Access credentials from AWS Secrets Manager in your Jenkins jobs.
This plugin is the high-level counterpart of the AWS Secrets Manager SecretSource plugin. It pulls in that plugin as a dependency, so by installing the CredentialsProvider on Jenkins you get the SecretSource 'for free'. This dependency will be removed in future, at which point you will need to install the SecretSource plugin separately.
- Read-only view of Secrets Manager.
CredentialsProvider
andSecretSource
API support.- Credential metadata caching (duration: 5 minutes).
Give Jenkins read access to Secrets Manager with an IAM policy.
Required permissions:
secretsmanager:GetSecretValue
secretsmanager:ListSecrets
Optional permissions:
kms:Decrypt
(if you use a customer-managed KMS key to encrypt the secret)
Example:
{
"Version": "2012-10-17",
"Statement": [
{
"Sid": "AllowJenkinsToGetSecretValues",
"Effect": "Allow",
"Action": "secretsmanager:GetSecretValue",
"Resource": "*"
},
{
"Sid": "AllowJenkinsToListSecrets",
"Effect": "Allow",
"Action": "secretsmanager:ListSecrets"
}
]
}
The plugin uses the AWS Java SDK to communicate with Secrets Manager. If you are running Jenkins outside EC2 or EKS you may need to manually configure the SDK to authenticate with AWS. See the authentication guide for more information.
Then, install and configure the plugin.
The plugin allows secrets from Secrets Manager to be used as Jenkins credentials.
Jenkins must know which credential type a secret is meant to be (e.g. Secret Text, Username With Password), in order to present it as a credential. To do this, you MUST add the relevant AWS tags to the secrets in Secrets Manager, as shown in the sections below. (If the credentials cache is enabled you must also wait for that to refresh before the newly annotated secrets appear in Jenkins.) Without these tags, the corresponding credentials will not appear in Jenkins.
Note: If you use this plugin together with the AWS Secrets Manager SecretSource plugin, remember that any string secret is accessible through SecretSource, but only a secret with the jenkins:credentials:type
tag is accessible through CredentialsProvider. This distinction allows you to share tagged secrets between both APIs, while untagged secrets are only accessible through SecretSource.
A simple text secret.
- Value: secret
- Tags:
jenkins:credentials:type
=string
AWS CLI:
aws secretsmanager create-secret --name 'newrelic-api-key' --secret-string 'abc123' --tags 'Key=jenkins:credentials:type,Value=string' --description 'Acme Corp Newrelic API key'
Declarative Pipeline:
pipeline {
agent any
environment {
NEWRELIC_API_KEY = credentials('newrelic-api-key')
}
stages {
stage('Foo') {
steps {
echo 'Hello world'
}
}
}
}
Scripted Pipeline:
node {
withCredentials([string(credentialsId: 'newrelic-api-key', variable: 'NEWRELIC_API_KEY')]) {
echo 'Hello world'
}
}
A username and password pair.
- Value: password
- Tags:
jenkins:credentials:type
=usernamePassword
jenkins:credentials:username
= username
AWS CLI:
aws secretsmanager create-secret --name 'artifactory' --secret-string 'supersecret' --tags 'Key=jenkins:credentials:type,Value=usernamePassword' 'Key=jenkins:credentials:username,Value=joe' --description 'Acme Corp Artifactory login'
Declarative Pipeline:
pipeline {
agent any
environment {
// Creates variables ARTIFACTORY=joe:supersecret, ARTIFACTORY_USR=joe, ARTIFACTORY_PSW=supersecret
ARTIFACTORY = credentials('artifactory')
}
stages {
stage('Foo') {
steps {
echo 'Hello world'
}
}
}
}
Scripted Pipeline:
node {
withCredentials([usernamePassword(credentialsId: 'artifactory', usernameVariable: 'ARTIFACTORY_USR', passwordVariable: 'ARTIFACTORY_PSW')]) {
echo 'Hello world'
}
}
An SSH private key, with a username.
- Value: private key
- Tags:
jenkins:credentials:type
=sshUserPrivateKey
jenkins:credentials:username
= username
Common private key formats include PKCS#1 (starts with -----BEGIN [ALGORITHM] PRIVATE KEY-----
) and PKCS#8 (starts with -----BEGIN PRIVATE KEY-----
).
Note: The passphrase field is not supported. (The SSHUserPrivateKey#getPassphrase()
implementation returns an empty string if called.) This is because any passphrase would have to be stored as a tag on the AWS secret, but tags are non-secret metadata (visible in any ListSecrets
API call), so the passphrase would offer no meaningful security benefit in this provider.
AWS CLI:
ssh-keygen -t rsa -b 4096 -C '[email protected]' -f id_rsa
aws secretsmanager create-secret --name 'ssh-key' --secret-string 'file://id_rsa' --tags 'Key=jenkins:credentials:type,Value=sshUserPrivateKey' 'Key=jenkins:credentials:username,Value=joe' --description 'Acme Corp SSH key'
Declarative Pipeline:
pipeline {
agent any
environment {
// Creates variables KEY=/temp/path/to/key, KEY_USR=joe
KEY = credentials('ssh-key')
}
stages {
stage('Foo') {
steps {
echo 'Hello world'
}
}
}
}
Scripted Pipeline:
node {
withCredentials([sshUserPrivateKey(credentialsId: 'ssh-key', keyFileVariable: 'KEY', usernameVariable: 'KEY_USR')]) {
echo 'Hello world'
}
}
A client certificate keystore in PKCS#12 format, encrypted with a zero-length password.
- Value: keystore
- Tags:
jenkins:credentials:type
=certificate
AWS CLI:
openssl pkcs12 -export -in /path/to/cert.pem -inkey /path/to/key.pem -out certificate.p12 -passout pass:
aws secretsmanager create-secret --name 'code-signing-cert' --secret-binary 'fileb://certificate.p12' --tags 'Key=jenkins:credentials:type,Value=certificate' --description 'Acme Corp code signing certificate'
Scripted Pipeline:
node {
withCredentials([certificate(credentialsId: 'code-signing-cert', keystoreVariable: 'STORE_FILE')]) {
echo 'Hello world'
}
}
A secret file with binary content and an optional filename.
- Value: content
- Tags:
jenkins:credentials:type
=file
jenkins:credentials:filename
= filename (optional)
The credential ID is used as the filename by default. In the rare cases when you need to override this (for example, if the credential ID would be an invalid filename on your filesystem), you can set the jenkins:credentials:filename
tag.
AWS CLI:
echo -n $'\x01\x02\x03' > license.bin
aws secretsmanager create-secret --name 'license-key' --secret-binary 'fileb://license.bin' --tags 'Key=jenkins:credentials:type,Value=file' --description 'License key'
Declarative Pipeline:
pipeline {
agent any
environment {
LICENSE_KEY_FILE = credentials('license-key')
}
stages {
stage('Example') {
steps {
echo 'Hello world'
}
}
}
}
Scripted Pipeline:
node {
withCredentials([file(credentialsId: 'license-key', variable: 'LICENSE_KEY_FILE')]) {
echo 'Hello world'
}
}
You may need to deal with multi-field credentials or vendor-specific credential types that the plugin does not (yet) support.
In this situation you have a couple of choices:
- Use the closest standard multi-field credential (e.g. Username With Password) that fits your requirements.
- Use a string credential, serialize all the fields into the secret value (e.g. as JSON or as a delimited string), and parse them in the job script. (This is a last resort when other methods don't work, e.g. when secret rotation would cause multiple fields to change.)
Example: Jenkins authenticates to Secrets Manager using the primary AWS credential (from the environment). You have a job that performs a particular AWS operation in a different account, which uses a secondary AWS credential. You choose to encode the secondary AWS credential as JSON in the string credential foo
:
node {
withCredentials([string(credentialsId: 'foo', variable: 'secret')]) {
script {
def creds = readJSON text: secret
env.AWS_ACCESS_KEY_ID = creds['accessKeyId']
env.AWS_SECRET_ACCESS_KEY = creds['secretAccessKey']
env.AWS_REGION = 'us-east-1' // or whatever
}
sh "aws sts get-caller-identity" // or whatever
}
}
The plugin has a couple of optional settings to fine-tune its behavior. In most installations you do not need to change these settings. If you need to change the configuration, you can use the Web UI or CasC.
You can set plugin configuration using the Web UI.
Go to Manage Jenkins
> Configure System
> AWS Secrets Manager Credentials Provider
and change the settings.
Available settings:
- Cache (on/off)
- Endpoint Configuration
- Service Endpoint
- Signing Region
- ListSecrets configuration
You can set plugin configuration using Jenkins Configuration As Code.
Schema:
unclassified:
awsCredentialsProvider:
cache: (boolean) # optional
endpointConfiguration: # optional
serviceEndpoint: (URL)
signingRegion: (string)
listSecrets: # optional
filters:
- key: name
values:
- (string)
- key: tag-key
values:
- (string)
- key: tag-value
values:
- (string)
- key: description
values:
- (string) # note: filtering by tags or name is usually a better approach
- Docker
- Java
- Maven
In Maven:
mvn clean verify
In your IDE:
- Generate translations:
mvn localizer:generate
. (This is a one-off task. You only need to re-run this if you change the translations, or if you clean the Maventarget
directory.) - Compile.
- Start Moto:
mvn docker:build docker:start
. - Run tests.
- Stop Moto:
mvn docker:stop
.