ansible/docsite/rst/playbooks_vault.rst

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Vault
=====
.. contents:: Topics
New in Ansible 1.5, "Vault" is a feature of ansible that allows keeping sensitive data such as passwords or keys in encrypted files, rather than as plaintext in your playbooks or roles. These vault files can then be distributed or placed in source control.
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To enable this feature, a command line tool, `ansible-vault` is used to edit files, and a command line flag `--ask-vault-pass` or `--vault-password-file` is used.
.. _what_can_be_encrypted_with_vault:
What Can Be Encrypted With Vault
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The vault feature can encrypt any structured data file used by Ansible. This can include "group_vars/" or "host_vars/" inventory variables, variables loaded by "include_vars" or "vars_files", or variable files passed on the ansible-playbook command line with "-e @file.yml" or "-e @file.json". Role variables and defaults are also included!
Because Ansible tasks, handlers, and so on are also data, these can also be encrypted with vault. If you'd like to not betray what variables you are even using, you can go as far to keep an individual task file entirely encrypted. However, that might be a little much and could annoy your coworkers :)
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.. _creating_files:
Creating Encrypted Files
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To create a new encrypted data file, run the following command::
ansible-vault create foo.yml
First you will be prompted for a password. The password used with vault currently must be the same for all files you wish to use together at the same time.
After providing a password, the tool will launch whatever editor you have defined with $EDITOR, and defaults to vim. Once you are done with the editor session, the file will be saved as encrypted data.
The default cipher is AES (which is shared-secret based).
.. _editing_encrypted_files:
Editing Encrypted Files
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To edit an encrypted file in place, use the `ansible-vault edit` command.
This command will decrypt the file to a temporary file and allow you to edit
the file, saving it back when done and removing the temporary file::
ansible-vault edit foo.yml
.. _rekeying_files:
Rekeying Encrypted Files
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Should you wish to change your password on a vault-encrypted file or files, you can do so with 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.
.. _encrypting_files:
Encrypting Unencrypted Files
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If you have existing files that you wish to encrypt, use the `ansible-vault encrypt` command. This command can operate on multiple files at once::
ansible-vault encrypt foo.yml bar.yml baz.yml
.. _decrypting_files:
Decrypting Encrypted Files
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If you have existing files that you no longer want to keep encrypted, you can permanently decrypt them by running the `ansible-vault decrypt` command. This command will save them unencrypted to the disk, so be sure you do not want `ansible-vault edit` instead::
ansible-vault decrypt foo.yml bar.yml baz.yml
.. _viewing_files:
Viewing Encrypted Files
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*Available since Ansible 1.8*
If you want 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
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.. _running_a_playbook_with_vault:
Running a Playbook With Vault
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To run a playbook that contains vault-encrypted data files, you must pass one of two flags. To specify the vault-password interactively::
ansible-playbook site.yml --ask-vault-pass
This prompt will then be used to decrypt (in memory only) any vault encrypted files that are accessed. Currently this requires that all files be encrypted with the same password.
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Alternatively, passwords can be specified with a file or a script, the script version will require Ansible 1.7 or later. When using this flag, ensure permissions on the file are such that no one else can access your key and do not add your key to source control::
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ansible-playbook site.yml --vault-password-file ~/.vault_pass.txt
ansible-playbook site.yml --vault-password-file ~/.vault_pass.py
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The password should be a string stored as a single line in the file.
If you are using a script instead of a flat file, ensure that it is marked as executable, and that the password is printed to standard output. If your script needs to prompt for data, prompts can be sent to standard error.
This is something you may wish to do if using Ansible from a continuous integration system like Jenkins.
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(The `--vault-password-file` option can also be used with the :ref:`ansible-pull` command if you wish, though this would require distributing the keys to your nodes, so understand the implications -- vault is more intended for push mode).