want to continue connecting (yes/no)? yes

When you are prompted, enter "yes" to continue.

To verify that Vault has been installed, run vault status command which should return "server is not yet initialized" message.

$ export VAULT_ADDR=http://127.0.0.1:8200

$ vault status
Error checking seal status: Error making API request.

URL: GET http://127.0.0.1:8200/v1/sys/seal-status
Code: 400. Errors:

* server is not yet initialized

Run the vault operator init command to initialize the Vault server by setting its key share to be 1 as follow:

$ vault operator init -stored-shares=1 -recovery-shares=1 -recovery-threshold=1 -key-shares=1 -key-threshold=1
Recovery Key 1: oOxAQfxcZitjqZfF3984De8rUckPeahQDUvmJ1A4JrQ=
Initial Root Token: 54c4dbe3-d45b-79d9-18d0-602831a6a991

Vault initialized successfully.

Recovery key initialized with 1 keys and a key threshold of 1. Please
securely distribute the above keys.

Stop and start the Vault server:

$ sudo systemctl stop vault

$ vault status
Error checking seal status: Get http://127.0.0.1:8200/v1/sys/seal-status: dial tcp 127.0.0.1:8200: getsockopt: connection refused

$ sudo systemctl start vault

Check the Vault status to verify that it has been started and unsealed.

$ vault status
Type: shamir
Sealed: false
Key Shares: 1
Key Threshold: 1
Unseal Progress: 0
Unseal Nonce:
Version: 0.9.6+prem.hsm
Cluster Name: vault-cluster-01cf6f33
Cluster ID: fb787d8a-b882-fee8-b461-445320cde311

High-Availability Enabled: false

Log into Vault using the generated initial root token:

$ vault login 54c4dbe3-d45b-79d9-18d0-602831a6a991
Successfully authenticated! You are now logged in.
token: 54c4dbe3-d45b-79d9-18d0-602831a6a991
token_duration: 0
token_policies: [root]

Review the Vault configuration file (/etc/vault.d/vault.hcl).

$ cat /etc/vault.d/vault.hcl
storage "file" {
  path = "/opt/vault"
}
listener "tcp" {
  address     = "0.0.0.0:8200"
  tls_disable = 1
}
seal "awskms" {
  kms_key_id = "d7c1ffd9-8cce-45e7-be4a-bb38dd205966"
}
ui=true

Notice the Vault configuration file defines the awskms stanza which sets the AWS KMS key ID to use for encryption and decryption.

At this point, you should be able to launch the Vault Enterprise UI by entering the address provided in the terraform apply outputs (e.g. http://192.0.2.1:8200/ui) and log in with your initial root token.

Vault Enterprise UI Login

Step 3: Clean Up

Once completed, execute the following commands to clean up:

$ terraform destroy -force

$ rm -rf .terraform terraform.tfstate* private.key

Next steps

Once you have a Vault environment setup, the next step is to write policies. Read Policies to learn how to write policies to govern the behavior of clients.