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vault-gcp-cloud-kms-pki

A fork of the @hashicorp Vault PKI backend with support for CA keys stored securely in Google Cloud KMS.

Storing the CA keys in Cloud KMS, including the new hardware backed Cloud HSM modules, allows for significantly improved security. The keys cannot be copied. The keys never leave the Google Cloud APIs.

The goal is not to maintain this project as a standalone plugin. Ideally this code can make its way back to the builtin Vault PKI backend.

Code for accessing KMS keys is from heptiolabs/google-kms-pgp

Setup

The setup guide assumes some familiarity with Vault and Vault's plugin ecosystem. You must have a Vault server already running, unsealed, and authenticated.

  1. Download and decompress the latest plugin binary from the releases tab on GitHub. Alternatively you can compile the plugin from source (make build).

  2. Move the compiled plugin into Vault's configured plugin_directory:

    mv vault-gcp-cloud-kms-pki /etc/vault/plugins/vault-gcp-cloud-kms-pki
  3. Calculate the SHA256 of the plugin and register it in Vault's plugin catalog. If you are downloading the pre-compiled binary, it is highly recommended that you use the published checksums to verify integrity.

    export SHA256=$(shasum -a 256 "/etc/vault/plugins/vault-gcp-cloud-kms-pki" | cut -d' ' -f1)
    
    vault write sys/plugins/catalog/vault-gcp-cloud-kms-pki \
      sha_256="${SHA256}" \
      command="vault-gcp-cloud-kms-pki" \
  4. Mount the secrets backend:

    vault secrets enable \
      -path="pki" \
      -plugin-name="vault-gcp-cloud-kms-pki" plugin
  5. To configure a new root CA backed by a KMS signing key:

    vault write \
        pki/root/generate/internal \
        common_name=rootCA \
        google_cloud_kms_key="projects/my-project/locations/us-west1/keyRings/my-keyring/cryptoKeys/root-ca/cryptoKeyVersions/1" \
        google_credentials=@service-account.json
  6. Or, to configure a new intermediate CA backed by a KMS signing key:

    vault write \
        pki/intermediate/generate/internal \
        common_name=intCA \
        google_cloud_kms_key="projects/my-project/locations/us-west1/keyRings/my-keyring/cryptoKeys/root-ca/cryptoKeyVersions/1" \
        google_credentials=@service-account.json

The plugin follows the same rules as the builtin Vault PKI backend - only root or intermediate can be used at a time by each instance of the plugin. Use additional pki mounts to support multiple CA's.

The google_credentials attribute is optional. The plugin uses the official Google Cloud Golang SDK which means it supports the common ways of providing credentials to Google Cloud.

In addition to specifying credentials directly via Vault configuration, you can also get configuration from the following values on the Vault server:

  1. The environment variable GOOGLE_APPLICATION_CREDENTIALS. This is specified as the path to a Google Cloud credentials file, typically for a service account. If this environment variable is present, the resulting credentials are used. If the credentials are invalid, an error is returned.

  2. Default instance credentials. When no environment variable is present, the default service account credentials are used. This is useful when running Vault on Google Compute Engine or Google Kubernetes Engine

Google Cloud KMS Keys

In order to use a Google Cloud KMS key with the backend the keys must be created outside of Vault.

The keys must be asymmetric-signing keys.

  1. First, create a keyring to hold the keys:

    gcloud beta kms keyrings create \
      my-keyring \
      --project my-project \
      --location us-west1
  2. Next, create an asymmetric-signing key named root-ca. Only RSA PKCS#1 keys are currently supported:

    gcloud alpha kms keys create \
      root-ca \
      --keyring my-keyring \
      --purpose asymmetric-signing \
      --default-algorithm rsa-sign-pkcs1-2048-sha256 \
      --project my-project \
      --location us-west1 \
      --protection-level hsm
  3. Get the full path of a key, in a format suitable for use with "google_cloud_kms_key=" attribute:

    echo "$(gcloud alpha kms keys describe root-ca --location us-west1 --keyring my-keyring --project my-project --format="value(name)")/cryptoKeyVersions/1
    
    # projects/my-project/locations/us-west1/keyRings/my-keyring/cryptoKeys/root-ca/cryptoKeyVersions/1`

Google Service Account

The credentials given to the service account used by Vault must include the permissions:

  • cloudkms.cryptoKeyVersions.get
  • cloudkms.cryptoKeyVersions.useToSign
  • cloudkms.cryptoKeyVersions.viewPublicKey

The simplest approach is to assign the pre-defined roles roles/viewer and roles/cloudkms.signerVerifier` to the service account. Alternatively, create a custom role with only these permissions assigned.

Example:

  1. Create service account:

    gcloud iam service-accounts create "vault-kms" --project "my-project"
  2. Assign roles to the service account:

    gcloud projects add-iam-policy-binding "my-project" \
    --member serviceAccount:"vault-kms@my-project.iam.gserviceaccount.com" \
    --role roles/cloudkms.signerVerifier
    
    gcloud projects add-iam-policy-binding "my-project" \
    --member serviceAccount:"vault-kms@my-project.iam.gserviceaccount.com" \
    --role roles/viewer
  3. Create credentials JSON file service-account.json:

    gcloud iam service-accounts keys create "service-account.json" \
    --iam-account="vault-kms@my-project.iam.gserviceaccount.com" \
    --project "my-project"

Example Scripts

The ./example directory contains scripts that walk through the steps of setting up the plugin for use with KMS keys and signing a single leaf certificate. The output of the CA certs and the leaf certs will be in ./tmp-{rootca,intermediate} for inspection.

  • example-rootca.sh
  • example-intermediate.sh

KMS keys will need to be created before running the scripts. Set the path to the keys in the ROOT_KEY and INTERMEDIATE_KEY variables. Both scripts will use default current Google credentials of your current installation.

Tests

The original Vault PKI plugin uses unit tests. Run make test to execute these tests.

The Google KMS code is only run when acceptance tests are enabled. You will need to create two signing keys, one will be used for the root CA and another for the intermediate CA.

In order to run the acceptance tests you must set the following environment variables:

  • VAULT_ACC: set this to enable the Google KMS tests
  • TEST_GOOGLE_KMS_ROOT_KEY: Set this to an asymmetric RSA key in Google KMS, including the key version, eg: projects/my-project/locations/us-west1/keyRings/my-key-ring/cryptoKeys/root-ca/cryptoKeyVersions/1
  • TEST_GOOGLE_KMS_INTERMEDIATE_KEY: Set this to an asymmetric RSA key in Google KMS, including the key version, eg: projects/my-project/locations/us-west1/keyRings/my-key-ring/cryptoKeys/intermediate-ca/cryptoKeyVersions/1
  • TEST_GOOGLE_CREDENTIALS_FILE: Set this to the path of a GCP service-account JSON key which has the required permissions to use the root and intermediate KMS keys for signing.

Run make test after setting the above env vars set to execute the Google KMS acceptance tests.

TODO

  • add support for EC keys
  • setup cirlceci to run acceptance tests
  • upstream into core vault...

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Fork of the Vault PKI Secrets plugin with support for CA keys backed by Google Cloud KMS

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