Reloader
sealed-secrets
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Reloader | sealed-secrets | |
---|---|---|
34 | 71 | |
6,718 | 7,147 | |
4.2% | 2.5% | |
9.0 | 9.1 | |
5 days ago | 4 days ago | |
Go | Go | |
Apache License 2.0 | Apache License 2.0 |
Stars - the number of stars that a project has on GitHub. Growth - month over month growth in stars.
Activity is a relative number indicating how actively a project is being developed. Recent commits have higher weight than older ones.
For example, an activity of 9.0 indicates that a project is amongst the top 10% of the most actively developed projects that we are tracking.
Reloader
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How are people managing env vars for Static Applications?
You can combine this approach with something like https://github.com/stakater/Reloader to automatically restart pods when a certain secret value changes. So if your static code needs to be rebuilt when certain values change, you can use an init container to run the build on startup.
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Containers are crashing due to memory exhaustion caused by secret rotation every minute.
This is not a cron job? I'm not sure if it helps, but you can have pods do a rolling restart on secret updates: https://github.com/stakater/Reloader that would clear the resources each run, but I'm not entirely clear on what you're looking to achieve.
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True Secrets Auto Rotation with ESO and Vault
If you use secrets as Environment Variables you will need to use something to make workloads get the new credentials, if they just loose connection. You can use the Reloader project for that.
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Automating Configuration Updates in Kubernetes with Reloader
Reloader is designed to simplify the process of updating application configurations in Kubernetes. It monitors ConfigMaps and Secrets for changes and triggers rolling upgrades for associated resources such as Deployments, StatefulSets, DaemonSets, and more. Reloader eliminates the need for manual intervention and reduces the risk of errors during the configuration update process.
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How to start a Go project in 2023
The go k8s packages are pretty bloated - this may also just be a niche case. If you are looking to get secrets with hot reloading, you might also consider mounting a file or setting env vars and coupling it with this reloading operator: https://github.com/stakater/Reloader
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What Wishlist Features Would You Like To See From K8s?
For the auto restart this has been a staple install in all clusters for years for me: https://github.com/stakater/Reloader
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Flux & Helm noob here - How do I pass secret values to Helm charts being handled by Flux?
If you didn't want to use SOPS, for some reason, you can certainly take advantage of external secrets as another commenter proposed, but you won't be able to accomplish (2) without an external tool adding to the mix, like Reloader: https://github.com/stakater/Reloader – that's because something has to update the HelmRelease in order to trigger it to upgrade. (You could just wait for the reconciler to come along, but the tendency is to set the polling interval longer than the default, so Helm won't be re-trying as often, in case something goes wrong...)
- Create new pods upon secret/configmap change in pipeline
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Environment variables - manifest or configMap?
You can install https://github.com/stakater/Reloader And then it's just matter of a single annotation and it restarts automatically when there are changes.
- AWS secret store CSI Driver provider - how to reload pod after SecretProvider update?
sealed-secrets
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Introduction to the Kubernetes ecosystem
External-Secrets Operator : A Kubernetes operator that integrates external secret management systems like AWS Secrets Manager, HashiCorp Vault, Google Secrets Manager, and many more. The operator reads information from external APIs and automatically injects the values into a Kubernetes Secret (Alternatives : Vault, SOPS, Sealed Secrets)
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Show HN: Open-source alternative to HashiCorp/IBM Vault
I like sealed secrets (https://github.com/bitnami-labs/sealed-secrets) a lot. It's like 1Password, but for apps in kubernetes. You only need to secure a private key, and can throw encrypted secrets in a public github repo or anywhere you want.
It's owned by VMware (Broadcom) now, so you have to decide which company you hate more.
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Deploy Secure Spring Boot Microservices on Amazon EKS Using Terraform and Kubernetes
If you have noticed, you are setting secrets in plain text on the application-configmap.yml file, which is not ideal and is not a best practice for security. The best way to do this securely would be to use AWS Secrets Manager, an external service like HashiCorp Vault, or Sealed Secrets. To learn more about these methods see the blog post Shhhh... Kubernetes Secrets Are Not Really Secret!.
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Plain text Kubernetes secrets are fine
Yeah documentation is hard and I'm guilty (as a former maintainer of SealedSecrets)
SealedSecrets was designed with "write only" secrets in mind.
Turns out a lot of people need to access the current secrets because they need to update a part of a "composite" secret.
There are two kinds of "composite" secrets, one easy and one harder, but if you don't know how to do it, even the easier is hard:
1. Secret with multiple data "items" (also called keys in K8s Secret jargon but that's confusing when there is encryption involved). I.e. good old "data":{"foo": "....", "bar": "..."}
2. Secrets where data within one item is actually a config file with cleartext and secrets mixed up in one single string (usually some JSON or YAML or TOML)
Case 1 is "easy" to deal with once you realize that sealed secrets files are just text files and you can just manually merge and update encryoted data items. We even created a "merge" and some "raw" encryption APIs to make that process a little less "copy pasta" but it's still hard to have a good UX that works for everyone.
Case 2 is harder. We did implement a data templating feature that allows you to generate a config file via a go-template that keeps the cleartext parts in clear and uses templating directives to inject the secret parts where you want (referencing the encrypted the items)
The main problem with case 2 is that it's undocumented.
The feature landed in 2021:
https://github.com/bitnami-labs/sealed-secrets/pull/580
I noticed that people at my current $dayjob used sealed secrets for years and it took me a while to understand that the reason they hated it was that they didn't know about that fundamental feature.
And how to blame them!? It's still undocumented!
In my defense I spent so much effort before and after I left VMware to lobby so that the project got the necessary staffing so it wouldn't die of bitrot that I didn't have much time left to work on documentation. Which is a bit said and probably just an excuse :-)
That said, I'm happy that the project is alive and the current maintainers are taking care of it against the forces of entropy. Perhaps some doc work would be useful too. Unfortunately I don't have time for now.
- Storing secrets in distributed binaries?
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Weekly: Questions and advice
This might be OT, and forgive me, but I think one of the best practices for Encrypting and Managing secrets in Kubernetes is to use Sealed Secrets, they allow your secrets to be securely stored in git with the rest of the configuration and yet no one with access to the Git repository will be able to read them. I say this might be OT, because Sealed Secrets are trying to mitigate a different threat, the threat of the secrets at rest somewhere, and not "live in the cluster", where in theory all the ingredients to decrypt the secrets would still live.
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Want advice on planned evolution: k3os/Longhorn --> Talos/Ceph, plus Consul and Vault
The addition of Consul and Vault gives me a few things. For one, right now I'm handling secrets with a mixture of SOPS and Sealed Secrets. I use Vault in my professional life, and have used both Vault and Consul at my last job. Vault is a beast, so I may as well get better at it; plus its options for secret injection are better.
- Homebrew 4.0.0 release
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How to Deploy and Scale Strapi on a Kubernetes Cluster 1/2
Use Sealed Secrets Operator.
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Secret Management in Kubernetes: Approaches, Tools, and Best Practices
sealed-secrets (sealed)
What are some alternatives?
kubernetes-external-secrets - Integrate external secret management systems with Kubernetes
vault-secrets-operator - Create Kubernetes secrets from Vault for a secure GitOps based workflow.
kubernetes-reflector - Custom Kubernetes controller that can be used to replicate secrets, configmaps and certificates.
sops - Simple and flexible tool for managing secrets
k8s-configmap-watcher
Vault - A tool for secrets management, encryption as a service, and privileged access management
flux2 - Open and extensible continuous delivery solution for Kubernetes. Powered by GitOps Toolkit.
helm-charts - Misc helm charts
helm-secrets - A helm plugin that help manage secrets with Git workflow and store them anywhere
secrets-store-csi-driver-provider-gcp - Google Secret Manager provider for the Secret Store CSI Driver.
argocd-vault-plugin - An Argo CD plugin to retrieve secrets from Secret Management tools and inject them into Kubernetes secrets