The chef_vault_try_notify cookbook provides a resource that can test if the chef-vault secrets your cookbook needs are available. If the vault items can be decrypted, the resource takes no action. If the secrets cannot be decrypted (perhaps because this is an autoscaled node and the vault has not yet been refreshed), the resource calls a ruby block which can take whatever action is appropriate to refresh the vault for the new node.
When using chef-vault secrets in cookbooks that converge nodes created in an orchestration template or spawned from an autoscaling group, the secrets will not be encrypted for the new node. The secrets cannot be encrypted until the node has registered with your Chef server and the public key for the node is available.
The standard method of refreshing vault items for a new node is to run
knife vault refresh
, a command intended for use by an operator, not a
program.
Members of the community have found ways around this problem, which tend to fall into three categories:
-
Bootstrap the node with a runlist that does not require chef-vault secrets, then have an operator refresh the vault items and change the run list
-
Have the cookbook test for the availability of vault secrets and either crash out or only converge resources that do not require secrets. At some point, a vault item refresh need to be performed in order to converge all resources successfully.
-
Automatically refresh vault items using some automated mechanism, either via cron or in response to a chef-client run failing. This requires that the automated mechanism have access to a private key for a Chef API user that can write to the chef-vault encrypted data bag.
The resource provided by this cookbook adapts the second approach and sets the groundwork for a more secure version of the third approach.
The LWRP supports two usage patterns
- Test / Notify / Retry / Fail
- Test / Remember / Predicate
To your cookbook's metadata.rb, add this line:
depends 'chef_vault_try_notify', '~> 0.1'
Then add this line to any recipe that requires chef-vault secrets:
include_recipe 'chef_vault_try_notify'
In the first case, the resource tries to decrypt the given vault items.
If the items cannot be decrypted, it calls the on_failure
ruby block,
then retries up to max_tries
times, throwing an exception if the
maximum attempts is exceeded.
Prior to using a chef-vault secret, declare a resource to test if the secrets are available:
chef_vault_try_notify 'web server secrets' do
vault_items ['foo/bar', 'baz/wibble']
on_failure do |state|
extend ChefVaultTryNotify::Helper
sns_notify(
node, state,
topic: 'arn:aws:sns:us-east-1:12345:MyTopic-ABCDE'
)
end
end
At compile time, this resource will attempt to decrypt the vault items
bar
in the foo
vault and wibble
in the baz
vault. If they can
be decrypted, it takes no further action. You can then safely retrieve
your secrets:
vaultitem = chef_vault_item('foo', 'bar')
If either secret cannot be decrypted, the on_failure
block is called
with a state object describing the attempted decryption (number of tries
so far, etc.). In the example above, the helper function sns_notify
is used to send an AWS SNS notification to a topic (see below for
details).
The resource will then retry the decryption, by default waiting for 10
seconds and retrying up to 30 times. Each time the decryption fails,
the on_failure
block will be called again with an updated state
Struct.
If the secrets cannot be decrypted after a defined number of attempts,
the resource will call Chef::Application.fatal!
to end the Chef run.
The intent is that the notification will trigger some process to refresh the vault items, and that the subsequent attempts to decrypt will be successful.
In the second case, which is enabled by setting the test_and_remember
attribute of the resource to true, the resource attempts to decrypt the
secrets, storing the result of the attempt in a state object. A
predicate function vault_available?
is provided that lets you decide
whether to include a given resource or recipe based on the availability
of vault items.
Prior to the point where you need the predicate, declare a resource to test if the secrets are available:
chef_vault_try_notify 'web server secrets' do
vault_items ['foo/bar', 'baz/wibble']
test_and_remember true
end
At some point thereafter, you can use the vault_available?
predicate,
either in a guard block:
file '/path/to/file' do
content lazy { chef_vault_item('foo', 'bar')['password'] }
only_if { vault_available?('web server secrets') }
end
Or as part of your recipe control flow:
if vault_available?('web server secrets')
include_recipe "#{cookbook_name}::_secrets"
end
The default recipe includes the chef-vault::default
recipe, which
installs the chef-vault
gem.
It also includes the vault_available?
helper into Chef::Recipe
and
Chef::Resource
.
There are no attributes defined by this cookbook.
This resource tests if it can decrypt a set of vault items, and calls a ruby block if it cannot.
chef_vault_try_notify 'my_app' do
vault_items ['one/two', 'three/four']
max_tries 10
wait_period 30
on_failure { |state| ... }
end
The resource supports only one action: test_secrets
The resource has the following parameters:
- name: a descriptive name for this set of vault items. Defaults to the name of the resource
- vault_items: an array of strings, each describing a vault item to attempt to decrypt in the form "vaultname/itemname"
- max_tries: the maximum number of times to attempt decryption. Defaults to 30
- wait_period: how long (in seconds) to wait between attempts to decrypt. Defaults to 10
- on_failure: a ruby block that will be called if any of the vault items cannot be decrypted. It is passed a state object (described below)
- test_and_remember: enables a single-pass test-and-remember mode, in which decryption is attempted and the result remembered for use later in the
vault_available?
predicate. In this mode, themax_tries
,wait_period
andon_failure
attributes are not used
The on_failure
ruby block is passed a state object that describes
the attempt to decrypt the vault items. The available methods are:
- failed_vault_items: an array of vault items which could not be decrypted (structured the same as the
vault_items
attribute) - tries: the number of times decryption has been attempted unsuccessfully
- max_tries: the maximum number of times decryption will be attempted before the resource fails
- wait_period: how long (in seconds) the resource waits between attempts to decrypt
- waiting_for: how long (in seconds) the resource has been waiting trying to decrypt the vault items
This cookbook provides a helper for sending a notification to an AWS SNS topic when it cannot decrypt secrets.
These helpers are in the module ChefVaultTryNotify::Helper, which can be included into your recipe or extended into the ruby block (as in the example above).
sns_notify
sends a notification to an AWS SNS topic. It takes as
arguments the Chef node object, the state object passed to the
on_failure
ruby block, and a hash of options. The hash must have the
following keys:
- topic: the ARN of the SNS topic
and can have the following keys:
- region: the AWS region to connect to
- credentials: the AWS credentials to use
If the region is not provided, it is constructed from EC2 Ohai data by taking the
value of node['ec2']['placement_availability_zone']
and chopping off the last
character.
If the credentials are not provided, then the standard AWS SDK for Ruby rules apply, which allow you to use IAM Instance Profiles. Describing these in detail is beyond the scope of this README, so please refer to the AWS documentation.
To use sns_notify
, you should also depend on the aws cookbook and include the
aws
recipe somewhere in order to install the aws-sdk
gem.
The notification send to the topic is a JSON document structured like this:
{
"type": "chef_vault_try_notify_failure",
"tries": 1,
"fqdn": "foobar.example.com",
"instance_id": "i-DEADBEEF",
"ipaddress": "10.10.10.10",
"ip6address": "fe80::4de:e7ff:fed4:1920",
"macaddress": "06:DE:E7:D4:19:20",
"chef_environment": "application1-prod",
"max_tries": 30,
"wait_period": 10,
"waiting_for": 30,
"failed_vault_items": ['foo/bar', 'baz/wibble']
}
This is (hopefully) enough information for whatever receives the notification to authenticate the request and decide whether it should refresh the vault or not.
PRs to provide helpers for other notification services, especially those of other cloud providers are welcome.
James FitzGibbon - [email protected] - Nordstrom, Inc.
Copyright (c) 2015 Nordstrom, Inc.
Permission is hereby granted, free of charge, to any person obtaining a copy of this software and associated documentation files (the "Software"), to deal in the Software without restriction, including without limitation the rights to use, copy, modify, merge, publish, distribute, sublicense, and/or sell copies of the Software, and to permit persons to whom the Software is furnished to do so, subject to the following conditions:
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