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Chapter 14. Using a vault to obtain secrets


Red Hat build of Keycloak currently provides two out-of-the-box implementations of the Vault SPI: a plain-text file-based vault and Java KeyStore-based vault.

To obtain a secret from a vault rather than entering it directly, enter the following specially crafted string into the appropriate field:

${vault.key}

where the key is the name of the secret recognized by the vault.

To prevent secrets from leaking across realms, Red Hat build of Keycloak combines the realm name with the key obtained from the vault expression. This method means that the key does not directly map to an entry in the vault but creates the final entry name according to the algorithm used to combine the key with the realm name. In case of the file-based vault, such combination reflects to a specific filename, for the Java KeyStore-based vault it’s a specific alias name.

You can obtain the secret from the vault in the following fields:

SMTP password
In the realm SMTP settings
LDAP bind credential
In the LDAP settings of LDAP-based user federation.
OIDC identity provider secret
In the Client Secret inside identity provider OpenID Connect Config

14.1. Key resolvers

All built-in providers support the configuration of key resolvers. A key resolver implements the algorithm or strategy for combining the realm name with the key, obtained from the ${vault.key} expression, into the final entry name used to retrieve the secret from the vault. Red Hat build of Keycloak uses the keyResolvers property to configure the resolvers that the provider uses. The value is a comma-separated list of resolver names. An example of the configuration for the files-plaintext provider follows:

kc.[sh|bat] start --spi-vault-file-key-resolvers=REALM_UNDERSCORE_KEY,KEY_ONLY

The resolvers run in the same order you declare them in the configuration. For each resolver, Red Hat build of Keycloak uses the last entry name the resolver produces, which combines the realm with the vault key to search for the vault’s secret. If Red Hat build of Keycloak finds a secret, it returns the secret. If not, Red Hat build of Keycloak uses the next resolver. This search continues until Red Hat build of Keycloak finds a non-empty secret or runs out of resolvers. If Red Hat build of Keycloak finds no secret, Red Hat build of Keycloak returns an empty secret.

In the previous example, Red Hat build of Keycloak uses the REALM_UNDERSCORE_KEY resolver first. If Red Hat build of Keycloak finds an entry in the vault that using that resolver, Red Hat build of Keycloak returns that entry. If not, Red Hat build of Keycloak searches again using the KEY_ONLY resolver. If Red Hat build of Keycloak finds an entry by using the KEY_ONLY resolver, Red Hat build of Keycloak returns that entry. If Red Hat build of Keycloak uses all resolvers, Red Hat build of Keycloak returns an empty secret.

A list of the currently available resolvers follows:

NameDescription

KEY_ONLY

Red Hat build of Keycloak ignores the realm name and uses the key from the vault expression.

REALM_UNDERSCORE_KEY

Red Hat build of Keycloak combines the realm and key by using an underscore character. Red Hat build of Keycloak escapes occurrences of underscores in the realm or key with another underscore character. For example, if the realm is called master_realm and the key is smtp_key, the combined key is master__realm_smtp__key.

REALM_FILESEPARATOR_KEY

Red Hat build of Keycloak combines the realm and key by using the platform file separator character.

If you have not configured a resolver for the built-in providers, Red Hat build of Keycloak selects the REALM_UNDERSCORE_KEY.

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