Vault
Vault enterprise license management
You can use this Helm chart to deploy Vault Enterprise by following a few extra steps around licensing.
Note: As of Vault Enterprise 1.8, the license must be specified via HCL configuration or environment variables on startup, unless the Vault cluster was created with an older Vault version and the license was stored. More information is available in the Vault Enterprise License docs.
Important Note: This chart is not compatible with Helm 2. Please use Helm 3.6+ with this chart.
Vault enterprise 1.8+
License install
First create a Kubernetes secret using the contents of your license file. For example, the following commands create a secret with the name vault-ent-license
and key license
:
secret=$(cat 1931d1f4-bdfd-6881-f3f5-19349374841f.hclic)
kubectl create secret generic vault-ent-license --from-literal="license=${secret}"
Note: If you cannot find your .hclic
file, please contact your sales team or Technical Account Manager.
In your chart overrides, set the values of server.image
to one of the enterprise release tags. Also set the name of the secret you just created in server.enterpriseLicense
.
# config.yaml
server:
image:
repository: hashicorp/vault-enterprise
tag: 1.15.2-ent
enterpriseLicense:
secretName: vault-ent-license
Now run helm install
:
$ helm install hashicorp hashicorp/vault -f config.yaml
Once the cluster is initialized and unsealed, you may check the license status using the vault license get
command:
kubectl exec -ti vault-0 -- vault license get
License update
To update the autoloaded license in Vault, you may do the following:
- Update your license secret with the new license data
new_secret=$(base64 < ./new-license.hclic | tr -d '\n')
cat > patch-license.yaml <<EOF
data:
license: ${new_secret}
EOF
kubectl patch secret vault-ent-license --patch "$(cat patch-license.yaml)"
Wait until
vault license inspect
shows the updated licenseSince the
inspect
command is reading the license file from the mounted secret, this tells you when the updated secret has been propagated to the mount on the Vault pod.
kubectl exec vault-0 -- vault license inspect
Reload Vault's license config
You may use the
sys/config/reload/license
API endpoint:
kubectl exec vault-0 -- vault write -f sys/config/reload/license
Or you may issue an HUP signal directly to Vault:
kubectl exec vault-0 -- pkill -HUP vault
- Verify that
vault license get
shows the updated license
kubectl exec vault-0 -- vault license get
Vault enterprise prior to 1.8
In your chart overrides, set the values of server.image
to one of the enterprise release tags. Install the chart, and initialize and unseal vault as described in Running Vault.
After Vault has been initialized and unsealed, setup a port-forward tunnel to the Vault Enterprise cluster:
kubectl port-forward vault-0 8200:8200
Next, in a separate terminal, create a payload.json
file that contains the license key like this example:
{
"text": "01ABCDEFG..."
}
Finally, using curl, apply the license key to the Vault API:
curl \
--header "X-Vault-Token: VAULT_LOGIN_TOKEN_HERE" \
--request POST \
--data @payload.json \
http://127.0.0.1:8200/v1/sys/license
To verify that the license installation worked correctly, using curl
, run the following:
curl \
--header "X-Vault-Token: VAULT_LOGIN_TOKEN_HERE" \
http://127.0.0.1:8200/v1/sys/license