Encrypting content with Ansible Vault¶
Ansible Vault encrypts variables and files so you can protect sensitive content such as passwords or keys rather than leaving it visible as plaintext in playbooks or roles. To use Ansible Vault you need one or more passwords to encrypt and decrypt content. If you store your vault passwords in a third-party tool such as a secret manager, you need a script to access them. Use the passwords with the ansible-vault command-line tool to create and view encrypted variables, create encrypted files, encrypt existing files, or edit, re-key, or decrypt files. You can then place encrypted content under source control and share it more safely.
Warning
- Encryption with Ansible Vault ONLY protects ‘data at rest’. Once the content is decrypted (‘data in use’), play and plugin authors are responsible for avoiding any secret disclosure, see no_log for details on hiding output and Steps to secure your editor for security considerations on editors you use with Ansible Vault.
You can use encrypted variables and files in ad-hoc commands and playbooks by supplying the passwords you used to encrypt them. You can modify your ansible.cfg
file to specify the location of a password file or to always prompt for the password.
- Managing vault passwords
- Encrypting content with Ansible Vault
- Using encrypted variables and files
- Configuring defaults for using encrypted content
- When are encrypted files made visible?
- Speeding up Ansible Vault
- Format of files encrypted with Ansible Vault
Managing vault passwords¶
Managing your encrypted content is easier if you develop a strategy for managing your vault passwords. A vault password can be any string you choose. There is no special command to create a vault password. However, you need to keep track of your vault passwords. Each time you encrypt a variable or file with Ansible Vault, you must provide a password. When you use an encrypted variable or file in a command or playbook, you must provide the same password that was used to encrypt it. To develop a strategy for managing vault passwords, start with two questions:
- Do you want to encrypt all your content with the same password, or use different passwords for different needs?
- Where do you want to store your password or passwords?
Choosing between a single password and multiple passwords¶
If you have a small team or few sensitive values, you can use a single password for everything you encrypt with Ansible Vault. Store your vault password securely in a file or a secret manager as described below.
If you have a larger team or many sensitive values, you can use multiple passwords. For example, you can use different passwords for different users or different levels of access. Depending on your needs, you might want a different password for each encrypted file, for each directory, or for each environment. For example, you might have a playbook that includes two vars files, one for the dev environment and one for the production environment, encrypted with two different passwords. When you run the playbook, select the correct vault password for the environment you are targeting, using a vault ID.
Managing multiple passwords with vault IDs¶
If you use multiple vault passwords, you can differentiate one password from another with vault IDs. You use the vault ID in three ways:
- Pass it with
--vault-id
to the ansible-vault command when you create encrypted content- Include it wherever you store the password for that vault ID (see Storing and accessing vault passwords)
- Pass it with
--vault-id
to the ansible-playbook command when you run a playbook that uses content you encrypted with that vault ID
When you pass a vault ID as an option to the ansible-vault command, you add a label (a hint or nickname) to the encrypted content. This label documents which password you used to encrypt it. The encrypted variable or file includes the vault ID label in plain text in the header. The vault ID is the last element before the encrypted content. For example:
my_encrytped_var: !vault |
$ANSIBLE_VAULT;1.2;AES256;dev
30613233633461343837653833666333643061636561303338373661313838333565653635353162
3263363434623733343538653462613064333634333464660a663633623939393439316636633863
61636237636537333938306331383339353265363239643939666639386530626330633337633833
6664656334373166630a363736393262666465663432613932613036303963343263623137386239
6330
In addition to the label, you must provide a source for the related password. The source can be a prompt, a file, or a script, depending on how you are storing your vault passwords. The pattern looks like this:
--vault-id label@source
If your playbook uses multiple encrypted variables or files that you encrypted with different passwords, you must pass the vault IDs when you run that playbook. You can use --vault-id
by itself, with --vault-password-file
, or with --ask-vault-pass
. The pattern is the same as when you create encrypted content: include the label and the source for the matching password.
See below for examples of encrypting content with vault IDs and using content encrypted with vault IDs. The --vault-id
option works with any Ansible command that interacts with vaults, including ansible-vault, ansible-playbook, and so on.
Limitations of vault IDs¶
Ansible does not enforce using the same password every time you use a particular vault ID label. You can encrypt different variables or files with the same vault ID label but different passwords. This usually happens when you type the password at a prompt and make a mistake. It is possible to use different passwords with the same vault ID label on purpose. For example, you could use each label as a reference to a class of passwords, rather than a single password. In this scenario, you must always know which specific password or file to use in context. However, you are more likely to encrypt two files with the same vault ID label and different passwords by mistake. If you encrypt two files with the same label but different passwords by accident, you can rekey one file to fix the issue.
Enforcing vault ID matching¶
By default the vault ID label is only a hint to remind you which password you used to encrypt a variable or file. Ansible does not check that the vault ID in the header of the encrypted content matches the vault ID you provide when you use the content. Ansible decrypts all files and variables called by your command or playbook that are encrypted with the password you provide. To check the encrypted content and decrypt it only when the vault ID it contains matches the one you provide with --vault-id
, set the config option DEFAULT_VAULT_ID_MATCH. When you set DEFAULT_VAULT_ID_MATCH, each password is only used to decrypt data that was encrypted with the same label. This is efficient, predictable, and can reduce errors when different values are encrypted with different passwords.
Note
Even with the DEFAULT_VAULT_ID_MATCH setting enabled, Ansible does not enforce using the same password every time you use a particular vault ID label.
Storing and accessing vault passwords¶
You can memorize your vault password, or manually copy vault passwords from any source and paste them at a command-line prompt, but most users store them securely and access them as needed from within Ansible. You have two options for storing vault passwords that work from within Ansible: in files, or in a third-party tool such as the system keyring or a secret manager. If you store your passwords in a third-party tool, you need a vault password client script to retrieve them from within Ansible.
Storing passwords in files¶
To store a vault password in a file, enter the password as a string on a single line in the file. Make sure the permissions on the file are appropriate. Do not add password files to source control. If you have multiple passwords, you can store them all in a single file, as long as they all have vault IDs. For each password, create a separate line and enter the vault ID, a space, then the password as a string. For example:
dev my_dev_pass
test my_test_pass
prod my_prod_pass
Storing passwords in third-party tools with vault password client scripts¶
You can store your vault passwords on the system keyring, in a database, or in a secret manager and retrieve them from within Ansible using a vault password client script. Enter the password as a string on a single line. If your password has a vault ID, store it in a way that works with your password storage tool.
To create a vault password client script:
- Create a file with a name ending in
-client.py
- Make the file executable
- Within the script itself:
- Print the passwords to standard output
- Accept a
--vault-id
option- If the script prompts for data (for example, a database password), send the prompts to standard error
When you run a playbook that uses vault passwords stored in a third-party tool, specify the script as the source within the --vault-id
flag. For example:
ansible-playbook --vault-id dev@contrib/vault/vault-keyring-client.py
Ansible executes the client script with a --vault-id
option so the script knows which vault ID label you specified. For example a script loading passwords from a secret manager can use the vault ID label to pick either the ‘dev’ or ‘prod’ password. The example command above results in the following execution of the client script:
contrib/vault/vault-keyring-client.py --vault-id dev
For an example of a client script that loads passwords from the system keyring, see contrib/vault/vault-keyring-client.py
.
Encrypting content with Ansible Vault¶
Once you have a strategy for managing and storing vault passwords, you can start encrypting content. You can encrypt two types of content with Ansible Vault: variables and files. Encrypted content always includes the !vault
tag, which tells Ansible and YAML that the content needs to be decrypted, and a |
character, which allows multi-line strings. Encrypted content created with --vault-id
also contains the vault ID label. For more details about the encryption process and the format of content encrypted with Ansible Vault, see Format of files encrypted with Ansible Vault. This table shows the main differences between encrypted variables and encrypted files:
Encrypted variables | Encrypted files | |
---|---|---|
How much is encrypted? | Variables within a plaintext file | The entire file |
When is it decrypted? | On demand, only when needed | Whenever loaded or referenced [1] |
What can be encrypted? | Only variables | Any structured data file |
[1] | Ansible cannot know if it needs content from an encrypted file unless it decrypts the file, so it decrypts all encrypted files referenced in your playbooks and roles. |
Encrypting individual variables with Ansible Vault¶
You can encrypt single values inside a YAML file using the ansible-vault encrypt_string command. For one way to keep your vaulted variables safely visible, see Keep vaulted variables safely visible.
Advantages and disadvantages of encrypting variables¶
With variable-level encryption, your files are still easily legible. You can mix plaintext and encrypted variables, even inline in a play or role. However, password rotation is not as simple as with file-level encryption. You cannot rekey encrypted variables. Also, variable-level encryption only works on variables. If you want to encrypt tasks or other content, you must encrypt the entire file.
Creating encrypted variables¶
The ansible-vault encrypt_string command encrypts and formats any string you type (or copy or generate) into a format that can be included in a playbook, role, or variables file. To create a basic encrypted variable, pass three options to the ansible-vault encrypt_string command:
- a source for the vault password (prompt, file, or script, with or without a vault ID)
- the string to encrypt
- the string name (the name of the variable)
The pattern looks like this:
ansible-vault encrypt_string <password_source> '<string_to_encrypt>' --name '<string_name_of_variable>'
For example, to encrypt the string ‘foobar’ using the only password stored in ‘a_password_file’ and name the variable ‘the_secret’:
ansible-vault encrypt_string --vault-password-file a_password_file 'foobar' --name 'the_secret'
The command above creates this content:
the_secret: !vault |
$ANSIBLE_VAULT;1.1;AES256
62313365396662343061393464336163383764373764613633653634306231386433626436623361
6134333665353966363534333632666535333761666131620a663537646436643839616531643561
63396265333966386166373632626539326166353965363262633030333630313338646335303630
3438626666666137650a353638643435666633633964366338633066623234616432373231333331
6564
To encrypt the string ‘foooodev’, add the vault ID label ‘dev’ with the ‘dev’ vault password stored in ‘a_password_file’, and call the encrypted variable ‘the_dev_secret’:
ansible-vault encrypt_string --vault-id dev@a_password_file 'foooodev' --name 'the_dev_secret'
The command above creates this content:
the_dev_secret: !vault |
$ANSIBLE_VAULT;1.2;AES256;dev
30613233633461343837653833666333643061636561303338373661313838333565653635353162
3263363434623733343538653462613064333634333464660a663633623939393439316636633863
61636237636537333938306331383339353265363239643939666639386530626330633337633833
6664656334373166630a363736393262666465663432613932613036303963343263623137386239
6330
To encrypt the string ‘letmein’ read from stdin, add the vault ID ‘test’ using the ‘test’ vault password stored in a_password_file, and name the variable ‘test_db_password’:
echo -n 'letmein' | ansible-vault encrypt_string --vault-id test@a_password_file --stdin-name 'test_db_password'
Warning
Typing secret content directly at the command line (without a prompt) leaves the secret string in your shell history. Do not do this outside of testing.
The command above creates this output:
Reading plaintext input from stdin. (ctrl-d to end input, twice if your content does not already have a new line)
db_password: !vault |
$ANSIBLE_VAULT;1.2;AES256;dev
61323931353866666336306139373937316366366138656131323863373866376666353364373761
3539633234313836346435323766306164626134376564330a373530313635343535343133316133
36643666306434616266376434363239346433643238336464643566386135356334303736353136
6565633133366366360a326566323363363936613664616364623437336130623133343530333739
3039
To be prompted for a string to encrypt, encrypt it with the ‘dev’ vault password from ‘a_password_file’, name the variable ‘new_user_password’ and give it the vault ID label ‘dev’:
ansible-vault encrypt_string --vault-id dev@a_password_file --stdin-name 'new_user_password'
The command above triggers this prompt:
Reading plaintext input from stdin. (ctrl-d to end input, twice if your content does not already have a new line)
Type the string to encrypt (for example, ‘hunter2’), hit ctrl-d, and wait.
Warning
Do not press Enter
after supplying the string to encrypt. That will add a newline to the encrypted value.
The sequence above creates this output:
new_user_password: !vault |
$ANSIBLE_VAULT;1.2;AES256;dev
37636561366636643464376336303466613062633537323632306566653533383833366462366662
6565353063303065303831323539656138653863353230620a653638643639333133306331336365
62373737623337616130386137373461306535383538373162316263386165376131623631323434
3866363862363335620a376466656164383032633338306162326639643635663936623939666238
3161
You can add the output from any of the examples above to any playbook, variables file, or role for future use. Encrypted variables are larger than plain-text variables, but they protect your sensitive content while leaving the rest of the playbook, variables file, or role in plain text so you can easily read it.
Viewing encrypted variables¶
You can view the original value of an encrypted variable using the debug module. You must pass the password that was used to encrypt the variable. For example, if you stored the variable created by the last example above in a file called ‘vars.yml’, you could view the unencrypted value of that variable like this:
ansible localhost -m ansible.builtin.debug -a var="new_user_password" -e "@vars.yml" --vault-id dev@a_password_file
localhost | SUCCESS => {
"new_user_password": "hunter2"
}
Encrypting files with Ansible Vault¶
Ansible Vault can encrypt any structured data file used by Ansible, including:
- group variables files from inventory
- host variables files from inventory
- variables files passed to ansible-playbook with
-e @file.yml
or-e @file.json
- variables files loaded by
include_vars
orvars_files
- variables files in roles
- defaults files in roles
- tasks files
- handlers files
- binary files or other arbitrary files
The full file is encrypted in the vault.
Note
Ansible Vault uses an editor to create or modify encrypted files. See Steps to secure your editor for some guidance on securing the editor.
Advantages and disadvantages of encrypting files¶
File-level encryption is easy to use. Password rotation for encrypted files is straightforward with the rekey command. Encrypting files can hide not only sensitive values, but the names of the variables you use. However, with file-level encryption the contents of files are no longer easy to access and read. This may be a problem with encrypted tasks files. When encrypting a variables file, see Keep vaulted variables safely visible for one way to keep references to these variables in a non-encrypted file. Ansible always decrypts the entire encrypted file when it is when loaded or referenced, because Ansible cannot know if it needs the content unless it decrypts it.
Creating encrypted files¶
To create a new encrypted data file called ‘foo.yml’ with the ‘test’ vault password from ‘multi_password_file’:
ansible-vault create --vault-id test@multi_password_file foo.yml
The tool launches an editor (whatever editor you have defined with $EDITOR, default editor is vi). Add the content. When you close the editor session, the file is saved as encrypted data. The file header reflects the vault ID used to create it:
``$ANSIBLE_VAULT;1.2;AES256;test``
To create a new encrypted data file with the vault ID ‘my_new_password’ assigned to it and be prompted for the password:
ansible-vault create --vault-id my_new_password@prompt foo.yml
Again, add content to the file in the editor and save. Be sure to store the new password you created at the prompt, so you can find it when you want to decrypt that file.
Encrypting existing files¶
To encrypt an existing file, use the ansible-vault encrypt command. This command can operate on multiple files at once. For example:
ansible-vault encrypt foo.yml bar.yml baz.yml
To encrypt existing files with the ‘project’ ID and be prompted for the password:
ansible-vault encrypt --vault-id project@prompt foo.yml bar.yml baz.yml
Viewing encrypted files¶
To view the contents of an encrypted file without editing it, you can use the ansible-vault view command:
ansible-vault view foo.yml bar.yml baz.yml
Editing encrypted files¶
To edit an encrypted file in place, use the ansible-vault edit command. This command decrypts the file to a temporary file, allows you to edit the content, then saves and re-encrypts the content and removes the temporary file when you close the editor. For example:
ansible-vault edit foo.yml
To edit a file encrypted with the vault2
password file and assigned the vault ID pass2
:
ansible-vault edit --vault-id pass2@vault2 foo.yml
Changing the password and/or vault ID on encrypted files¶
To change the password on an encrypted file or files, use the rekey command:
ansible-vault rekey foo.yml bar.yml baz.yml
This command can rekey multiple data files at once and will ask for the original password and also the new password. To set a different ID for the rekeyed files, pass the new ID to --new-vault-id
. For example, to rekey a list of files encrypted with the ‘preprod1’ vault ID from the ‘ppold’ file to the ‘preprod2’ vault ID and be prompted for the new password:
ansible-vault rekey --vault-id preprod1@ppold --new-vault-id preprod2@prompt foo.yml bar.yml baz.yml
Decrypting encrypted files¶
If you have an encrypted file that you no longer want to keep encrypted, you can permanently decrypt it by running the ansible-vault decrypt command. This command will save the file unencrypted to the disk, so be sure you do not want to edit it instead.
ansible-vault decrypt foo.yml bar.yml baz.yml
Steps to secure your editor¶
Ansible Vault relies on your configured editor, which can be a source of disclosures. Most editors have ways to prevent loss of data, but these normally rely on extra plain text files that can have a clear text copy of your secrets. Consult your editor documentation to configure the editor to avoid disclosing secure data. The following sections provide some guidance on common editors but should not be taken as a complete guide to securing your editor.
vim¶
You can set the following vim
options in command mode to avoid cases of disclosure. There may be more settings you need to modify to ensure security, especially when using plugins, so consult the vim
documentation.
- Disable swapfiles that act like an autosave in case of crash or interruption.
set noswapfile
- Disable creation of backup files.
set nobackup
set nowritebackup
- Disable the viminfo file from copying data from your current session.
set viminfo=
- Disable copying to the system clipboard.
set clipboard=
You can optionally add these settings in .vimrc
for all files, or just specific paths or extensions. See the vim
manual for details.
Emacs¶
You can set the following Emacs options to avoid cases of disclosure. There may be more settings you need to modify to ensure security, especially when using plugins, so consult the Emacs documentation.
- Do not copy data to the system clipboard.
(setq x-select-enable-clipboard nil)
- Disable creation of backup files.
(setq make-backup-files nil)
- Disable autosave files.
(setq auto-save-default nil)
Using encrypted variables and files¶
When you run a task or playbook that uses encrypted variables or files, you must provide the passwords to decrypt the variables or files. You can do this at the command line or in the playbook itself.
Passing a single password¶
If all the encrypted variables and files your task or playbook needs use a single password, you can use the --ask-vault-pass
or --vault-password-file
cli options.
To prompt for the password:
ansible-playbook --ask-vault-pass site.yml
To retrieve the password from the /path/to/my/vault-password-file
file:
ansible-playbook --vault-password-file /path/to/my/vault-password-file site.yml
To get the password from the vault password client script my-vault-password-client.py
:
ansible-playbook --vault-password-file my-vault-password-client.py
Passing vault IDs¶
You can also use the --vault-id
option to pass a single password with its vault label. This approach is clearer when multiple vaults are used within a single inventory.
To prompt for the password for the ‘dev’ vault ID:
ansible-playbook --vault-id dev@prompt site.yml
To retrieve the password for the ‘dev’ vault ID from the dev-password
file:
ansible-playbook --vault-id dev@dev-password site.yml
To get the password for the ‘dev’ vault ID from the vault password client script my-vault-password-client.py
:
ansible-playbook --vault-id dev@my-vault-password-client.py
Passing multiple vault passwords¶
If your task or playbook requires multiple encrypted variables or files that you encrypted with different vault IDs, you must use the --vault-id
option, passing multiple --vault-id
options to specify the vault IDs (‘dev’, ‘prod’, ‘cloud’, ‘db’) and sources for the passwords (prompt, file, script). . For example, to use a ‘dev’ password read from a file and to be prompted for the ‘prod’ password:
ansible-playbook --vault-id dev@dev-password --vault-id prod@prompt site.yml
By default the vault ID labels (dev, prod and so on) are only hints. Ansible attempts to decrypt vault content with each password. The password with the same label as the encrypted data will be tried first, after that each vault secret will be tried in the order they were provided on the command line.
Where the encrypted data has no label, or the label does not match any of the provided labels, the passwords will be tried in the order they are specified. In the example above, the ‘dev’ password will be tried first, then the ‘prod’ password for cases where Ansible doesn’t know which vault ID is used to encrypt something.
Using --vault-id
without a vault ID¶
The --vault-id
option can also be used without specifying a vault-id. This behavior is equivalent to --ask-vault-pass
or --vault-password-file
so is rarely used.
For example, to use a password file dev-password
:
ansible-playbook --vault-id dev-password site.yml
To prompt for the password:
ansible-playbook --vault-id @prompt site.yml
To get the password from an executable script my-vault-password-client.py
:
ansible-playbook --vault-id my-vault-password-client.py
Configuring defaults for using encrypted content¶
Setting a default vault ID¶
If you use one vault ID more frequently than any other, you can set the config option DEFAULT_VAULT_IDENTITY_LIST to specify a default vault ID and password source. Ansible will use the default vault ID and source any time you do not specify --vault-id
. You can set multiple values for this option. Setting multiple values is equivalent to passing multiple --vault-id
cli options.
Setting a default password source¶
If you use one vault password file more frequently than any other, you can set the DEFAULT_VAULT_PASSWORD_FILE config option or the ANSIBLE_VAULT_PASSWORD_FILE
environment variable to specify that file. For example, if you set ANSIBLE_VAULT_PASSWORD_FILE=~/.vault_pass.txt
, Ansible will automatically search for the password in that file. This is useful if, for example, you use Ansible from a continuous integration system such as Jenkins.
When are encrypted files made visible?¶
In general, content you encrypt with Ansible Vault remains encrypted after execution. However, there is one exception. If you pass an encrypted file as the src
argument to the copy, template, unarchive, script or assemble module, the file will not be encrypted on the target host (assuming you supply the correct vault password when you run the play). This behavior is intended and useful. You can encrypt a configuration file or template to avoid sharing the details of your configuration, but when you copy that configuration to servers in your environment, you want it to be decrypted so local users and processes can access it.
Speeding up Ansible Vault¶
If you have many encrypted files, decrypting them at startup may cause a perceptible delay. To speed this up, install the cryptography package:
pip install cryptography
Format of files encrypted with Ansible Vault¶
Ansible Vault creates UTF-8 encoded txt files. The file format includes a newline terminated header. For example:
$ANSIBLE_VAULT;1.1;AES256
or:
$ANSIBLE_VAULT;1.2;AES256;vault-id-label
The header contains up to four elements, separated by semi-colons (;
).
- The format ID (
$ANSIBLE_VAULT
). Currently$ANSIBLE_VAULT
is the only valid format ID. The format ID identifies content that is encrypted with Ansible Vault (via vault.is_encrypted_file()).- The vault format version (
1.X
). All supported versions of Ansible will currently default to ‘1.1’ or ‘1.2’ if a labeled vault ID is supplied. The ‘1.0’ format is supported for reading only (and will be converted automatically to the ‘1.1’ format on write). The format version is currently used as an exact string compare only (version numbers are not currently ‘compared’).- The cipher algorithm used to encrypt the data (
AES256
). CurrentlyAES256
is the only supported cipher algorithm. Vault format 1.0 used ‘AES’, but current code always uses ‘AES256’.- The vault ID label used to encrypt the data (optional,
vault-id-label
) For example, if you encrypt a file with--vault-id dev@prompt
, the vault-id-label isdev
.
Note: In the future, the header could change. Fields after the format ID and format version depend on the format version, and future vault format versions may add more cipher algorithm options and/or additional fields.
The rest of the content of the file is the ‘vaulttext’. The vaulttext is a text armored version of the encrypted ciphertext. Each line is 80 characters wide, except for the last line which may be shorter.
Ansible Vault payload format 1.1 - 1.2¶
The vaulttext is a concatenation of the ciphertext and a SHA256 digest with the result ‘hexlifyied’.
‘hexlify’ refers to the hexlify()
method of the Python Standard Library’s binascii module.
hexlify()’ed result of:
- hexlify()’ed string of the salt, followed by a newline (
0x0a
) - hexlify()’ed string of the crypted HMAC, followed by a newline. The HMAC is:
- a RFC2104 style HMAC
- inputs are:
- The AES256 encrypted ciphertext
- A PBKDF2 key. This key, the cipher key, and the cipher IV are generated from:
- the salt, in bytes
- 10000 iterations
- SHA256() algorithm
- the first 32 bytes are the cipher key
- the second 32 bytes are the HMAC key
- remaining 16 bytes are the cipher IV
- inputs are:
- a RFC2104 style HMAC
- hexlify()’ed string of the ciphertext. The ciphertext is:
- AES256 encrypted data. The data is encrypted using:
- AES-CTR stream cipher
- cipher key
- IV
- a 128 bit counter block seeded from an integer IV
- the plaintext
- the original plaintext
- padding up to the AES256 blocksize. (The data used for padding is based on RFC5652)