Protecting Ansible secrets with Mozilla SOPS

Mozilla SOPS allows to encrypt and decrypt files using various key sources (GPG, AWS KMS, GCP KMS, …). For structured data, such as YAML, JSON, INI and ENV files, it will encrypt values, but not mapping keys. For YAML files, it also encrypts comments. This makes it a great tool for encrypting credentials with Ansible: you can easily see which files contain which variable, but the variables themselves are encrypted.

The ability to utilize various keysources makes it easier to use in complex environments than Ansible Vault.

Installing sops

You can find binaries and packages on the project’s release page. Depending on your operating system, you might also be able to install it with your system’s package manager.

This collection provides a role community.sops.install which allows to install sops and GNU Privacy Guard (GPG). The role allows to install sops from the system’s package manager or from GitHub. Both sops and GPG can be installed on the remote hosts or the Ansible controller.

- name: Playbook to install sops
  hosts: all
  tasks:
    # To use the sops_encrypt module on a remote host, you need to install sops on it:
    - name: Install sops on remote hosts
      ansible.builtin.include_role:
        name: community.sops.install
      vars:
        sops_version: 2.7.0  # per default installs the latest version

    # To use the lookup plugin, filter plugin, vars plugin, or the load_vars action,
    # you need sops installed on localhost:
    - name: Install sops on localhost
      ansible.builtin.include_role:
        name: community.sops.install
      vars:
        sops_install_on_localhost: true

When using ansible-core 2.11 or later, you can also use two convenience playbooks:

# Install sops on Ansible controller
$ ansible-playbook community.sops.install_localhost

# Install sops on remote servers
$ ansible-playbook community.sops.install --inventory /path/to/inventory

Installing community.sops in an Execution Environment

When building an execution environment containing community.sops, please note that by default sops is not automatically installed. This is due to a limitation of the dependency specification system for execution environments. If you are building an execution environment that contains community.sops, you should make sure that sops is installed in it.

The simplest way of ensuring this is to use the community.sops.install_localhost playbook. When defining an execution environment, you can add a RUN additional build step to your execution-environment.yml:

---
version: 3
dependencies:
  galaxy: requirements.yml
additional_build_steps:
  append_final:
    # Ensure that sops is installed in the EE, assuming the EE is for ansible-core 2.11 or newer
    - RUN ansible-playbook -v community.sops.install_localhost

Note that this only works if the execution environment is built with ansible-core 2.11 or newer. When using an execution environment with Ansible 2.9, you have to use the community.sops.install role manually. Also note that you need to make sure that Ansible 2.9 uses the correct Python interpreter to be able to install system packages with; in the below example we are assuming a RHEL/CentOS based execution environment base image:

---
version: 3
dependencies:
  galaxy: requirements.yml
additional_build_steps:
  append_final:
    # Special step needed for Ansible 2.9 based EEs
    - >-
      RUN ansible localhost -m include_role -a name=community.sops.install
          -e sops_install_on_localhost=true
          -e ansible_python_interpreter=/usr/libexec/platform-python

Once this step has been taken care of, you can use all plugins and modules (on localhost) from community.sops in the execution environment.

Setting up sops

From now on this guide assumes that you have installed Mozilla SOPS.

For simplicity, you can work with GPG keys. If you do not have one, or do not want to use yours, you can run gpg --quick-generate-key me@example.com to create a GPG key for the user ID me@example.com. You will need its 40 hex-digit key ID that is printed at the end. The first step is to create a .sops.yaml file in the directory tree you are working in:

creation_rules:
  - pgp: 'FBC7B9E2A4F9289AC0C1D4843D16CEE4A27381B4'

Here, FBC7B9E2A4F9289AC0C1D4843D16CEE4A27381B4 is the 40 hex-digit key ID. With this file you can create a sops encrypted file by running the following in the directory where .sops.yaml was placed, or a subdirectory of it:

$ sops test.sops.yaml

This will open an editor window with an example YAML file. Put the following content in:

# This is a comment
hello: world
foo:
  - bar
  - baz

After closing the editor, sops will create test.sops.yaml with the encrypted contents:

#ENC[AES256_GCM,data:r6Ok05DzzHBO4tonlz2t49CF,iv:Y0P39iXwaGYU9NG5oRC3NuaGVL40uruSze0CxbDTpTk=,tag:EzoG+X+BJAHbxE0asSyGlQ==,type:comment]
hello: ENC[AES256_GCM,data:onBZqWk=,iv:bwj4bwaeh3vpVDYqY2AnYo1thF955i5vbFpCC1DwJtM=,tag:4qbVzuHTaPrXm64r2Rqz1Q==,type:str]
foo:
    - ENC[AES256_GCM,data:UsY8,iv:USv71rKfvbTF+3a5T2WO56wGVu609/0uigqkO0pa6U4=,tag:s8NdqLp+8OOQg4xDfE78oA==,type:str]
    - ENC[AES256_GCM,data:Dhmo,iv:qWs5gN2SCXYq0EfGelZhODsdViKB9w2taQMhsqy0D2g=,tag:I+ZFvuxnsvQmywqz+a/M9w==,type:str]
sops:
    kms: []
    gcp_kms: []
    azure_kv: []
    hc_vault: []
    age: []
    lastmodified: "2021-06-15T19:36:34Z"
    mac: ENC[AES256_GCM,data:HAvLeOvt7xWI7B5TCeDEsL6sOSzGGeTbgBSJaZkwadmoAm3Ny4IZPF8JAbFaPPLmN8FJVAt4D61aIWa6Xwi3xMj1g6DmxFfgK6JFJqWqW122UlMhqZ/WuMWFV6yVxpTLDXgemndgGDJqUTUi14FMh/MzPDg4f6kFP64kA9fpLrY=,iv:LdhswnMymZG8J9na/jnF3WYnX0DvzvoBlvjUCu4nI6c=,tag:Qt4d7L3FXsgfmg9iOs8P4A==,type:str]
    pgp:
        - created_at: "2021-06-15T19:36:01Z"
          enc: |-
            -----BEGIN PGP MESSAGE-----

            wcBMAyUpShfNkFB/AQgAT8OAKnWLBQRG3kT5lZCmyoPzK6RwF0zRkwCzJkLNl6xg
            nQjUjpD03ZD4FtiRidspXEj7NvCLDghJ0UETtDjmrwsTeJ5YAK/JxouWmoNhVVdF
            p0qOlj/THXIV+ypVaqrisZGZiTqeWjUNFuayknvjm3XduOOPZA1MIJ14pQxcgca4
            NWmKwPwXTWEy3RJ0ZsnjjjYvKHjHyvbHdbDgARu8R1jEgdNPKPBRVpEY6RNeafXI
            gFBVRfrhPKD6HmnmNvjHwUc/K+wOa1ciIYVrT4mPXoyBsFkyV0egh/QRf0JO8+X7
            Ut/jEtCrl9BXJCNYGmC5EU3PPiFlAu1MRxlCiPNWltLmASn2w62wMpgih6f+OpI/
            zyEOdz0qx80LEfhv3+jBbDfBwz4GqpAHUr0fCXDzeDiKfzlU6isagoIAhJfwX6oG
            NeQ47ktk1XhPmgIwxxuvonG14iQoU2cA
            =GoXQ
            -----END PGP MESSAGE-----
          fp: FBC7B9E2A4F9289AC0C1D4843D16CEE4A27381B4
    unencrypted_suffix: _unencrypted
    version: 3.7.1

The first line contains the encrypted content. The second line contains the unencrypted key of hello: world, and the encrypted string value world. The next few lines contain the unencrypted key foo with the encrypted list elements.

At the end, the sops section contains metadata, which includes the private key needed to decrypt the file encrypted with the public key of the GPG key ID FBC7B9E2A4F9289AC0C1D4843D16CEE4A27381B4. If you had multiple GPG keys configured, or also other key sources, you can also find the file secret key encrypted with these keys here.

Working with encrypted files

You can decrypt sops-encrypted files with the community.sops.sops lookup plugin, and dynamically encrypt data with the community.sops.sops_encrypt module. Being able to encrypt is useful when you create or update secrets in your Ansible playbooks.

Assume that you have an encrypted private key keys/private_key.pem.sops, which was in PEM format before being encrypted by sops:

$ openssl genrsa -out keys/private_key.pem 2048
$ sops --encrypt keys/private_key.pem > keys/private_key.pem.sops
$ wipe keys/private_key.pem

To use it in a playbook, for example to pass it to the community.crypto.openssl_csr module to create a certificate signing request (CSR), you can use the community.sops.sops lookup plugin to load it:

---
- name: Load sops-encrypted private key
  hosts: localhost
  gather_facts: false
  tasks:
    - name: Create CSR with encrypted private key
      community.crypto.openssl_csr:
        # The private key is provided with sops:
        privatekey_content: "{{ lookup('community.sops.sops', 'keys/private_key.pem.sops') }}"
        # Store the CSR on disk unencrypted:
        path: ansible.com.csr
        # This is going to be a CSR for ansible.com and www.ansible.com
        subject_alt_name:
          - DNS:ansible.com
          - DNS:www.ansible.com
        use_common_name_for_san: false

This results in the following output:

PLAY [Load sops-encrypted private key] ***************************************************************************

TASK [Create CSR with encrypted private key] *********************************************************************
ok: [localhost]

PLAY RECAP *******************************************************************************************************
localhost                  : ok=1    changed=0    unreachable=0    failed=0    skipped=0    rescued=0    ignored=0

Afterwards, you will have a CSR ansible.com.csr for the encrypted private key keys/private_key.pem.sops.

If you want to use Ansible to generate (or update) the encrypted private key, you can use the community.crypto.openssl_privatekey_pipe module to generate (or update) the private key, and use the community.sops.sops_encrypt module to write it to disk in encrypted form:

---
- name: Create sops-encrypted private key
  hosts: localhost
  gather_facts: false
  tasks:
    - block:
        - name: Create private key
          community.crypto.openssl_privatekey_pipe:
            size: 2048
          no_log: true  # Always use this with openssl_privatekey_pipe!
          register: private_key

        - name: Write encrypted key to disk
          community.sops.sops_encrypt:
            path: keys/private_key.pem.sops
            content_text: "{{ private_key.privatekey }}"

      always:
        - name: Wipe private key from Ansible's facts
          # This is particularly important if the playbook doesn't end here!
          set_fact:
            private_key: ''

This playbook creates a new key on every run. If you want the private key creation to be idempotent, you need to do a little more work:

---
- name: Create sops-encrypted private key
  hosts: localhost
  gather_facts: false
  tasks:
    - block:
        - name: Create private key
          community.crypto.openssl_privatekey_pipe:
            size: 2048
            content: >-
              {{ lookup(
                    'community.sops.sops',
                    'keys/private_key.pem.sops',
                    empty_on_not_exist=true
                 ) }}
          no_log: true  # Always use this with openssl_privatekey_pipe!
          register: private_key

        - name: Write encrypted key to disk
          community.sops.sops_encrypt:
            path: keys/private_key.pem.sops
            content_text: "{{ private_key.privatekey }}"
          when: private_key is changed

      always:
        - name: Wipe private key from Ansible's facts
          # This is particularly important if the playbook doesn't end here!
          set_fact:
            private_key: ''

The empty_on_not_exist=true flag is needed to avoid the lookup to fail when the key does not yet exist. When this playbook is run twice, the output will be:

PLAY [Create sops-encrypted private key] *************************************************************************

TASK [Create private key] ****************************************************************************************
ok: [localhost]

TASK [Write encrypted key to disk] *******************************************************************************
skipping: [localhost]

TASK [Wipe private key from Ansible's facts] *********************************************************************
ok: [localhost]

PLAY RECAP *******************************************************************************************************
localhost                  : ok=2    changed=0    unreachable=0    failed=0    skipped=1    rescued=0    ignored=0

Working with encrypted data from other sources

You can use the community.sops.decrypt Jinja2 filter to decrypt arbitrary data. This can be data read earlier from a file, returned from an action, or obtained through some other means.

For example, assume that you want to decrypt a file retrieved from a HTTPS server with the ansible.builtin.uri module. To use the community.sops.sops lookup, you have to write it to a file first. With the filter, you can directly decrypt it:

---
- name: Decrypt file fetched from URL
  hosts: localhost
  gather_facts: false
  tasks:
    - name: Fetch file from URL
      ansible.builtin.uri:
        url: https://raw.githubusercontent.com/getsops/sops/master/functional-tests/res/comments.enc.yaml
        return_content: true
      register: encrypted_content

    - name: Show encrypted data
      debug:
        msg: "{{ encrypted_content.content | ansible.builtin.from_yaml }}"

    - name: Decrypt data and decode decrypted YAML
      set_fact:
        decrypted_data: "{{ encrypted_content.content | community.sops.decrypt | ansible.builtin.from_yaml }}"

    - name: Show decrypted data
      debug:
        msg: "{{ decrypted_data }}"

The output will be:

PLAY [Decrypt file fetched from URL] *****************************************************************************

TASK [Fetch file from URL] ***************************************************************************************
ok: [localhost]

TASK [Show encrypted data] ***************************************************************************************
ok: [localhost] => {
    "msg": {
        "dolor": "ENC[AES256_GCM,data:IgvT,iv:wtPNYbDTARFE810PH6ldOLzCDcAjkB/dzPsZjpgHcko=,tag:zwE8P+AwO1hrHkgF6pTbZw==,type:str]",
        "lorem": "ENC[AES256_GCM,data:PhmSdTs=,iv:J5ugEWq6RfyNx+5zDXvcTdoQ18YYZkqesDED7LNzou4=,tag:0Qrom6J6aUnZMZzGz5XCxw==,type:str]",
        "sops": {
            "age": [],
            "azure_kv": [],
            "gcp_kms": [],
            "hc_vault": [],
            "kms": [],
            "lastmodified": "2020-10-07T15:49:13Z",
            "mac": "ENC[AES256_GCM,data:2dhyKdHYSynjXPwYrn9356wA7vRKw+T5qwBenI2vZrgthpQBOCQG4M6f7eeH3VLTxB4mN4CAchb25dsNRoGr6A38VruaSSAhPco3Rh4AlvKSvXuhgRnzZvNxE/bnHX1D4K5cdTb4FsJg/Ue1l7UcWrlrv1s3H3SwLHP/nf+suD0=,iv:6xBYURjjaQzlUOKOrs2NWOChiNFZVAGPJZQZ59MwX3o=,tag:uXD5VYme+c8eHcCc5TD2YA==,type:str]",
            "pgp": [
                {
                    "created_at": "2019-08-29T21:52:32Z",
                    "enc": "-----BEGIN PGP MESSAGE-----\n\nhQEMAyUpShfNkFB/AQgAlvpTj0NYqF4mQyIeM7wX2SHLb4U07/flpqDpp2W/30Pz\nAHA7sYrgP0l8BrjT2kwtgCN0cdfoIHJudezrNjANp2P5TbP2b9kYYNxpehzB9PFj\nFixnCS7Zp8WIt1yXr1TX+ANZoXLopVcRbMaQ5OdH7CN1pNQtMR+R3FR3X/IqKxiU\nDo1YLaooRJICUC8LJw2Tb4K+lYnTSqd/HalLGym++ivFvdDB1Ya1GhT1FswXidXK\nIRjsOVbxV0q5VeNOR0zxsheOvuHyCje16c7NXJtATJVWtTFABJB8u7CY5HhZSgq+\nrXJHyLHqVLzJ8E4WqHQkMNUlVcrqAz7glZ6xbAhfI9JeAYk5SuBOQOQ4yvASqH4K\nb0N3+/abluBY7YPqKuRZBiEtmcYlZ+zIHuOTP1rD/7L5VY8CwE5U8SFlEqwM7nQJ\n6/vtl6qngOFjwt34WrhZzUfLPB/wRV/m1Qv2kr0RNA==\n=Ykiw\n-----END PGP MESSAGE-----\n",
                    "fp": "FBC7B9E2A4F9289AC0C1D4843D16CEE4A27381B4"
                }
            ],
            "unencrypted_suffix": "_unencrypted",
            "version": "3.6.1"
        }
    }
}

TASK [Decrypt data] **********************************************************************************************
ok: [localhost]

TASK [Show decrypted data] ***************************************************************************************
ok: [localhost] => {
    "msg": {
        "dolor": "sit",
        "lorem": "ipsum"
    }
}

PLAY RECAP *******************************************************************************************************
localhost                  : ok=4    changed=0    unreachable=0    failed=0    skipped=0    rescued=0    ignored=0

Please note that if you put a Jinja2 expression in a variable, it will be evaluated every time it is used. Decrypting data takes a certain amount of time. If you need to use an expression multiple times, it is better to store its evaluated form as a fact with ansible.bulitin.set_fact first. This can be important if decrypted data should be passed to a role

---
- name: Decrypt file fetched from URL
  hosts: localhost
  gather_facts: false
  tasks:
    - name: Fetch file from URL
      ansible.builtin.uri:
        url: https://raw.githubusercontent.com/getsops/sops/master/functional-tests/res/comments.enc.yaml
        return_content: true
      register: encrypted_content

    # BAD: every time the role uses decrypted_data, the data will be decrypted!

    - name: Call role with decrypted data
      include_role:
        name: myrole
      vars:
        role_parameter: "{{ encrypted_content.content | community.sops.decrypt | ansible.builtin.from_yaml }}"

    # GOOD: the data is decrypted once before the role is called,

    - name: Store decrypted data as fact
      set_fact:
        decrypted_data: "{{ encrypted_content.content | community.sops.decrypt | ansible.builtin.from_yaml }}"

    - name: Call role with decrypted data
      include_role:
        name: myrole
      vars:
        role_parameter: "{{ decrypted_data }}"

Working with encrypted variables

You can load encrypted variables similarly to the ansible.builtin.host_group_vars vars plugin with the community.sops.sops vars plugin. If you need to load variables dynamically similarly to the ansible.builtin.include_vars action, you can use the community.sops.load_vars action.

To use the vars plugin, you need to enable it in your Ansible config file (ansible.cfg):

[defaults]
vars_plugins_enabled = host_group_vars,community.sops.sops

See VARIABLE_PLUGINS_ENABLED for more details on enabling vars plugins. Then you can put files with the following extensions into the group_vars and host_vars directories:

  • .sops.yaml

  • .sops.yml

  • .sops.json

The vars plugin will decrypt them and you can use their unencrypted content transparently.

If you need to dynamically load encrypted variables, similar to the built-in ansible.builtin.include_vars action, you can use the community.sops.load_vars action action. Please note that it is not a perfect replacement, since the built-in action relies on some hard-coded special casing in ansible-core which allows it to load the variables actually as variables (more precisely: as “unsafe” Jinja2 expressions which are automatically evaluated when used). Other action plugins, such as community.sops.load_vars, cannot do that and have to load the variables as facts instead.

This is mostly relevant if you use Jinja2 expressions in the encrypted variable file. When ansible.builtin.include_vars loads a variable file with expressions, these expressions will only be evaluated when the variable that defines them needs to be evaluated (lazy evaluation). Since community.sops.load_vars returns facts, it has to directly evaluate expressions at load time. (For this, set its expressions option to evaluate-on-load.) This is mostly relevant if you want to refer to other variables from the same file: this will not work, since Ansible does not know the other variable yet while evaluating the first. It will only “know” them as facts after all have been evaluated and the action finishes.

For the following example, assume you have the encrypted file keys/credentials.sops.yml which decrypts to:

encrypted_password: foo
expression: "{{ inventory_hostname }}"

Consider the following playbook:

---
- name: Create sops-encrypted private key
  hosts: localhost
  gather_facts: false
  tasks:
    - name: Load encrypted credentials
      community.sops.load_vars:
        file: keys/credentials.sops.yml
        expressions: ignore  # explicitly do not evaluate expressions
                             # on load (this is the default)

    - name: Show password
      debug:
        msg: "The password is {{ encrypted_password }}"

    - name: Show expression
      debug:
        msg: "The expression is {{ expression }}"

Running it produces:

PLAY [Create sops-encrypted private key] *************************************************************************

TASK [Load encrypted credentials] ********************************************************************************
ok: [localhost]

TASK [Show password] *********************************************************************************************
ok: [localhost] => {
    "msg": "The password is foo"
}

TASK [Show expression] *******************************************************************************************
ok: [localhost] => {
    "msg": "The expression is {{ inventory_hostname }}"
}

PLAY RECAP *******************************************************************************************************
localhost                  : ok=3    changed=0    unreachable=0    failed=0    skipped=0    rescued=0    ignored=0

If you change the variable loading task to:

- name: Load encrypted credentials
  community.sops.load_vars:
    file: keys/credentials.sops.yml
    expressions: evaluate-on-load

The last task will now show the evaluated expression:

TASK [Show expression] *******************************************************************************************
ok: [localhost] => {
    "msg": "The expression is localhost"
}