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Managing Secrets using kubectl
This page shows you how to create, edit, manage, and delete Kubernetes
Secrets using the kubectl
command-line tool.
Before you begin
You need to have a Kubernetes cluster, and the kubectl command-line tool must be configured to communicate with your cluster. It is recommended to run this tutorial on a cluster with at least two nodes that are not acting as control plane hosts. If you do not already have a cluster, you can create one by using minikube or you can use one of these Kubernetes playgrounds:
Create a Secret
A Secret
object stores sensitive data such as credentials
used by Pods to access services. For example, you might need a Secret to store
the username and password needed to access a database.
You can create the Secret by passing the raw data in the command, or by storing
the credentials in files that you pass in the command. The following commands
create a Secret that stores the username admin
and the password S!B\*d$zDsb=
.
Use raw data
Run the following command:
kubectl create secret generic db-user-pass \
--from-literal=username=admin \
--from-literal=password='S!B\*d$zDsb='
You must use single quotes ''
to escape special characters such as $
, \
,
*
, =
, and !
in your strings. If you don't, your shell will interpret these
characters.
Use source files
Store the credentials in files:
echo -n 'admin' > ./username.txt echo -n 'S!B\*d$zDsb=' > ./password.txt
The
-n
flag ensures that the generated files do not have an extra newline character at the end of the text. This is important because whenkubectl
reads a file and encodes the content into a base64 string, the extra newline character gets encoded too. You do not need to escape special characters in strings that you include in a file.Pass the file paths in the
kubectl
command:kubectl create secret generic db-user-pass \ --from-file=./username.txt \ --from-file=./password.txt
The default key name is the file name. You can optionally set the key name using
--from-file=[key=]source
. For example:kubectl create secret generic db-user-pass \ --from-file=username=./username.txt \ --from-file=password=./password.txt
With either method, the output is similar to:
secret/db-user-pass created
Verify the Secret
Check that the Secret was created:
kubectl get secrets
The output is similar to:
NAME TYPE DATA AGE
db-user-pass Opaque 2 51s
View the details of the Secret:
kubectl describe secret db-user-pass
The output is similar to:
Name: db-user-pass
Namespace: default
Labels: <none>
Annotations: <none>
Type: Opaque
Data
====
password: 12 bytes
username: 5 bytes
The commands kubectl get
and kubectl describe
avoid showing the contents
of a Secret
by default. This is to protect the Secret
from being exposed
accidentally, or from being stored in a terminal log.
Decode the Secret
View the contents of the Secret you created:
kubectl get secret db-user-pass -o jsonpath='{.data}'
The output is similar to:
{ "password": "UyFCXCpkJHpEc2I9", "username": "YWRtaW4=" }
Decode the
password
data:echo 'UyFCXCpkJHpEc2I9' | base64 --decode
The output is similar to:
S!B\*d$zDsb=
Caution: This is an example for documentation purposes. In practice, this method could cause the command with the encoded data to be stored in your shell history. Anyone with access to your computer could find the command and decode the secret. A better approach is to combine the view and decode commands.kubectl get secret db-user-pass -o jsonpath='{.data.password}' | base64 --decode
Edit a Secret
You can edit an existing Secret
object unless it is
immutable. To edit a
Secret, run the following command:
kubectl edit secrets <secret-name>
This opens your default editor and allows you to update the base64 encoded
Secret values in the data
field, such as in the following example:
# Please edit the object below. Lines beginning with a '#' will be ignored,
# and an empty file will abort the edit. If an error occurs while saving this file, it will be
# reopened with the relevant failures.
#
apiVersion: v1
data:
password: UyFCXCpkJHpEc2I9
username: YWRtaW4=
kind: Secret
metadata:
creationTimestamp: "2022-06-28T17:44:13Z"
name: db-user-pass
namespace: default
resourceVersion: "12708504"
uid: 91becd59-78fa-4c85-823f-6d44436242ac
type: Opaque
Clean up
To delete a Secret, run the following command:
kubectl delete secret db-user-pass
What's next
- Read more about the Secret concept
- Learn how to manage Secrets using config file
- Learn how to manage Secrets using kustomize