Kubernetes Secrets are very flexible and can be consumed in many ways. Secret values can be passed to containers as environment variables or appear as regular files when mounting secret volumes.
Often users end up using the latter method just to wrap full configuration files into k8s secrets, just because one or more fields in the config file happen to be secrets (e.g. a database password, or a session cookie encryption key).
Ideally you should avoid configuring your software that way, instead split your configuration from your secrets somehow. Also make sure you know about 12 Factor.
That said, there are circumstances where you just have to provide such a file to your application (perhaps because it's a legacy app) and encrypting the whole configuration file in a single SealedSecrets item is problematic:
- You cannot easily update individual secret values (e.g. rotate your DB password), without first decrypting the whole configuration file.
- Since the whole configuration file is encrypted, it's hard to view, change (and review) non-secret parts of the config.
This example shows how to use built in support for templating encrypted secret values into a plaintext key template.
To update the encrypted data in the included SealedSecret with your own value for server1
you can run:
echo -n baz | kubectl create secret generic example --dry-run=client --from-file=server1=/dev/stdin -o json \
| kubeseal -o yaml --merge-into sealedsecret.yaml