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Markdown
686 lines
No EOL
22 KiB
Markdown
# `sops-nix` In-Depth Usage
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This is a collection of useful walkthroughs in no particular order. Reference the table of contents as you need.
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- [Get a public key from a target machine](#get-a-public-key-from-a-target-machine)
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- [Set secret permission/owner and allow services to access it](#Set-secret-permission-/-owner-and-allow-services-to-access-it)
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- [Restarting/reloading systemd units on secret change](#Restarting-/-reloading-systemd-units-on-secret-change)
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- [Symlinks to other directories](#symlinks-to-other-directories)
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- [Setting a user's password](#setting-a-users-password)
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- [Different file formats](#different-file-formats)
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-[Emit plain file for yaml and json formats](#emit-plain-file-for-yaml-and-json-formats)
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- [Use with home manager](#use-with-home-manager)
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- [Use with GPG instead of SSH keys](#use-with-gpg-instead-of-ssh-keys)
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- [Share secrets between different users](#share-secrets-between-different-users)
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- [Migrate from pass/krops](#migrate-from-passkrops)
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- [Real-world examples](#real-world-examples)
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- [Known limitations](#known-limitations)
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- [Templates](#templates)
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## Get a public key from a target machine
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The easiest way to add new machines is by using SSH host keys (this requires OpenSSH to be enabled).
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If you are using `age`, the `ssh-to-age` tool can be used to convert any SSH Ed25519 public key to the `age` format:
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```console
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$ nix-shell -p ssh-to-age --run 'ssh-keyscan example.com | ssh-to-age'
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age1rgffpespcyjn0d8jglk7km9kfrfhdyev6camd3rck6pn8y47ze4sug23v3
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$ nix-shell -p ssh-to-age --run 'cat /etc/ssh/ssh_host_ed25519_key.pub | ssh-to-age'
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age1rgffpespcyjn0d8jglk7km9kfrfhdyev6camd3rck6pn8y47ze4sug23v3
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```
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For GPG, since sops does not natively support SSH keys yet, sops-nix supports a conversion tool (`ssh-to-pgp`) to store them as GPG keys:
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```console
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$ ssh root@server01 "cat /etc/ssh/ssh_host_rsa_key" | nix-shell -p ssh-to-pgp --run "ssh-to-pgp -o server01.asc"
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# or with sudo
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$ ssh youruser@server01 "sudo cat /etc/ssh/ssh_host_rsa_key" | nix-shell -p ssh-to-pgp --run "ssh-to-pgp -o server01.asc"
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0fd60c8c3b664aceb1796ce02b318df330331003
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# or just read them locally/over ssh
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$ nix-shell -p ssh-to-pgp --run "ssh-to-pgp -i /etc/ssh/ssh_host_rsa_key -o server01.asc"
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0fd60c8c3b664aceb1796ce02b318df330331003
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```
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The output of these commands is the identifier for the server's key, which can be added to your `.sops.yaml`:
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```yaml
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keys:
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- &admin_alice 2504791468b153b8a3963cc97ba53d1919c5dfd4
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- &admin_bob age12zlz6lvcdk6eqaewfylg35w0syh58sm7gh53q5vvn7hd7c6nngyseftjxl
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- &server_azmidi 0fd60c8c3b664aceb1796ce02b318df330331003
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- &server_nosaxa age1rgffpespcyjn0d8jglk7km9kfrfhdyev6camd3rck6pn8y47ze4sug23v3
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creation_rules:
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- path_regex: secrets/[^/]+\.(yaml|json|env|ini)$
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key_groups:
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- pgp:
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- *admin_alice
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- *server_azmidi
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age:
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- *admin_bob
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- *server_nosaxa
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- path_regex: secrets/azmidi/[^/]+\.(yaml|json|env|ini)$
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key_groups:
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- pgp:
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- *admin_alice
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- *server_azmidi
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age:
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- *admin_bob
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```
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If you prefer having a separate GPG key, see [Use with GPG instead of SSH keys](#use-with-GPG-instead-of-SSH-keys).
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## Set secret permission/owner and allow services to access it
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By default secrets are owned by `root:root`. Furthermore
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the parent directory `/run/secrets.d` is only owned by
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`root` and the `keys` group has read access to it:
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``` console
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$ ls -la /run/secrets.d/1
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total 24
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drwxr-x--- 2 root keys 0 Jul 12 6:23 .
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drwxr-x--- 3 root keys 0 Jul 12 6:23 ..
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-r-------- 1 root root 20 Jul 12 6:23 example-secret
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```
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The secrets option has further parameter to change secret permission.
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Consider the following nixos configuration example:
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```nix
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{
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# Permission modes are in octal representation (same as chmod),
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# the digits represent: user|group|others
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# 7 - full (rwx)
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# 6 - read and write (rw-)
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# 5 - read and execute (r-x)
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# 4 - read only (r--)
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# 3 - write and execute (-wx)
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# 2 - write only (-w-)
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# 1 - execute only (--x)
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# 0 - none (---)
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sops.secrets.example-secret.mode = "0440";
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# Either a user id or group name representation of the secret owner
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# It is recommended to get the user name from `config.users.users.<?name>.name` to avoid misconfiguration
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sops.secrets.example-secret.owner = config.users.users.nobody.name;
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# Either the group id or group name representation of the secret group
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# It is recommended to get the group name from `config.users.users.<?name>.group` to avoid misconfiguration
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sops.secrets.example-secret.group = config.users.users.nobody.group;
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}
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```
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<details>
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<summary>This example configures secrets for buildkite, a CI agent;
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the service needs a token and a SSH private key to function.</summary>
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```nix
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{ pkgs, config, ... }:
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{
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services.buildkite-agents.builder = {
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enable = true;
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tokenPath = config.sops.secrets.buildkite-token.path;
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privateSshKeyPath = config.sops.secrets.buildkite-ssh-key.path;
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runtimePackages = [
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pkgs.gnutar
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pkgs.bash
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pkgs.nix
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pkgs.gzip
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pkgs.git
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];
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};
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sops.secrets.buildkite-token.owner = config.users.buildkite-agent-builder.name;
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sops.secrets.buildkite-ssh-key.owner = config.users.buildkite-agent-builder.name;
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}
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```
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</details>
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## Restarting/reloading systemd units on secret change
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It is possible to restart or reload units when a secret changes or is newly initialized.
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This behavior can be configured per-secret:
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```nix
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{
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sops.secrets."home-assistant-secrets.yaml" = {
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restartUnits = [ "home-assistant.service" ];
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# there is also `reloadUnits` which acts like a `reloadTrigger` in a NixOS systemd service
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};
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}
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```
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## Symlinks to other directories
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Some services might expect files in certain locations.
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Using the `path` option a symlink to this directory can
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be created:
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```nix
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{
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sops.secrets."home-assistant-secrets.yaml" = {
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owner = "hass";
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path = "/var/lib/hass/secrets.yaml";
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};
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}
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```
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```console
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$ ls -la /var/lib/hass/secrets.yaml
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lrwxrwxrwx 1 root root 40 Jul 19 22:36 /var/lib/hass/secrets.yaml -> /run/secrets/home-assistant-secrets.yaml
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```
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## Setting a user's password
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sops-nix has to run after NixOS creates users (in order to specify what users own a secret.)
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This means that it's not possible to set `users.users.<name>.hashedPasswordFile` to any secrets managed by sops-nix.
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To work around this issue, it's possible to set `neededForUsers = true` in a secret.
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This will cause the secret to be decrypted to `/run/secrets-for-users` instead of `/run/secrets` before NixOS creates users.
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As users are not created yet, it's not possible to set an owner for these secrets.
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The password must be stored as a hash for this to work, which can be created with the command `mkpasswd`
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```console
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$ echo "password" | mkpasswd -s
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$y$j9T$WFoiErKnEnMcGq0ruQK4K.$4nJAY3LBeBsZBTYSkdTOejKU6KlDmhnfUV3Ll1K/1b.
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```
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```nix
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{ config, ... }: {
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sops.secrets.my-password.neededForUsers = true;
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users.users.mic92 = {
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isNormalUser = true;
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hashedPasswordFile = config.sops.secrets.my-password.path;
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};
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}
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```
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**Note:** If you are using Impermanence, the key used for secret decryption (`sops.age.keyFile`, or the host SSH keys) must be in a persisted directory,
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loaded early enough during boot. For example:
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```nix
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sops.age.keyFile = "/nix/persist/var/lib/sops-nix/key.txt";
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```
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or:
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```nix
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fileSystems."/etc/ssh".neededForBoot = true;
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```
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## Different file formats
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At the moment we support the following file formats: YAML, JSON, INI, dotenv and binary.
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sops-nix allows specifying multiple sops files in different file formats:
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```nix
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{
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imports = [ <sops-nix/modules/sops> ];
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# The default sops file used for all secrets can be controlled using `sops.defaultSopsFile`
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sops.defaultSopsFile = ./secrets.yaml;
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# If you use something different from YAML, you can also specify it here:
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#sops.defaultSopsFormat = "yaml";
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sops.secrets.github_token = {
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# The sops file can be also overwritten per secret...
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sopsFile = ./other-secrets.json;
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# ... as well as the format
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format = "json";
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};
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}
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```
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### YAML
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Open a new file with sops ending in `.yaml`:
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```console
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$ sops secrets.yaml
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```
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Then, put in the following content:
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```yaml
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github_token: 4a6c73f74928a9c4c4bc47379256b72e598e2bd3
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ssh_key: |
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-----BEGIN OPENSSH PRIVATE KEY-----
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b3BlbnNzaC1rZXktdjEAAAAABG5vbmUAAAAEbm9uZQAAAAAAAAABAAAAMwAAAAtzc2gtZW
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QyNTUxOQAAACDENhLwQI4v/Ecv65iCMZ7aZAL+Sdc0Cqyjkd012XwJzQAAAJht4at6beGr
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egAAAAtzc2gtZWQyNTUxOQAAACDENhLwQI4v/Ecv65iCMZ7aZAL+Sdc0Cqyjkd012XwJzQ
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AAAEBizgX7v+VMZeiCtWRjpl95dxqBWUkbrPsUSYF3DGV0rsQ2EvBAji/8Ry/rmIIxntpk
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Av5J1zQKrKOR3TXZfAnNAAAAE2pvZXJnQHR1cmluZ21hY2hpbmUBAg==
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-----END OPENSSH PRIVATE KEY-----
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```
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You can include it like this in your `configuration.nix`:
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```nix
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{
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sops.defaultSopsFile = ./secrets.yaml;
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# YAML is the default
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#sops.defaultSopsFormat = "yaml";
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sops.secrets.github_token = {
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format = "yaml";
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# can be also set per secret
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sopsFile = ./secrets.yaml;
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};
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}
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```
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### JSON
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Open a new file with sops ending in `.json`:
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```console
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$ sops secrets.json
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```
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Then, put in the following content:
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``` json
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{
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"github_token": "4a6c73f74928a9c4c4bc47379256b72e598e2bd3",
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"ssh_key": "-----BEGIN OPENSSH PRIVATE KEY-----\\nb3BlbnNzaC1rZXktdjEAAAAABG5vbmUAAAAEbm9uZQAAAAAAAAABAAAAMwAAAAtzc2gtZW\\nQyNTUxOQAAACDENhLwQI4v/Ecv65iCMZ7aZAL+Sdc0Cqyjkd012XwJzQAAAJht4at6beGr\\negAAAAtzc2gtZWQyNTUxOQAAACDENhLwQI4v/Ecv65iCMZ7aZAL+Sdc0Cqyjkd012XwJzQ\\nAAAEBizgX7v+VMZeiCtWRjpl95dxqBWUkbrPsUSYF3DGV0rsQ2EvBAji/8Ry/rmIIxntpk\\nAv5J1zQKrKOR3TXZfAnNAAAAE2pvZXJnQHR1cmluZ21hY2hpbmUBAg==\\n-----END OPENSSH PRIVATE KEY-----\\n"
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}
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```
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You can include it like this in your `configuration.nix`:
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```nix
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{
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sops.defaultSopsFile = ./secrets.json;
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# YAML is the default
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sops.defaultSopsFormat = "json";
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sops.secrets.github_token = {
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format = "json";
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# can be also set per secret
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sopsFile = ./secrets.json;
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};
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}
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```
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### Binary
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This format allows to encrypt an arbitrary binary format that can't be put into
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JSON/YAML files. Unlike the other two formats, for binary files, one file corresponds to one secret.
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To encrypt an binary file use the following command:
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``` console
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$ sops -e /etc/krb5/krb5.keytab > krb5.keytab
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# an example of what this might result in:
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$ head krb5.keytab
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{
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"data": "ENC[AES256_GCM,data:bIsPHrjrl9wxvKMcQzaAbS3RXCI2h8spw2Ee+KYUTsuousUBU6OMIdyY0wqrX3eh/1BUtl8H9EZciCTW29JfEJKfi3ackGufBH+0wp6vLg7r,iv:TlKiOmQUeH3+NEdDUMImg1XuXg/Tv9L6TmPQrraPlCQ=,tag:dVeVvRM567NszsXKK9pZvg==,type:str]",
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"sops": {
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"kms": null,
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"gcp_kms": null,
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"azure_kv": null,
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"lastmodified": "2020-07-06T06:21:06Z",
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"mac": "ENC[AES256_GCM,data:ISjUzaw/5mNiwypmUrOk2DAZnlkbnhURHmTTYA3705NmRsSyUh1PyQvCuwglmaHscwl4GrsnIz4rglvwx1zYa+UUwanR0+VeBqntHwzSNiWhh7qMAQwdUXmdCNiOyeGy6jcSDsXUeQmyIWH6yibr7hhzoQFkZEB7Wbvcw6Sossk=,iv:UilxNvfHN6WkEvfY8ZIJCWijSSpLk7fqSCWh6n8+7lk=,tag:HUTgyL01qfVTCNWCTBfqXw==,type:str]",
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"pgp": [
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{
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```
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It can be decrypted again like this:
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``` console
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$ sops -d krb5.keytab > /tmp/krb5.keytab
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```
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This is how it can be included in your `configuration.nix`:
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```nix
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{
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sops.secrets.krb5-keytab = {
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format = "binary";
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sopsFile = ./krb5.keytab;
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};
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}
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```
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## Emit plain file for yaml and json formats
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By default, sops-nix extracts a single key from yaml and json files. If you
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need the plain file instead of extracting a specific key from the input document,
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you can set `key` to an empty string.
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For example, the input document `my-config.yaml` likes this:
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```yaml
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my-secret1: ENC[AES256_GCM,data:tkyQPQODC3g=,iv:yHliT2FJ74EtnLIeeQtGbOoqVZnF0q5HiXYMJxYx6HE=,tag:EW5LV4kG4lcENaN2HIFiow==,type:str]
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my-secret2: ENC[AES256_GCM,data:tkyQPQODC3g=,iv:yHliT2FJ74EtnLIeeQtGbOoqVZnF0q5HiXYMJxYx6HE=,tag:EW5LV4kG4lcENaN2HIFiow==,type:str]
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sops:
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kms: []
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gcp_kms: []
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azure_kv: []
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hc_vault: []
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...
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```
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This is how it can be included in your NixOS module:
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```nix
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{
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sops.secrets.my-config = {
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format = "yaml";
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sopsFile = ./my-config.yaml;
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key = "";
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};
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}
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```
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Then, it will be mounted as `/run/secrets/my-config`:
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```yaml
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my-secret1: hello
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my-secret2: hello
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```
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## Use with home manager
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sops-nix also provides a home-manager module.
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This module provides a subset of features provided by the system-wide sops-nix since features like the creation of the ramfs and changing the owner of the secrets are not available for non-root users.
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The home-manager module requires systemd/user as it runs a service called `sops-nix.service` rather than an activation script.
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While the sops-nix _system_ module decrypts secrets to the system non-persistent `/run/secrets`, the _home-manager_ module places them in the users non-persistent `$XDG_RUNTIME_DIR/secrets.d`.
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Additionally secrets are symlinked to the users home at `$HOME/.config/sops-nix/secrets` which are referenced for the `.path` value in sops-nix.
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This requires that the home-manager option `home.homeDirectory` is set to determine the home-directory on evaluation. It will have to be manually set if home-manager is configured as stand-alone or on non NixOS systems.
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Depending on whether you use home-manager system-wide or stand-alone using a home.nix, you have to import it in a different way.
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This example shows the `flake` approach from the recommended example [Install: Flakes (current recommendation)](#Flakes (current recommendation))
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```nix
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{
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# NixOS system-wide home-manager configuration
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home-manager.sharedModules = [
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inputs.sops-nix.homeManagerModules.sops
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];
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}
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```
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```nix
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{
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# Configuration via home.nix
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imports = [
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inputs.sops-nix.homeManagerModules.sops
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];
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}
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```
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This example show the `channel` approach from the example [Install: nix-channel](#nix-channel). All other methods work as well.
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```nix
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{
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# NixOS system-wide home-manager configuration
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home-manager.sharedModules = [
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<sops-nix/modules/home-manager/sops.nix>
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];
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}
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```
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```nix
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{
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# Configuration via home.nix
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imports = [
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<sops-nix/modules/home-manager/sops.nix>
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];
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}
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```
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|
The actual sops configuration is in the `sops` namespace in your home.nix (or in the `home-manager.users.<name>` namespace when using home-manager system-wide):
|
|
```nix
|
|
{
|
|
sops = {
|
|
age.keyFile = "/home/user/.age-key.txt"; # must have no password!
|
|
# It's also possible to use a ssh key, but only when it has no password:
|
|
#age.sshKeyPaths = [ "/home/user/path-to-ssh-key" ];
|
|
defaultSopsFile = ./secrets.yaml;
|
|
secrets.test = {
|
|
# sopsFile = ./secrets.yml.enc; # optionally define per-secret files
|
|
|
|
# %r gets replaced with a runtime directory, use %% to specify a '%'
|
|
# sign. Runtime dir is $XDG_RUNTIME_DIR on linux and $(getconf
|
|
# DARWIN_USER_TEMP_DIR) on darwin.
|
|
path = "%r/test.txt";
|
|
};
|
|
};
|
|
}
|
|
```
|
|
|
|
The secrets are decrypted in a systemd user service called `sops-nix`, so other services needing secrets must order after it:
|
|
```nix
|
|
{
|
|
systemd.user.services.mbsync.Unit.After = [ "sops-nix.service" ];
|
|
}
|
|
```
|
|
|
|
### Qubes Split GPG support
|
|
|
|
If you are using Qubes with the [Split GPG](https://www.qubes-os.org/doc/split-gpg),
|
|
then you can configure sops to utilize the `qubes-gpg-client-wrapper` with the `sops.gnupg.qubes-split-gpg` options.
|
|
The example above updated looks like this:
|
|
```nix
|
|
{
|
|
sops = {
|
|
gnupg.qubes-split-gpg = {
|
|
enable = true;
|
|
domain = "vault-gpg";
|
|
};
|
|
defaultSopsFile = ./secrets.yaml;
|
|
secrets.test = {
|
|
# sopsFile = ./secrets.yml.enc; # optionally define per-secret files
|
|
|
|
# %r gets replaced with a runtime directory, use %% to specify a '%'
|
|
# sign. Runtime dir is $XDG_RUNTIME_DIR on linux and $(getconf
|
|
# DARWIN_USER_TEMP_DIR) on darwin.
|
|
path = "%r/test.txt";
|
|
};
|
|
};
|
|
}
|
|
```
|
|
|
|
## Use with GPG instead of SSH keys
|
|
|
|
If you prefer having a separate GPG key, sops-nix also comes with a helper tool, `sops-init-gpg-key`:
|
|
|
|
```console
|
|
$ nix run github:Mic92/sops-nix#sops-init-gpg-key -- --hostname server01 --gpghome /tmp/newkey
|
|
# You can use the following command to save it to a file:
|
|
$ cat > server01.asc <<EOF
|
|
-----BEGIN PGP PUBLIC KEY BLOCK-----
|
|
|
|
mQENBF8L/iQBCACroEaUfvPBMMorNepNQmideOtNztALejgEJ5wZmxabck+qC1Gb
|
|
NWe3tmvChXVHgL7DzodSUfX1PuIjTTeRr2clMXtISPFIsBlRQb4MiErZfsardITM
|
|
n4WScg8sTb4nnqEOJiRknwAhBryIjH8kkCXxKlYK67re281dIK4dKBMIolFADlyv
|
|
wyHurJ7NPpHxR2WXHcIqXX1DaT6RvGQvZHMpfctob8k/QD4CyV6QwG5IVACQ/tuC
|
|
bEUggrkGw+g+XdeieUfWbRsHM4C4pv8BNwA/EYD5d0eKI+rshSPoTT+hcGn8Uh8w
|
|
MVQ8PVs6jWMMOAF1JH/stoPr9Yha+TGbMRi5ABEBAAG0GHNlcnZlcjAxIDxyb290
|
|
QHNlcnZlcjAxPokBTgQTAQgAOBYhBOTKhnaPF2rrbAFVQVOvjX8UlhOxBQJfC/4k
|
|
AhsvBQsJCAcCBhUKCQgLAgQWAgMBAh4BAheAAAoJEFOvjX8UlhOx1XIH/jUOrSR2
|
|
wuoqFiHcqaDPgXmTVJk8QanVkmiP3tk0mz5rRKrDX2eX5GnHqYR4PfpjUYNzedQE
|
|
sGyTjl7+DvglWJ2Q8m3yD/9+1agBmeqEVQlKqwL6Sc3bI4WBwHaxwVDo/bNwMs0w
|
|
o8ngOs1jPd3LfQdfG/rE1NolpHm4LWqYj0D2zEGqozLXVBx2wiuwmm6OKX4U4EHR
|
|
UwKax+VZYA+J9oFDN+kOy/yR+bKnOvg5eyOv2ZrK5BKceSBhDTOclMIWTL2cGxcL
|
|
jsq4N7fobs4TbwFPxRUi/T9ldXi0LXeGhTl9stImTtj3bL+4Y734TipvB5UvzCDK
|
|
CkjjwEvD5MYdGDE=
|
|
=uvIf
|
|
-----END PGP PUBLIC KEY BLOCK-----
|
|
EOF
|
|
# fingerprint: E4CA86768F176AEB6C01554153AF8D7F149613B1
|
|
```
|
|
|
|
You can choose between a RSA GPG key (default, like in the example above) or a
|
|
Curve25519 based one by adding `--keytype Curve25519` like so:
|
|
|
|
```console
|
|
$ nix run github:Mic92/sops-nix#sops-init-gpg-key -- --hostname server01 --gpghome /tmp/newkey --keytype Curve25519
|
|
You can use the following command to save it to a file:
|
|
cat > server01.asc <<EOF
|
|
-----BEGIN PGP PUBLIC KEY BLOCK-----
|
|
|
|
mDMEY7dJExYJKwYBBAHaRw8BAQdAloRZFyqNh3nIDtyUQKaBSMJOtLkbNeg+4TPg
|
|
BG5TduG0OG5peC1hLmhvbWUua3VldGVtZWllci5kZSA8cm9vdEBuaXgtYS5ob21l
|
|
Lmt1ZXRlbWVpZXIuZGU+iJMEExYKADsWIQREE2hPxiNijOo+CSmrLxbGte+J7wUC
|
|
Y7dJEwIbAwULCQgHAgIiAgYVCgkICwIEFgIDAQIeBwIXgAAKCRCrLxbGte+J79LX
|
|
AQDtLfQFDKm04ORIk28DrzTBbMTFQEW21dGBXk7ykBx4jQD/ZOnt1RPnB9mzMc8L
|
|
wIS3oI8D9719DjoS9hrHnJ4xvge4OARjt0kTEgorBgEEAZdVAQUBAQdA0t1X35pN
|
|
ic+etscIIkHjKUwrXhbTgWrARgXUuEMwwz8DAQgHiHgEGBYKACAWIQREE2hPxiNi
|
|
jOo+CSmrLxbGte+J7wUCY7dJEwIbDAAKCRCrLxbGte+J7+0NAQCfj95TSyPEFKz3
|
|
eLJ1aCA1bZZV/rkhHd+OwX1MFL3mKQD9GMPgvMzDIoofycDzMY2ttJgkRJfq+zOZ
|
|
juXFQdUkMgY=
|
|
=pf3V
|
|
-----END PGP PUBLIC KEY BLOCK-----
|
|
EOF
|
|
fingerprint: 4413684FC623628CEA3E0929AB2F16C6B5EF89EF
|
|
F0477297E369CD1D189DD901278D1535AB473B9E
|
|
```
|
|
|
|
In both cases, you must upload the GPG key directory `/tmp/newkey` onto the server.
|
|
If you uploaded it to `/var/lib/sops` than your sops configuration will look like this:
|
|
|
|
```nix
|
|
{
|
|
# Make sure that `/var/lib/sops` is owned by root and is not world-readable/writable
|
|
sops.gnupg.home = "/var/lib/sops";
|
|
# disable importing host ssh keys
|
|
sops.gnupg.sshKeyPaths = [];
|
|
}
|
|
```
|
|
|
|
However be aware that this will also run GnuPG on your server including the
|
|
GnuPG daemon. [GnuPG is in general not great software](https://latacora.micro.blog/2019/07/16/the-pgp-problem.html) and might break in
|
|
hilarious ways. If you experience problems, you are on your own. If you want a
|
|
more stable and predictable solution go with SSH keys or one of the KMS services.
|
|
|
|
|
|
## Share secrets between different users
|
|
|
|
Secrets can be shared between different users by creating different files
|
|
pointing to the same sops key but with different permissions. In the following
|
|
example the `drone` secret is exposed as `/run/secrets/drone-server` for
|
|
`drone-server` and as `/run/secrets/drone-agent` for `drone-agent`:
|
|
|
|
```nix
|
|
{
|
|
sops.secrets.drone-server = {
|
|
owner = config.systemd.services.drone-server.serviceConfig.User;
|
|
key = "drone";
|
|
};
|
|
sops.secrets.drone-agent = {
|
|
owner = config.systemd.services.drone-agent.serviceConfig.User;
|
|
key = "drone";
|
|
};
|
|
}
|
|
```
|
|
|
|
## Migrate from pass/krops
|
|
|
|
If you have used [pass](https://www.passwordstore.org) before (e.g. in
|
|
[krops](https://github.com/krebs/krops)) than you can use the following one-liner
|
|
to convert all your secrets to a YAML structure:
|
|
|
|
```console
|
|
$ for i in *.gpg; do echo "$(basename $i .gpg): |\n$(pass $(dirname $i)/$(basename $i .gpg)| sed 's/^/ /')"; done
|
|
```
|
|
|
|
Copy the output to the editor you have opened with sops.
|
|
|
|
## Real-world examples
|
|
|
|
The [nix-community infra](https://github.com/nix-community/infra) makes extensive usage of sops-nix.
|
|
Each host has a [secrets.yaml](https://github.com/nix-community/infra/tree/master/hosts/build01) containing secrets for the host.
|
|
Also Samuel Leathers explains his personal setup in this [blog article](https://samleathers.com/posts/2022-02-11-my-new-network-and-sops.html).
|
|
|
|
## Known limitations
|
|
|
|
### Initrd secrets
|
|
|
|
sops-nix does not fully support initrd secrets.
|
|
This is because `nixos-rebuild switch` installs
|
|
the bootloader before running sops-nix's activation hook.
|
|
As a workaround, it is possible to run `nixos-rebuild test`
|
|
before `nixos-rebuild switch` to provision initrd secrets
|
|
before actually using them in the initrd.
|
|
In the future, we hope to extend NixOS to allow keys to be
|
|
provisioned in the bootloader install phase.
|
|
|
|
### Using secrets at evaluation time
|
|
|
|
It is not possible to use secrets at evaluation time of nix code. This is
|
|
because sops-nix decrypts secrets only in the activation phase of nixos i.e. in
|
|
`nixos-rebuild switch` on the target machine. If you rely on this feature for
|
|
some secrets, you should also include solutions that allow secrets to be stored
|
|
securely in your version control, e.g.
|
|
[git-agecrypt](https://github.com/vlaci/git-agecrypt). These types of solutions
|
|
can be used together with sops-nix.
|
|
|
|
## Templates
|
|
|
|
If your setup requires embedding secrets within a configuration file, the `template` feature of `sops-nix` provides a seamless way to do this.
|
|
|
|
Here's how to use it:
|
|
|
|
1. **Define Your Secret**
|
|
|
|
Specify the secrets you intend to use. This will be encrypted and managed securely by `sops-nix`.
|
|
|
|
```nix
|
|
{
|
|
sops.secrets.your-secret = { };
|
|
}
|
|
```
|
|
|
|
2. **Use Templates for Configuration with Secrets**
|
|
|
|
Create a template for your configuration file and utilize the placeholder where you'd like the secret to be inserted.
|
|
During the activation phase, `sops-nix` will substitute the placeholder with the actual secret content.
|
|
|
|
```nix
|
|
{
|
|
sops.templates."your-config-with-secrets.toml".content = ''
|
|
password = "${config.sops.placeholder.your-secret}"
|
|
'';
|
|
}
|
|
```
|
|
|
|
You can also define ownership properties for the configuration file:
|
|
|
|
```nix
|
|
{
|
|
sops.templates."your-config-with-secrets.toml".owner = "serviceuser";
|
|
}
|
|
```
|
|
|
|
3. **Reference the Rendered Configuration in Services**
|
|
|
|
When defining a service (e.g., using `systemd`), refer to the rendered configuration (with secrets in place) by leveraging the `.path` attribute.
|
|
|
|
```nix
|
|
{
|
|
systemd.services.myservice = {
|
|
# ... (any other service attributes)
|
|
|
|
serviceConfig = {
|
|
ExecStart = "${pkgs.myservice}/bin/myservice --config ${config.sops.templates."your-config-with-secrets.toml".path}";
|
|
User = "serviceuser";
|
|
};
|
|
};
|
|
}
|
|
``` |