1
0
mirror of https://github.com/Luzifer/vault2env.git synced 2024-09-19 00:53:02 +00:00
Small utility to transfer fields of a key in Vault into the environment
Go to file
Knut Ahlers c64fa046da
Update README for new version
Signed-off-by: Knut Ahlers <knut@ahlers.me>
2017-04-21 21:50:31 +02:00
Godeps Fix: Updated godeps 2016-06-25 17:15:09 +02:00
vendor Fix: Added godeps 2016-06-25 17:16:26 +02:00
.gitignore First version 2016-05-29 01:35:17 +02:00
.repo-runner.yaml Add github publishing 2016-11-21 20:13:41 +01:00
History.md prepare release v0.6.1 2016-11-21 20:14:06 +01:00
LICENSE First version 2016-05-29 01:35:17 +02:00
main.go Breaking: Move vault keys to parameters 2017-04-21 21:31:46 +02:00
Makefile Add github publishing 2016-11-21 20:13:41 +01:00
README.md Update README for new version 2017-04-21 21:50:31 +02:00

License Go Report Card

Luzifer / vault2env

vault2env is a really small utility to transfer fields of a key in Vault into the environment. It uses the app-role or simple token authentication to identify itself with the Vault server, fetches all fields in the specified keys and returns export directives for bash / zsh. That way you can do eval stuff and pull those fields into your ENV. If you don't want to use export directives you also can pass commands to vault2env to be executed using those environment variables.

Usage

In general this program can either output your ENV variables to use with eval or similar or it can run a program with populated environment.

# vault2env --key=<secret path> <command>
<program is started, you see its output>

# vault2env --export --key=<secret path>
export ...

Using evironment variables

# export VAULT_ADDR="https://127.0.0.1:8200"
# export VAULT_ROLE_ID="29c8febe-49f5-4620-a177-20dff0fda2da"
# export VAULT_SECRET_ID="54d24f66-6ecb-4dcc-bdb7-0241a955f1df"
# vault2env --export --key=secret/my/path/with/keys
export FIRST_KEY="firstvalue"
export SECOND_KEY="secondvalue"

# eval $(vault2env --export --key=secret/my/path/with/keys)
# echo "${FIRST_KEY}"
firstvalue

Using CLI parameters

The command does differ only with its parameters specified for the different authentication mechanisms:

  • When using AppRole you need to specify --vault-role-id and optionally --vault-secret-id if you're using the bind_secret_id flag for your AppRole
  • When using Token auth only specify --vault-token
# vault2env --vault-addr="..." --vault-app-id="..." --vault-user-id="..." --key=secret/my/path/with/keys
export FIRST_KEY="firstvalue"
export SECOND_KEY="secondvalue"

Though it's possible to use CLI parameters I strongly recommend to stick to the ENV variant as it's possible under certain conditions to read CLI parameters on a shared system using for example ps aux.