Table Of Contents
- Introduction
- Prerequisites
- Creating an Azure Key Vault
- Creating Secrets in Azure Key Vault
- Using AzPowerShell & AzCLI to Lookup Secrets
- Using azure_keyvault_secret Ansible Lookup Plugin
- Conclusion
Introduction
As companies become more security conscious, password rotation is often one of the first areas addressed. Secret management is one solution to the problem of password rotation. Decoupling and centralizing secrets into a secret management system is a good start. However, that's not the greatest value add you'll get from a secret management system. The true benefit is being able to rotate those secrets without manual intervention or fear of the unknown side effects of that change. This frees you from having to manually update the password and improves security posture.
You accomplish this by first using a secret management system to store secrets and other sensitive information. Second, when writing code that utilizes those secrets it pulls that information at run time from the secrets management system. How this is implemented varies widely and depends on your tooling and coding languages in use. In this tutorial you'll go through the process of storing and retrieving secrets from Azure Key Vault with Ansible.
Prerequisites
- Azure subscription
- Ansible installed for Azure
- Azure PowerShell module
- Azure CLI
- Connecting to Azure with Ansible
Creating an Azure Key Vault
Before you can use secrets stored in Azure Key Vault you must first create the Azure Key Vault and the secrets you wish to retrieve. Creating these resources in Azure can be done with Ansible. azure_rm_keyvault
is the Ansible module that is used to create the Azure Key Vault itself. The required parameters are; resource group, SKU name, vault tenant, and vault name. While these are the required parameters. The Azure Key Vault will not be useful unless Ansible can access the secrets stored inside. To address that you must also define access policies.
Access to Azure Key Vault can be done in several ways, but for this tutorial you'll use a service principal. This tutorial assumes a service principal as already been created. For more information on creating a service principal reference Connecting to Azure with Ansible: Create an Azure Service Principal. You will need the tenant id and object id of the service principal. Note, that the object id is not the same as the application id or client id referenced in other resources.
# Get Azure tenantId
az account show --subscription "MySubscriptionName" --query tenantId --output tsv
# Get objectId with AzCLI
az ad sp show --id <ApplicationID> --query objectId
# Get Azure tenantID with AzPowerShell
(Get-AzSubscription -SubscriptionName "MySubscriptionName").TenantId
# Get objectId with AzPowerShell
(Get-AzADServicePrincipal -ApplicationId <ApplicationID> ).id
With the tenantId and service principal objectId you can create the Azure Key Vault. It is worth mentioning that the vault_name value has to be globally unique in Azure. So, don't be alarmed if your name was taken you'll have to find one that hasn't. Another thing to consider is to place the Azure Key Vault in a different resource group than the infrastructure you are building in Azure with Ansible. If you keep in the same resource group you might accidentally delete it along with other compute resources.
Azure Key Vault can store more than just secrets. It can also store certificates and keys. However, in this tutorial you'll only use it for secrets. Keep in mind the idea of least privilege as you assign permission and ensure the accounts have only the access they need. For this tutorial the service principal will need to get, list, and set permissions. Normally, it would only require get and list, but you also have to create the secret within the vault. That task can be done with another Ansible module but requires that the service principal has set permissions on secrets in the Azure Key Vault.
---
- hosts: localhost
gather_facts: false
connection: local
tasks:
- name: Create resource group
azure_rm_resourcegroup:
name: ansible-infra
location: eastus
- name: Create Ansible Key Vault
azure_rm_keyvault:
resource_group: ansible-infra
vault_name: ansibleKeyVaultDEV
vault_tenant: <tenantID>
enabled_for_deployment: yes
sku:
name: standard
access_policies:
- tenant_id: <tenantID>
object_id: <servicePrincipalObjectId>
secrets:
- get
- list
- set
Creating Secrets in Azure Key Vault
Creating secrets in an Azure Key Vault can be done with the azure_rm_keyvaultsecret
Ansible module. This Ansible module allows you to create, update, and delete secrets stored in the Azure Key Vault. It does not however allow you to look up those secrets. The azure_rm_keyvaultsecret module requires you to specify a secret name, a secret value, and the key vault URI. The key vault URI can be within the portal under the properties blade called DNS Name. It can also be found with AzureCli or AzPowerShell. All of those are valid methods for obtaining the key vault URI, but you can also look it up with Ansible.
- name: Create a secret
azure_rm_keyvaultsecret:
secret_name: adminPassword
secret_value: "P@ssw0rd0987654321"
keyvault_uri: "{{ keyvaulturi }}"
The Ansible module azure_rm_keyvault_info
will query an existing Azure Key Vault and return information about the resource. One of the values returned in the key vault URI. Using the register functionality in Ansible, you can store that information in a variable and parse it with a JSON query to pull out just the key vault URI. Using set_fact
you can create another variable containing just the key vault URI. That variable containing the value for the Azure Key Vault URI can then be used to create a secret without having to look up the URI manually.
- name: Get Key Vault by name
azure_rm_keyvault_info:
resource_group: ansible-infra
name: ansibleKeyVaultDEV
register: keyvault
- name: set KeyVault uri fact
set_fact: keyvaulturi="{{ keyvault | json_query('keyvaults[0].vault_uri')}}
---
- hosts: localhost
gather_facts: false
connection: local
tasks:
- name: Get Key Vault by name
azure_rm_keyvault_info:
resource_group: ansible-infra
name: ansibleKeyVaultDEV
register: keyvault
- name: set KeyVault uri fact
set_fact: keyvaulturi="{{ keyvault | json_query('keyvaults[0].vault_uri')}}"
- name: Create a secret
azure_rm_keyvaultsecret:
secret_name: adminPassword
secret_value: "P@ssw0rd0987654321"
keyvault_uri: "{{ keyvaulturi }}"
Learn more about Working with Ansible Register Variables.
Using AzPowerShell & AzCLI to Lookup Secrets
At this point you have an Azure Key Vault instance and a secret stored in the vault. That secret can now be used in future playbooks to populate sensitive information. But how do you retrieve that information with Ansible? One way is to use the Azure PowerShell module. Ansible has the ability to run shell commands within a task. On Linux operating systems you'll use the shell
Ansible module.
By default the shell task will use bash as its command prompt, but using the args parameter you can specify an alternate executable. In order to execute a PowerShell command put in the path to the pwsh executable. In this example you'll specify /usr/bin/pwsh
, which is the default location for PowerShell on CentOS. In order for you to use the Azure cmdlets in PowerShell you first have to connect to Azure. This requires that you provide a service principal application id and password. As well as a tenant id.
Once connected to Azure you can issue the command to retrieve the Azure Key Vault secret. That cmdlet is Get-AzKeyVaultSecret
. Get-AzKeyVaultSecret requires that you specify the name of the Azure Key Vault and the name of the secret stored in the vault. The cmdlet does not return the value in the text by default. If you enclose the cmdlet with ()
and then add .SecretValueText
to the end it will output the secret as a string. That string can then be stored in a variable for Ansible to use within the Ansible playbook.
Read more about using the shell
Ansible module here.
Using AzPowerShell
---
- hosts: localhost
connection: local
vars:
vaultName: ansibleKeyVaultDEV
vaultSecretName: adminPassword
servicePrincipalId: <ServicePrincipal.ApplicationId>
servicePrincipalPassword: P@ssw0rd0987654321
tenantId: <tenantId>
tasks:
- name: connect AzPowerShell to Azure
shell: |
$passwd = ConvertTo-SecureString "{{ servicePrincipalPassword }}" -AsPlainText -Force;
$pscredential = New-Object System.Management.Automation.PSCredential("{{ servicePrincipalId }}", $passwd);
Connect-AzAccount -ServicePrincipal -Credential $pscredential -Tenant "{{ tenantId }}"
args:
executable: /usr/bin/pwsh
- name: Run a pwsh command
shell: (Get-AzKeyVaultSecret -Name "{{ vaultSecretName }}" -VaultName "{{ vaultName }}").SecretValueText
args:
executable: /usr/bin/pwsh
register: result
- debug:
msg: "{{ result.stdout }}"
Using AzCLI
In case you are not familiar with PowerShell, you can retrieve the same information using Azure CLI. Azure CLI is a command-line interface and will be a familiar experience if you have experience with bash. The general idea is the same. You'll have to connect to Azure using the az login
command. In order to authenticate with a service principal you'll have to supply the service principal name and the tenant id for that service principal. Once connected to Azure you can retrieve the Azure Key Vault secret using the az keyvault secret
command, which requires you to provide the Azure Key Vault name and the name of the secret stored in the vault.
Azure CLI typically outputs JSON data. Which can be queried for specific values. In this example you are only concerned with the property value
as it contains the secret's value. Also, note the -o tsv
at the end of the command. This ensures the output does not contain ""
. This is what you want because this value will be used to populate the variable storing the secret value.
Learn more about Querying Azure CLI command output.
---
- hosts: localhost
connection: local
vars:
vaultName: ansibleKeyVaultDEV
vaultSecretName: adminPassword
servicePrincipalId: <ServicePrincipal.ApplicationId>
servicePrincipalPassword: P@ssw0rd0987654321
tenantId: <tenantId>
tasks:
- name: connect AzPowerShell to Azure
shell: |
az login --service-principal -u "{{ servicePrincipalId }}" -p "{{ servicePrincipalPassword }}" --tenant "{{ tenantId }}"
args:
executable: /usr/bin/bash
- name: Run a pwsh command
shell: az keyvault secret show --name "{{ vaultSecretName }}" --vault-name "{{ vaultName }}" --query value -o tsv
args:
executable: /usr/bin/bash
register: result
- debug:
msg: "{{ result.stdout }}"
Using azure_keyvault_secret Ansible Lookup Plugin
Lookup Plugins in Ansible are advanced features that allow you to access data from outside sources. The simplest lookup plugin is one that allows you to access data in a file. Similar to using a cat
or Get-Content
command. Microsoft has written an Ansible lookup plugin for Azure Key Vault called azure_keyvault_secret
. The plugin is written in Python and can be found on GitHub inside the azure_preview_modules repository.
The azure_keyvault_secret Ansible lookup plugin is part of an Ansible Galaxy module called azure_preview_modules. You can use the lookup plugin by downloading the entire module. However, in this tutorial you'll be adding the lookup plugin directly to your Ansible repo without using the role.
Adding the Lookup Plugin
In order for you to add a lookup plugin to your Ansible code base, you first have to create a directory called lookup_plugins
. This directory needs to be adjacent to your playbook. If you'd like to specify a different location for it, you can do that by modifying the ansible.cfg. With the lookup_plugins directory created you next need to create a file with the name of the lookup plugin which is azure_keyvault_secret.py
. It is a Python script and requires the .py
extension.
mkdir lookup_plugins
#PowerShell
Invoke-WebRequest `
-Uri 'https://raw.githubusercontent.com/Azure/azure_preview_modules/master/lookup_plugins/azure_keyvault_secret.py' `
-OutFile lookup_plugins/azure_keyvault_secret.py
#Curl
curl \
https://raw.githubusercontent.com/Azure/azure_preview_modules/master/lookup_plugins/azure_keyvault_secret.py \
-o lookup_plugins/azure_keyvault_secret.py
Read more about Ansible lookup plugins.
Non-Managed Identity Lookups
Looking at the examples provided within the comments of the lookup plugin there are two ways to use the lookup plugin; non-managed identity lookups and managed identity lookups. A managed identity is a feature in Azure that provides Azure services with an automatically managed identity in Azure AD. You can use the identity to authenticate to any service that supports Azure AD authentication, including Key Vault, without any credentials in your code. Managed identities are the way to go when your Ansible infrastructure runs in Azure or has the ability to use managed identities. However, that won't always be the case.
When using the azure_keyvault_secret plugin with non-managed identities you have to provide additional information for the plugin to authenticate. In addition to the vault URI and vault secret, you also have to provide a service principal client id, service principal secret, and tenant id.
---
- hosts: localhost
gather_facts: false
connection: local
tasks:
- name: Look up secret when ansible host is general VM
vars:
url: 'https://ansiblekeyvaultdev.vault.azure.net/'
secretname: 'adminPassword'
client_id: <ServicePrincipal.ApplicationId>
secret: 'P@ssw0rd0987654321'
tenant: <tenantId>
debug: msg="the value of this secret is {{lookup('azure_keyvault_secret',secretname,vault_url=url, client_id=client_id, secret=secret, tenant_id=tenant)}}"
Read more about managed identities for Azure resources.
Managed Identity Lookups
In order to use managed identities in Azure for Ansible your Ansible control server will have to be deployed in Azure as a Linux virtual machine. If that is how you have or want your Ansible environment to be, managed identities are the way to go and offer more security and reduce the complicity in code. Deploying an Azure virtual machine and creating a managed identity is out of scope for this tutorial. However, resources are provided below for you to follow if this infrastructure does not already exist in your environment.
Future post in the works to deploy these with Azure Resource Manager templates.
Prerequisites
- Quickstart: Deploy the Ansible solution template for Azure to CentOS
- Configure managed identities for Azure resources on a VM
- Assign managed identity permissions.
Once a managed identity has been created and the permissions assigned to the Azure Key Vault you can query the vault for the stored secrets. Because the authentication is taking place within Azure AD with the managed identity you no longer have to provide the service principal information.
---
- hosts: localhost
gather_facts: false
connection: local
tasks:
- name: Look up secret when ansible host is general VM
vars:
url: 'https://ansiblekeyvaultdev.vault.azure.net/'
secretname: 'adminPassword'
debug: msg="the value of this secret is {{lookup('azure_keyvault_secret',secretname,vault_url=url, client_id=client_id, secret=secret, tenant_id=tenant)}}"
Conclusion
Secret management can either be a nightmare or a blessing. Keep this in mind when implementing infrastructure as code and when authoring automation that requires the use of sensitive information. Keeping those secrets tightly coupled makes the management of the code increasingly difficult over time. Seek to decouple the secrets from your code. It will not only make it more manageable but will also increase your security posture. Imagine how nice it would be to not care or even know if a secret was rotated?
Want to learn more about Ansible? I'm writing a book! And the first chapter is free! Check it out at becomeAnsible.com.
Top comments (2)
Hi Josh
nice write up.
I am quiet new with azure and ansible.
Do you know how to create an azure-keyvault with ansible and define the network connection of the keyvault? So that only my internal vnet can connect the keyvault?
Regards
Pirmin
Thank you for the comment Pirmin! I'm currently working on some labs that walk through setting up an Azure Key Vault and secrets with Ansible, but haven't dove into doing in within a private network. I'll add that to my list of topics to cover that's a really good one. Below are some links of my work in progress and the MS docs I plan to use for that work. I hope that helps!
github.com/CloudSkills/using-ansib...
docs.microsoft.com/en-us/azure/key...