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guides | Cubbyhole Response Wrapping - Guides | Cubbyhole Response Wrapping | guides-secret-mgmt-cubbyhole | Vault provides a capability to wrap Vault response and store it in a "cubbyhole" where the holder of the one-time use wrapping token can unwrap to uncover the secret. |
Cubbyhole
The term cubbyhole comes from an Americanism where you get a "locker" or "safe place" to store your belongings or valuables. In Vault, cubbyhole is your "locker". All secrets are namespaced under your token. If that token expires or is revoked, all the secrets in its cubbyhole are revoked as well.
It is not possible to reach into another token's cubbyhole even as the root user. This is the key difference between the cubbyhole and the key/value secret engine. The secrets in the key/value secret engine are accessible to any token for as long as its policy allows it.
Reference Material
~> NOTE: An interactive tutorial is also available if you do not have a Vault environment to perform the steps described in this guide.
Estimated Time to Complete
10 minutes
Personas
The end-to-end scenario described in this guide involves two personas:
admin
with privileged permissions to create tokensapps
trusted entity retrieving secrets from Vault
Challenge
In order to tightly manage the secrets, you set the scope of who can do what using the Vault policy and attach that to tokens, roles, entities, etc.
Think of a case where you have a trusted entity (Chef, Jenkins, etc.) which reads secrets from Vault. This trusted entity must obtain a token. If the trusted entity or its host machine was rebooted, it must re-authenticate with Vault using a valid token.
How can you securely distribute the initial token to the trusted entity?
Solution
Use Vault's cubbyhole response wrapping where the initial token is stored in the cubbyhole secret engine. The wrapped secret can be unwrapped using the single-use wrapping token. Even the user or the system created the initial token won't see the original value. The wrapping token is short-lived and can be revoked just like any other tokens so that the risk of unauthorized access can be minimized.
Prerequisites
To perform the tasks described in this guide, you need to have a Vault environment. Refer to the Getting Started guide to install Vault. Make sure that your Vault server has been initialized and unsealed.
Policy requirements
-> NOTE: For the purpose of this guide, you can use root
token to work
with Vault. However, it is recommended that root tokens are only used for just
enough initial setup or in emergencies. As a best practice, use tokens with
appropriate set of policies based on your role in the organization.
To perform all tasks demonstrated in this guide, your policy must include the following permissions:
# Manage tokens
path "auth/token/*" {
capabilities = [ "create", "read", "update", "delete", "sudo" ]
}
# Write ACL policies
path "sys/policy/*" {
capabilities = [ "create", "read", "update", "delete", "list" ]
}
# Manage secret/dev secret engine - for Verification test
path "secret/dev" {
capabilities = [ "create", "read", "update", "delete", "list" ]
}
If you are not familiar with policies, complete the policies guide.
Steps
Think of a scenario where apps read secrets from Vault. The apps
need:
- Policy granting "read" permission on the specific path (
secret/dev
) - Valid tokens to interact with Vault
Setting the appropriate policies and token generation are done by the admin
persona. For the admin
to distribute the initial token to the app securely, it
uses cubbyhole response wrapping. In this guide, you perform the following:
NOTE: This guide demonstrates how the response wrapping works. To learn more about reading and writing secrets in Vault, refer to the Static Secret guide.
Step 1: Create and wrap a token
(Persona: admin)
To solve the challenge addressed in this guide:
- More privileged token (
admin
) wraps a secret only the expecting client can read - The receiving client (
app
) unwraps the secret to obtain the token
When the response to vault token create
request is wrapped, Vault inserts the
generated token into the cubbyhole of a single-use token, returning that
single-use wrapping token. Retrieving the secret requires an unwrap operation
against this wrapping token.
In this scenario, an admin user creates a token using response wrapping. To perform the steps in this guide, first create a policy for the app.
apps-policy.hcl
:
# For testing, read-only on secret/dev path
path "secret/dev" {
capabilities = [ "read" ]
}
CLI command
First create an apps
policy:
$ vault policy write apps apps-policy.hcl
Policy 'apps' written.
To create a token using response wrapping:
$ vault token create -policy=<POLICY_NAME> -wrap-ttl=<WRAP_TTL>
Where the <WRAP_TTL>
can be either an integer number of seconds or a string
duration of seconds (15s), minutes (20m), or hours (25h).
Example:
Generate a token for apps
persona using response wrapping with TTL of 120
seconds.
$ vault token create -policy=apps -wrap-ttl=120
Key Value
--- -----
wrapping_token: 9ac59985-094f-a2de-aed8-bf688e436fbc
wrapping_token_ttl: 2m0s
wrapping_token_creation_time: 2018-01-10 00:47:54.970185208 +0000 UTC
wrapping_token_creation_path: auth/token/create
wrapped_accessor: 195763a9-3f26-1fcf-6a1a-ee0a11e76cb1
The response is the wrapping token; therefore, the admin user does not even see
the generated token from the token create
command.
API call using cURL
First create an apps
policy using sys/policy
endpoint:
$ curl --header "X-Vault-Token: <TOKEN>" \
--request PUT \
--data <PAYLOAD> \
<VAULT_ADDRESS>/v1/sys/policy/<POLICY_NAME>
Where <TOKEN>
is your valid token, and <PAYLOAD>
includes policy name and
stringified policy.
Example:
# Request payload
$ cat payload.json
{
"policy": "path \"secret/dev\" { capabilities = [ \"read\" ] }"
}
# API call to create a policy named, "apps"
$ curl --header "X-Vault-Token: ..." --request PUT --data @payload.json \
http://127.0.0.1:8200/v1/sys/policy/apps
Response wrapping is per-request and is triggered by providing to Vault the
desired TTL for a response-wrapping token for that request. This is set using
the X-Vault-Wrap-TTL
header in the request and can be either an integer
number of seconds or a string duration.
$ curl --header "X-Vault-Wrap-TTL: <TTL>" \
--header "X-Vault-Token: <TOKEN>" \
--request <HTTP_VERB> \
--data '<PARAMETERS>' \
<VAULT_ADDRESS>/v1/<ENDPOINT>
Where <TTL>
can be either an integer number of seconds or a string duration of
seconds (15s), minutes (20m), or hours (25h).
Example:
To wrap the response of token create request:
$ curl --header "X-Vault-Wrap-TTL: 120" \
--header "X-Vault-Token: ..." \
--request POST \
--data '{"policies":["apps"]}' \
http://127.0.0.1:8200/v1/auth/token/create | jq
{
"request_id": "",
"lease_id": "",
"renewable": false,
"lease_duration": 0,
"data": null,
"wrap_info": {
"token": "e095129f-123a-4fef-c007-1f6a487cfa78",
"ttl": 120,
"creation_time": "2018-01-10T01:43:38.025351336Z",
"creation_path": "auth/token/create",
"wrapped_accessor": "44e8253c-65b4-1690-1bf1-7902a7a6b2aa"
},
"warnings": null,
"auth": null
}
This API call generates a token for apps
persona using response wrapping with
TTL of 60 seconds. The admin user does not even see the generated token.
Step 2: Unwrap the secret
(Persona: apps)
The apps
persona receives a wrapping token from the admin
. In order for the
apps
to acquire a valid token to read secrets from secret/dev
path, it must
run the unwrap operation using this token.
-> NOTE: If a client has been expecting delivery of a response-wrapping token and none arrives, this may be due to an attacker intercepting the token and then preventing it from traveling further. This should cause an alert to trigger an immediate investigation.
The following tasks will be performed to demonstrate the client operations:
- Create a token with
default
policy - Authenticate with Vault using this
default
token (less privileged token) - Unwrap the secret to obtain more privileged token (
apps
persona token) - Verify that you can read
secret/dev
using theapps
token
CLI command
First, create a token with default
policy:
# Create a token with `default` policy
$ vault token create -policy=default
Key Value
--- -----
token 4522b2e8-27fe-bdc5-b932-d982f3166c6c
token_accessor 96108f48-7475-6190-b058-769a2e5ebc8e
token_duration 768h0m0s
token_renewable true
token_policies [default]
# Authenticate using the generated token
$ vault login 4522b2e8-27fe-bdc5-b932-d982f3166c6c
Successfully authenticated! You are now logged in.
token: 4522b2e8-27fe-bdc5-b932-d982f3166c6c
token_duration: 2764729
token_policies: [default]
# Verify that you do NOT have a permission to read secret/dev
$ vault read secret/dev
Error reading secret/dev: Error making API request.
URL: GET http://<VAULT_ADDRESS>/v1/secret/dev
Code: 403. Errors:
* permission denied
The command to unwrap the wrapped secret is:
$ vault unwrap <WRAPPING_TOKEN>
Or
$ VAULT_TOKEN=<WRAPPING_TOKEN> vault unwrap
Example:
$ VAULT_TOKEN=9ac59985-094f-a2de-aed8-bf688e436fbc vault unwrap
Key Value
--- -----
token 7bb915b2-8a44-48b0-a71d-72b590252016
token_accessor 195763a9-3f26-1fcf-6a1a-ee0a11e76cb1
token_duration 768h0m0s
token_renewable true
token_policies [apps default]
Verify that this token has apps
policy attached.
Once the client acquired the token, future requests can be made using this token.
$ vault login 7bb915b2-8a44-48b0-a71d-72b590252016
$ vault read secret/dev
No value found at secret/dev
API call using cURL
First, create a token with default
policy:
# Create a new token default policy
$ curl --header "X-Vault-Token: ..." --request POST \
--data '{"policies": "default"}' \
http://127.0.0.1:8200/v1/auth/token/create | jq
{
...
"auth": {
"client_token": "5fe14760-b0fd-22dc-403c-14a05003b67f",
"accessor": "e709610e-916e-f7e3-b93b-41f4dfdca7a0",
"policies": [
"default"
],
...
}
}
# Verify that you can NOT read secret/dev using default token
$ curl --header "X-Vault-Token: 5fe14760-b0fd-22dc-403c-14a05003b67f" \
--request GET \
http://127.0.0.1:8200/v1/secret/dev | jq
{
"errors": [
"permission denied"
]
}
Now, unwrap the secret using /sys/wrapping/unwrap
endpoint:
$ curl --header "X-Vault-Token: <WRAPPING_TOKEN>" \
--request POST \
<VAULT_ADDRESS>/v1/sys/wrapping/unwrap
Example:
$ curl --header "X-Vault-Token: e095129f-123a-4fef-c007-1f6a487cfa78" \
--request POST \
http://127.0.0.1:8200/v1/sys/wrapping/unwrap | jq
{
"request_id": "d704435d-c1cf-b8a3-52f6-ec50bc8246c4",
"lease_id": "",
"renewable": false,
"lease_duration": 0,
"data": null,
"wrap_info": null,
"warnings": null,
"auth": {
"client_token": "af5f7682-aa55-fa37-5039-ee116df56600",
"accessor": "19b5407e-b304-7cde-e946-54942325d3c1",
"policies": [
"apps",
"default"
],
"metadata": null,
"lease_duration": 2764800,
"renewable": true
}
}
Once the client acquired the token, future requests can be made using this token.
$ curl --header "X-Vault-Token: af5f7682-aa55-fa37-5039-ee116df56600" \
--request GET \
http://127.0.0.1:8200/v1/secret/dev | jq
{
"errors": []
}
Since there is no data in secret/dev
, it returns an empty array.
Additional Discussion
The cubbyhole
secret engine provides your own private secret storage space
where no one else can read (including root
). This comes handy when you want to
store a password tied to your username that should not be shared with anyone.
The cubbyhole secret engine is mounted at the cubbyhole/
prefix by
default. The secrets you store in the cubbyhole/
path are tied to your token
and all tokens are permitted to read and write to the cubbyhole
secret engine
by the default
policy.
...
# Allow a token to manage its own cubbyhole
path "cubbyhole/*" {
capabilities = ["create", "read", "update", "delete", "list"]
}
...
To test the cubbyhole secret engine, perform the following steps. (NOTE: Keep
using the apps
token from Step 2 to ensure that you are logged in with
non-root token.)
CLI command
Commands to write and read secrets to the cubbyhole
secret engine:
# Write key-value pair(s) in your cubbyhole
$ vault write cubbyhole/<PATH> <KEY>=<VALUE>
# Read values from your cubbyhole
$ vault write cubbyhole/<PATH>
Example:
Write secrets under cubbyhole/private/
path, and read it back.
# Write "token" to cubbyhole/private/access-token path
$ vault write cubbyhole/private/access-token token="123456789abcdefg87654321"
Success! Data written to: cubbyhole/private/access-token
# Read value from cubbyhole/private/access-token path
$ vault read cubbyhole/private/access-token
Key Value
--- -----
token 123456789abcdefg87654321
Now, try to access the secret using the root
token. It should NOT return the
secret.
$ VAULT_TOKEN=<ROOT_TOKEN> vault read cubbyhole/private/access-token
No value found at cubbyhole/private/access-token
API call using cURL
The API to work with the cubbyhole
secret engine is very similar to secret
secret engine:
$ curl --header "X-Vault-Token: <TOKEN>" \
--request POST \
--data <SECRETS> \
<VAULT_ADDRESS>/v1/cubbyhole/<PATH>
Example:
Write secrets under cubbyhole/private/
path, and read it back.
# Write "token" to cubbyhole/private/access-token path
$ curl --header "X-Vault-Token: e095129f-123a-4fef-c007-1f6a487cfa78" --request POST \
--data '{"token": "123456789abcdefg87654321"}' \
http://127.0.0.1:8200/v1/cubbyhole/private/access-token
# Read value from cubbyhole/private/access-token path
$ curl --header "X-Vault-Token: e095129f-123a-4fef-c007-1f6a487cfa78" --request GET \
http://127.0.0.1:8200/v1/cubbyhole/private/access-token | jq
{
"request_id": "b2ff9f04-7a72-7eb0-672f-225b5eb652df",
"lease_id": "",
"renewable": false,
"lease_duration": 0,
"data": {
"token": "123456789abcdefg87654321"
},
"wrap_info": null,
"warnings": null,
"auth": null
}
Now, try to access the secret using the root
token. It should NOT return the
secret.
$ curl --header "X-Vault-Token: root" --request GET \
http://127.0.0.1:8200/v1/cubbyhole/private/access-token | jq
{
"errors": []
}
Also, refer to Cubbyhole Secret Engine (API).
Next steps
The use of AppRole Pull Authentication is a good use case to leverage the response wrapping. Go through the guide if you have not done so. To better understand the lifecycle of Vault tokens, proceed to Tokens and Leases guide.