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docs Vault Integration Program docs-partnerships Guide to partnership integrations and creating plugins for Vault.

Vault Integration Program

The HashiCorp Vault Integration Program allows vendors to integrate their products to work with Vault. Vault has a relatively large surface area and thereby a large set of possible integrations some of which require the vendor integration code, like other integrations that result in the solution working tightly with Vault.

Vendors integrating their solutions via the Vault Integration Process provide their customers a verified and seamless user experience. The Vault Integration Program currently only supports coding with the Go programming language (run time integrations).

This program is intended to be largely a self-service process with links and guidance to information sources, clearly defined steps, and checkpoints.

Types of Vault Integrations

From a high-level perspective, Vault is a tool used to manage secrets and protect sensitive data. It helps secure, store and tightly control access to tokens, passwords, certificates, encryption keys for protecting secrets and other sensitive data using a UI, CLI, or HTTP API. For a full description of the current features please refer to the Vault website Vault Website. Vault provides a unified interface to any secret, while providing tight access control and support with detailed recording from integrated audit logs.

The diagram below depicts the key Vault integration categories and types.

Integration Categories

Main Vault categories for partners to integrate with include:

Authentication Methods: Authentication (or Auth) methods are components in Vault that perform authentication and are responsible for assigning identity along with a set of policies to a user. Vault supports multiple auth methods/identity models to better support your business use case. You can find more information about Vault Auth Methods here.

Runtime Integrations: Plugin backends are components in Vault that can be implemented separately from Vault's built-in features. Runtime integrations are sometimes referred to a Direct Application Integration. These backends can be either authentication, secrets engines or other security features. You can find more information about Vault Direct Application Integration here.

Audit/Monitoring & Compliance: Audit/Monitoring and Compliance are components in Vault that keep a detailed log of all requests and response to Vault. Because every operation with Vault is an API request/response, the audit log contains every authenticated interaction with Vault, including errors. Vault supports multiple audit devices to support your business use case. You can find more information about Vault Audit Devices here.

HSM (Hardware Security Module) integrations provide an added level of security and compliance. The HSM communicates with Vault using the PKCS#11 protocol thereby resulting in the integration to primarily involve verification of the operation of the functionality. You can find more information about Vault HSM here.

Secrets Engines: Secrets engine are components which store, generate, or encrypt data. Secrets engines are provided some set of data, that take some action on that data, and then return a result. Some secrets engines store and read data, like encrypted in-memory data structure, other secrets engines connect to other services. Examples of secrets engines include Identity modules of Cloud providers like AWS, Azure IAM models, Cloud (LDAP), database or key management. You can find more information about Vault Secrets Engines here.

Development Process

The Vault integration development process is divided into six steps. By following these steps, Vault integrations can be developed alongside HashiCorp to ensure that the integrations are able to be verified and supported in Vault as quickly as possible. A visual representation of the self-guided steps is depicted below.

Development Process

  1. Engage: Initial contact between vendor and HashiCorp
  2. Enable: Information and articles to aid with the development of the integration
  3. Develop and Test: Integration development and testing process
  4. Review: HashiCorp code review and verification of integration (iterative process)
  5. Release: Verified integration made available and listed on the HashiCorp website once the HashiCorp technology partnership agreement has been executed
  6. Support: Ongoing maintenance and support of the integration by the vendor.

1. Engage

Please begin by providing some basic information about the integration that is being built via a simple webform.

This information is recorded and used by HashiCorp to track the integration through various stages. The information is also used to notify the integration developer of any overlapping work, perhaps coming from the community so you may better focus resources.

Vault has a large and active community and ecosystem of partners that may have already started working on a similar integration. We'll do our best to connect similar parties to avoid duplicate work.

2. Enable

While not mandatory, HashiCorp encourages vendors to sign and MNDA (Mutual Non-Disclosure Agreement) to allow for open dialog and sharing of ideas during the integration process.

In an effort to support our self-serve model weve included links to resources, documentation, examples and best practices to guide you through the Vault integration development and testing process.

  • Writing vendor extension guide
  • Sample development implemented by a partner
  • Example vendor extensions for reference: Aqua, Demisto
  • Contributing to Vault guidelines
  • Vault Community Forum
  • Vault's source code

We encourage vendors to closely follow the above guidance. Adopting the same structure and coding patterns helps expedite the review and release cycles.

3. Develop and Test

Vault requires all code-level integrations to be written in the Go programming language and contain an MPL-2.0 open source license. The only knowledge necessary to write a plugin is basic command-line skills and knowledge of the Go programming language. When writing in Go-Language, HashiCorp has found the integration development process to be straightforward and simple when vendors pay close attention and follow the resources and by adopting the same structure and coding patterns helps expedite the review and release cycles. Please remember that all integration major steps should contain acceptance testing and the appropriate documentation.

Auth Methods

Runtime Integration

Audit, Monitoring & Compliance Integration

Secrets Engine Integration

4. Review

During the review process, HashiCorp will provide feedback on the newly developed integration. This is an important step to allow HashiCorp to review and verify your Vault integration. Please send the integration code and other relevant logs for verification to: vault-integration-dev@hashicorp.com.

For Auth, Secret and Storage plugins please submit a GitHub pull request (PR) against the Vault project. In some cases the vendor may need to provide HashiCorp with a permanent test account so that the integration can be verified on an ongoing basis.

The review process can take a while to complete and may require some iterations through the code to address and problems identified by the HashiCorp team.

5. Release

At this stage, it is expected that the integration is fully complete, the necessary documentation has been written, the acceptance tests have all passed, and that HashiCorp has reviewed the integration. Once the plugin has been validated and accepted by HashiCorp, the plugin can be hosted anywhere so it can more easily be downloaded then installed within Vault.

Once the integration has been released the vendor is requested to sign the HashiCorp Technology Partner Agreement so that we can have their integration be listed on the HashiCorp website.

6. Support

Many vendors view the release step to be the end of the journey, while at HashiCorp we view it to be the beginning of the journey. Getting the integration built is just the first step in enabling users to leverage it against their infrastructure. Once development is completed, on-going effort is required to support the developed integration maintain the provider and address any issues in a timely manner.

The expectation from the vendor/partner is to create a mechanism for them to track and resolve all critical issues as soon as possible within 48 hours and all other issues within 5 business days. This is a requirement given the critical nature of Vault to customers operation. Vendors who choose to not support their integration will not be considered a verified integration and cannot be listed on the website.

Checklist

Below is a checklist of steps that should be followed during the Vault integration development process. This reiterates the steps described above.

  • Fill out the Vault Integration webform
  • Develop and test Vault integration along with the acceptance tests and documentation, send to vault-integration-dev@hashicorp.com, to schedule an initial review
  • Address review feedback and finalize the development process
  • Provide HashiCorp with credentials for underlying infrastructure for test purposes
  • Demo the integration and/or send the test logs to HashiCorp to vault-integration-dev@hashicorp.com
  • Execute HashiCorp Partner Agreement Documents, review logo guidelines, partner listing and more
  • Plan to continue supporting the integration with additional functionality and responding to customer issues

Contact Us

For any questions or feedback, please contact us at: vault-integration-dev@hashicorp.com