Boundary
Manage SSH keys with HCP Boundary and Vault
Boundary includes support for credential management of SSH keys though its credential brokering feature. HCP Boundary and Boundary Enterprise introduce credential injection: the ability to inject SSH credentials into sessions, particularly using Vault.
This tutorial will demonstrate SSH credential injection for an SSH target previously configured in this tutorial series.
Warning
This tutorial requires you to have completed all previous tutorials in this series. For a complete example of SSH credential injection, refer to the HCP credential injection with private Vault tutorial.
A self-managed HCP worker is required for integrating private Vault clusters with HCP Boundary. To learn more about setting up self-managed workers, refer back to the Self-Managed Worker Registration with HCP Boundary tutorial.
Tutorial overview
- Prerequisites
- Background
- Set up Vault
- Set up Boundary
- Configure an SSH target
- Inject credentials into sessions
Prerequisites
This tutorial assumes the learner has completed all previous tutorials in the HCP Boundary Getting Administration collection. The learner should have a working HCP Boundary cluster, a preconfigured Ubuntu target, and a self-managed worker deployed in the same network as the target.
A Boundary binary greater than 0.12.0 in your
PATH
A Vault binary greater than 1.7.0 in your
PATH
Installing the Boundary Desktop App provides an optional workflow at the end of this tutorial. The 1.2.0 version or above is required for Vault support.
This tutorial assumes basic knowledge of using Vault, including running a development server and managing policies, roles, and tokens. If you are new to using Vault, complete the Getting Started with Vault quick start tutorials before integrating Vault with Boundary.
Credential injection background
Boundary is a distributed system for managing identity-based access to computing resources. Core to Boundary are controllers and workers which, from a resource point of view, are referred to as servers. Controllers are responsible for authenticating and authorizing users, as well as serving user API requests for processes like session initiation. They also assign jobs to workers, such as session handling, session recording, and parsing. Workers are responsible for session proxying, as well as other jobs that involve storage.
SSH, also known as Secure Shell, is arguably the de facto tool for remote administration, enabling end users and administrators with a simple, powerful and secure access method. SSH offers a variety of benefits and configurations, such as:
- Encryption
- Support for multiple keys types and sizes
- Built in key exchange
- Ability to create a tunnel and spawn multiple channels
Boundary seamlessly provides authenticated users access to remote machines via their SSH client, regardless of the authentication mechanisms implemented by their administrators.
Previously Boundary supported credential brokering, where Boundary controllers check out credentials from Vault and return them back to users and clients. In this workflow, Boundary acts as a broker of the credential.
Brokering lacks the ability to hide credentials from clients. For credential injection, controllers instead return credentials to Boundary workers and create a session to a target where the user/client never has access to the credential. This workflow is called credential injection because the credential is injected into a worker’s session, instead of being passed back to the client.
Set up Vault
Note
This tutorial uses a Vault dev server to test credential injection. To access Vault, HCP Boundary requires a self-managed worker deployed in the same network.
Open a new terminal session and run Vault in development mode.
$ vault server -dev -dev-root-token-id=groot
==> Vault server configuration:
Api Address: http://127.0.0.1:8200
Cgo: disabled
Cluster Address: https://127.0.0.1:8201
Go Version: go1.16.7
Listener 1: tcp (addr: "127.0.0.1:8200", cluster address: "127.0.0.1:8201", max_request_duration: "1m30s", max_request_size: "33554432", tls: "disabled")
Log Level: info
Mlock: supported: false, enabled: false
Recovery Mode: false
Storage: inmem
Version: Vault v1.8.2
Version Sha: aca76f63357041a43b49f3e8c11d67358496959f
==> Vault server started! Log data will stream in below:
2022-05-05T14:01:31.647-0500 [INFO] proxy environment: http_proxy="" https_proxy="" no_proxy=""
2022-05-05T14:01:31.648-0500 [WARN] no `api_addr` value specified in config or in VAULT_API_ADDR; falling back to detection if possible, but this value should be manually set
2022-05-05T14:01:31.649-0500 [INFO] core: security barrier not initialized
2022-05-05T14:01:31.650-0500 [INFO] core: security barrier initialized: stored=1 shares=1 threshold=1
2022-05-05T14:01:31.650-0500 [INFO] core: post-unseal setup starting
2022-05-05T14:01:31.657-0500 [INFO] core: loaded wrapping token key
2022-05-05T14:01:31.657-0500 [INFO] core: successfully setup plugin catalog: plugin-directory=""
2022-05-05T14:01:31.657-0500 [INFO] core: no mounts; adding default mount table
2022-05-05T14:01:31.658-0500 [INFO] core: successfully mounted backend: type=cubbyhole path=cubbyhole/
2022-05-05T14:01:31.659-0500 [INFO] core: successfully mounted backend: type=system path=sys/
2022-05-05T14:01:31.659-0500 [INFO] core: successfully mounted backend: type=identity path=identity/
2022-05-05T14:01:31.663-0500 [INFO] core: successfully enabled credential backend: type=token path=token/
2022-05-05T14:01:31.663-0500 [INFO] rollback: starting rollback manager
2022-05-05T14:01:31.663-0500 [INFO] core: restoring leases
2022-05-05T14:01:31.664-0500 [INFO] identity: entities restored
2022-05-05T14:01:31.664-0500 [INFO] identity: groups restored
2022-05-05T14:01:31.666-0500 [INFO] core: post-unseal setup complete
2022-05-05T14:01:31.667-0500 [INFO] expiration: lease restore complete
2022-05-05T14:01:31.667-0500 [INFO] core: root token generated
2022-05-05T14:01:31.667-0500 [INFO] core: pre-seal teardown starting
2022-05-05T14:01:31.667-0500 [INFO] rollback: stopping rollback manager
2022-05-05T14:01:31.667-0500 [INFO] core: pre-seal teardown complete
2022-05-05T14:01:31.668-0500 [INFO] core.cluster-listener.tcp: starting listener: listener_address=127.0.0.1:8201
2022-05-05T14:01:31.668-0500 [INFO] core.cluster-listener: serving cluster requests: cluster_listen_address=127.0.0.1:8201
2022-05-05T14:01:31.668-0500 [INFO] core: post-unseal setup starting
2022-05-05T14:01:31.668-0500 [INFO] core: loaded wrapping token key
2022-05-05T14:01:31.668-0500 [INFO] core: successfully setup plugin catalog: plugin-directory=""
2022-05-05T14:01:31.668-0500 [INFO] core: successfully mounted backend: type=system path=sys/
2022-05-05T14:01:31.668-0500 [INFO] core: successfully mounted backend: type=identity path=identity/
2022-05-05T14:01:31.668-0500 [INFO] core: successfully mounted backend: type=cubbyhole path=cubbyhole/
2022-05-05T14:01:31.669-0500 [INFO] core: successfully enabled credential backend: type=token path=token/
2022-05-05T14:01:31.669-0500 [INFO] rollback: starting rollback manager
2022-05-05T14:01:31.669-0500 [INFO] core: restoring leases
2022-05-05T14:01:31.670-0500 [INFO] identity: entities restored
2022-05-05T14:01:31.670-0500 [INFO] identity: groups restored
2022-05-05T14:01:31.670-0500 [INFO] expiration: lease restore complete
2022-05-05T14:01:31.670-0500 [INFO] core: post-unseal setup complete
2022-05-05T14:01:31.670-0500 [INFO] core: vault is unsealed
2022-05-05T14:01:31.672-0500 [INFO] expiration: revoked lease: lease_id=auth/token/root/h49a4c4a4eef16a18370b98f2883fff349e0917dd5913d74c02bd97d04d8edcbb
2022-05-05T14:01:31.675-0500 [INFO] core: successful mount: namespace="" path=secret/ type=kv
2022-05-05T14:01:31.686-0500 [INFO] secrets.kv.kv_c1ca00f3: collecting keys to upgrade
2022-05-05T14:01:31.686-0500 [INFO] secrets.kv.kv_c1ca00f3: done collecting keys: num_keys=1
2022-05-05T14:01:31.686-0500 [INFO] secrets.kv.kv_c1ca00f3: upgrading keys finished
WARNING! dev mode is enabled! In this mode, Vault runs entirely in-memory
and starts unsealed with a single unseal key. The root token is already
authenticated to the CLI, so you can immediately begin using Vault.
You may need to set the following environment variable:
$ export VAULT_ADDR='http://127.0.0.1:8200'
The unseal key and root token are displayed below in case you want to
seal/unseal the Vault or re-authenticate.
Unseal Key: Yc27V3wm7l9axQaYQTxeZUlsn4AVOtqOPPUvvQuVOng=
Root Token: groot
Development mode should NOT be used in production installations!
Leave Vault running in dev mode and open a new terminal window.
Next, export the required Vault environment variables for the address and token.
$ export VAULT_ADDR="http://127.0.0.1:8200"; export VAULT_TOKEN="groot"
Deploy a self-managed worker
An HCP worker deployed on the same network as Vault is required for integrating private Vault clusters with HCP Boundary. To learn more about setting up self-managed workers, refer to the Self-Managed Worker Registration with HCP Boundary tutorial.
Download the Boundary Enterprise binary
Download the Boundary Enterprise binary to the ~/boundary/
directory. If you
already have the Boundary Enterprise binary locally available from a previous
tutorial, skip to the Write the worker config
section.
Note
If you already deployed a self-managed worker locally in the Self-managed worker registration tutorial, verify it is still running, then skip to the Define the controller policy section.
You can manually download the latest binary for your operating system by navigating to the Boundary releases page. The example below demonstrates downloading the binary using the command line.
Note
The binary version should match the version of the HCP control plane. Check the version of the control plane in the HCP Boundary portal, and download the appropriate version using wget. The example below downloads the 0.13.2 version of the Boundary Enterprise binary.
Below is an example of downloading and unzipping the Boundary Enterprise binary on Ubuntu, MacOS, and Windows.
The following command downloads the Boundary Enterprise binary and unzips it to the current directory.
$ wget -q https://releases.hashicorp.com/boundary/0.13.2+ent/boundary_0.13.2+ent_linux_amd64.zip ;\
sudo apt-get update && sudo apt-get install unzip ;\
unzip *.zip
Once downloaded, verify the version of the boundary binary.
$ ./boundary version
Version information:
Build Date: 2023-06-07T16:41:10Z
Git Revision: b1f75f5c731c843f5c987feae310d86e635806c7
Metadata: ent
Version Number: 0.13.2+ent
Ensure the Version Number matches the version of the HCP Boundary control plane. They should match in order to get the latest HCP Boundary features.
Write the worker config
Next, create a new file named vault-worker.hcl
in the ~/boundary/
directory.
$ touch ~/boundary/vault-worker.hcl
Open the file with a text editor, such as Vi.
Paste the following configuration into the worker config file:
~/boundary/vault-worker.hcl
disable_mlock = true
hcp_boundary_cluster_id = "<cluster-id>"
listener "tcp" {
address = "127.0.0.1:9202"
purpose = "proxy"
}
worker {
auth_storage_path = "/home/myusername/boundary/vault-worker"
tags {
type = ["worker", "vault"]
}
}
Update the cluster id in the vault-worker.hcl
file:
The <cluster-id>
on line 3 can be determined from the UUID in the HCP
Boundary Cluster URL. For example, if your Cluster URL is:
https://c3a7a20a-f663-40f3-a8e3-1b2f69b36254.boundary.hashicorp.cloud
,
then the cluster id is c3a7a20a-f663-40f3-a8e3-1b2f69b36254
The auth_storage_path
should match the full path to the ~/boundary/vault-worker
directory, such as /home/myusername/boundary/vault-worker
.
Save this file.
Start the worker
With the worker config defined, start the worker server. Provide the full path
to the worker config file (such as /home/myusername/boundary/vault-worker.hcl
).
$ ./boundary server -config="/home/myusername/boundary/vault-worker.hcl"
==> Boundary server configuration:
Cgo: disabled
Listener 1: tcp (addr: "0.0.0.0:9202", max_request_duration: "1m30s", purpose: "proxy")
Log Level: info
Mlock: supported: true, enabled: false
Version: Boundary v0.13.2+ent
Version Sha: b1f75f5c731c843f5c987feae310d86e635806c7
Worker Auth Current Key Id: preaching-favored-verbalize-widen-duchess-relish-jurist-sly
Worker Auth Registration Request: GzusqckarbczHoLGQ4UA25uSRmUHY1BGSRA6cePp8RWHQFUYSrf3hnDw4ETPswFnMrcxx6tq7BUWD5azGULzPecPicuYGD6qg3qYvaGRgHgKwvh9FLY9Gu891KSj8hAef19JjHog8d7qpo9f9KoiwrhfcV2YxGyVu1P943656iNGCFHWiBR3ofsyTatQ7fzcMV2ciKtuYYGfx4FfiRStnkAzoE98RdR2LeCk2huRkFt7ayeeWVfD7Awm8xaZfFJn4pYRJwu2LRBeNs915warEBaS8XHXSKoi3cRUYif8Qu
Worker Auth Storage Path: /home/ubuntu/boundary/vault-worker
Worker Public Proxy Addr: 127.0.0.1:9202
==> Boundary server started! Log data will stream in below:
{"id":"Rb7PMMBdZa","source":"https://hashicorp.com/boundary/ip-172-31-84-100/worker","specversion":"1.0","type":"system","data":{"version":"v0.1","op":"worker.(Worker).StartControllerConnections","data":{"msg":"Setting HCP Boundary cluster address e58fe114-7624-431c-994d-b6670e90b09f.proxy.boundary.hashicorp.cloud:9202 as upstream address"}},"datacontentype":"application/cloudevents","time":"2022-09-19T22:16:38.770232603Z"}
The worker will start and begin attempting to connect to the upstream Controller.
The worker also outputs its authorization request as the Worker Auth
Registration Request token. This will also be saved to a file,
auth_request_token
, defined by the auth_storage_path
in the worker config.
Note the Worker Auth Registration Request:
value. This value can also be
located in the ~/boundary/vault-worker/auth_request_token
directory. Copy this
value.
Register the worker with HCP
HCP workers can be registered using the Boundary CLI or Admin Console Web UI.
Authenticate to HCP Boundary as the admin user.
Log in to the HCP portal.
From the HCP Portal's Boundary page, click Open Admin UI - a new page will open.
Enter the admin username and password you created when you deployed the new instance and click Authenticate.
Once logged in, navigate to the Workers page.
Notice that only HCP workers are listed.
Click New.
Scroll down to the bottom of the New Worker page and paste the Worker Auth Registration Request key you copied earlier.
Click Register Worker.
Click Done and notice the new worker on the Workers page.
Define the controller policy
The following Vault policy must be defined for the Boundary controller to support credential brokering. To learn more about these policies, refer to the HCP Boundary Vault credential brokering quickstart tutorial.
Export the required Vault environment variables to store the Vault address and token.
$ export VAULT_ADDR="http://127.0.0.1:8200"; export VAULT_TOKEN="groot"
Now write the controller policy to Vault.
$ vault policy write boundary-controller -<<EOF
path "auth/token/lookup-self" {
capabilities = ["read"]
}
path "auth/token/renew-self" {
capabilities = ["update"]
}
path "auth/token/revoke-self" {
capabilities = ["update"]
}
path "sys/leases/renew" {
capabilities = ["update"]
}
path "sys/leases/revoke" {
capabilities = ["update"]
}
path "sys/capabilities-self" {
capabilities = ["update"]
}
EOF
Define the KV policy
A policy must also be defined for the key-value secrets that will be brokered via Vault.
Create a new kv-read
policy in Vault.
$ vault policy write kv-read -<<EOF
path "secret/data/ubuntu-secret" {
capabilities = ["read"]
}
EOF
Lastly, create a new Vault KV credential at the secret/my-secret
path and
provide the username and private key for the ubuntu target machine you are
connecting to. If using a cloud provider like AWS, the private
key
was provided or created when the instance was set up at the beginning of the
HCP administration
tutorials.
Ensure the path to the private key is entered after the @
symbol (for example,
private_key=@/Users/myuser/.ssh/ubuntu-private-key.pem
)
$ vault kv put secret/ubuntu-secret username=ubuntu private_key=@/path/to/private-key
====== Secret Path ======
secret/data/ubuntu-secret
======= Metadata =======
Key Value
--- -----
created_time 2023-08-24T23:45:06.923374Z
custom_metadata <nil>
deletion_time n/a
destroyed false
version 1
Create a Vault token
Now create a Vault token.
$ vault token create \
-no-default-policy=true \
-policy="boundary-controller" \
-policy="kv-read" \
-orphan=true \
-period=20m \
-renewable=true \
-field=token
Example:
$ vault token create \
-no-default-policy=true \
-policy="boundary-controller" \
-policy="kv-read" \
-orphan=true \
-period=20m \
-renewable=true \
-field=token
hvs.CAESIIGB4m5Z0ZkimEXi0GKZ5k0twCBkJPI5mcHyPq1rSs_wGh4KHGh2cy5Rb1F4NDVabTVIb1lwVUMzY3ZMdThsVTE
Copy the token value and export it as the $CRED_STORE_TOKEN
variable.
Note
If you plan on using the Admin Console UI to connect, save this value for creating a credential store later on.
$ export CRED_STORE_TOKEN=hvs.CAESIIGB4m5Z0ZkimEXi0GKZ5k0twCBkJPI5mcHyPq1rSs_wGh4KHGh2cy5Rb1F4NDVabTVIb1lwVUMzY3ZMdThsVTE
Set up Boundary
Start by logging in to HCP Boundary within the terminal.
Export the BOUNDARY_ADDR
and BOUNDARY_AUTH_METHOD_ID
environment variables. These
values are gathered from the HCP Boundary Admin Console, as demonstrated in the
Get Started with HCP
Boundary
tutorials.
$ export BOUNDARY_AUTH_METHOD_ID=copied-value-from-boundary-ui; export BOUNDARY_ADDR=copied-value-from-hcp-portal
Log in to the CLI as an admin user, or a user with privileges to manage
resources in the global scope. Enter your admin username for login-name
.
Enter password
at the Please enter the password (it will be hidden):
prompt.
$ boundary authenticate password \
-auth-method-id=$BOUNDARY_AUTH_METHOD_ID \
-login-name=awesome-admin
You will also need an ORG_ID
to create the SSH test project within. You may
create a new global scope for this, or utilize an existing scope used for
testing.
If creating a new org for testing, execute the following:
$ boundary scopes create -scope-id=global -name=testing-org -description="SSH testing org"
Scope information:
Created Time: Mon, 09 May 2022 12:33:12 CDT
Description: SSH testing org
ID: o_YcngFcjRcP
Name: testing-org
Updated Time: Mon, 09 May 2022 12:33:12 CDT
Version: 1
Scope (parent):
ID: global
Name: global
Type: global
Authorized Actions:
no-op
read
update
delete
Whether you create a new org or not, be sure to export the org ID.
$ export ORG_ID=global-testing-org-id
Set up a new project
Create a new project scope within Boundary. You will need an org ID to create
the new project within. To view your existing orgs, execute boundary scopes
list -recursive
.
Note
You may use an existing org scope, or create a new org scope for the ssh-project. Refer to the Manage Scopes tutorial to learn more about creating and managing scopes.
$ boundary scopes create -scope-id=$ORG_ID -name=ssh-project -description="SSH test machines"
Scope information:
Created Time: Fri, 06 May 2022 14:13:39 CDT
Description: SSH test machines
ID: p_TRfAEMzkAP
Name: ssh-project
Updated Time: Fri, 06 May 2022 14:13:39 CDT
Version: 1
Scope (parent):
ID: o_26VOj9vJjN
Name: ssh-org
Parent Scope ID: global
Type: org
Authorized Actions:
no-op
read
update
delete
Copy the ID from the output and export it as the $PROJECT_ID
variable.
$ export PROJECT_ID=p_TRfAEMzkAP
Create a credential store
Next, create a new credential store within Boundary using the new token. The
vault
credential store type is used to integrate with Vault, but static
credential stores can also be used with credential injection.
When setting up an HCP worker, it's important to create a worker filter for the credential store. A worker filter will identify workers that should be used as proxies for the new credential store, and ensure these credentials are brokered from the private Vault.
Recall the filters defined in the vault-worker.hcl
file earlier:
worker {
auth_storage_path = "/home/myusername/boundary/vault-worker"
tags {
type = ["worker", "vault"]
}
}
The Tags
or Name
of the worker (vault-worker
) can be used to create a
worker filter for the target.
The example below adds a worker tag filter that searches for workers with the
vault
tag. Boundary will consider any worker with this tag assigned to it an
acceptable proxy for the new credential store.
Create a new vault
credential store with a worker-filter
.
$ boundary credential-stores create vault \
-scope-id $PROJECT_ID \
-vault-address $VAULT_ADDR \
-vault-token $CRED_STORE_TOKEN \
-worker-filter='"vault" in "/tags/type"'
Example output:
$ boundary credential-stores create vault \
-scope-id $PROJECT_ID \
-vault-address $VAULT_ADDR \
-vault-token $CRED_STORE_TOKEN \
-worker-filter='"vault" in "/tags/type"'
Credential Store information:
Created Time: Thu, 24 Aug 2023 17:57:27 MDT
ID: csvlt_ItzbO5ULBF
Type: vault
Updated Time: Thu, 24 Aug 2023 17:57:27 MDT
Version: 1
Scope:
ID: p_1PgXI0HPSR
Name: ssh-project
Parent Scope ID: o_pwVF9V4hK6
Type: project
Authorized Actions:
no-op
read
update
delete
Authorized Actions on Credential Store's Collections:
credential-libraries:
create
list
Attributes:
Address: http://127.0.0.1:8200
Token HMAC:
8xy1fErkPOtQ36OZbyKg4TPOp2XQtQRZXE7V9WZJPk0
Token Status: current
Worker Filter: "vault" in "/tags/type"
Store the returned ID value in the $CRED_STORE_ID
variable.
$ export CRED_STORE_ID=csvlt_ItzbO5ULBF
Create credential library
Create a new credential library of type ssh_private_key
within Boundary
using the credential store ID and passing the vault-path of ubuntu-secret
.
$ boundary credential-libraries create vault-generic \
-credential-store-id $CRED_STORE_ID \
-vault-path "secret/data/ubuntu-secret" \
-name "vault-cred-library" \
-credential-type ssh_private_key
Example output:
$ boundary credential-libraries create vault-generic \
-credential-store-id $CRED_STORE_ID \
-vault-path "secret/data/ubuntu-secret" \
-name "vault-cred-library" \
-credential-type ssh_private_key
Credential Library information:
Created Time: Thu, 24 Aug 2023 18:00:37 MDT
Credential Store ID: csvlt_ItzbO5ULBF
ID: clvlt_xzJeddzCw6
Name: vault-cred-library
Type: vault-generic
Updated Time: Thu, 24 Aug 2023 18:00:37 MDT
Version: 1
Scope:
ID: p_1PgXI0HPSR
Name: ssh-project
Parent Scope ID: o_pwVF9V4hK6
Type: project
Authorized Actions:
no-op
read
update
delete
Attributes:
HTTP Method: GET
Path: secret/data/ubuntu-secret
Credential Type:
ssh_private_key
Copy the ID from the output and export it as the $CRED_LIB_SSH_ID
variable.
$ export CRED_LIB_ID=clvlt_xzJeddzCw6
Create an SSH target
Earlier in this series, you created a target of type tcp
. To inject SSH
credentials, a target of type ssh
is required instead.
In the previous tutorials on worker management, you set up a multi-hop session to the target by configuring egress and ingress workers.
Ensure that you have the correct worker filter defined when setting up your
target. If you have modified how Boundary accesses the target, select from the
following examples to define the target worker config. For example, if you are
testing injection using a public ip address, you can omit the
-egress-worker-filter
entirely.
Select the appropriate tab for your worker setup.
Create a new ssh target, and set the address directly. Replace
"ubuntu-public-ip-address"
with the actual address of your Ubuntu host.
$ boundary targets create ssh -scope-id $PROJECT_ID \
-name "ubuntu ssh target" \
-address "ubuntu-public-ip-address" \
-session-connection-limit -1 \
-default-port 22
Example output:
$ boundary targets create ssh -scope-id $PROJECT_ID \
-name "ubuntu ssh target" \
-address 50.16.114.201 \
-session-connection-limit -1 \
-default-port 22
Target information:
Address: 50.16.114.201
Created Time: Thu, 24 Aug 2023
18:17:33 MDT
ID: tssh_4lKEOzTdi6
Name: ubuntu ssh target
Session Connection Limit: -1
Session Max Seconds: 28800
Type: ssh
Updated Time: Thu, 24 Aug 2023
18:17:33 MDT
Version: 1
Scope:
ID: p_1PgXI0HPSR
Name: ssh-project
Parent Scope ID: o_pwVF9V4hK6
Type: project
Authorized Actions:
no-op
read
update
delete
add-host-sources
set-host-sources
remove-host-sources
add-credential-sources
set-credential-sources
remove-credential-sources
authorize-session
Attributes:
Default Port: 22
Enable Session Recording: false
Copy the ID from the output and export it as the $SSH_TARGET_ID
variable.
$ export SSH_TARGET_ID=tssh_4lKEOzTdi6
Associate the SSH target with the SSH credential library for credential injection.
$ boundary targets add-credential-sources -id $SSH_TARGET_ID -injected-application-credential-source $CRED_LIB_ID
Target information:
Address: 50.16.114.201
Created Time: Thu, 24 Aug 2023
18:17:33 MDT
ID: tssh_4lKEOzTdi6
Name: ubuntu ssh target
Session Connection Limit: -1
Session Max Seconds: 28800
Type: ssh
Updated Time: Thu, 24 Aug 2023
18:18:53 MDT
Version: 2
Scope:
ID: p_1PgXI0HPSR
Name: ssh-project
Parent Scope ID: o_pwVF9V4hK6
Type: project
Authorized Actions:
no-op
read
update
delete
add-host-sources
set-host-sources
remove-host-sources
add-credential-sources
set-credential-sources
remove-credential-sources
authorize-session
Host Sources:
Host Catalog ID: hcst_51IX0mMocD
ID: hsst_xhgJzsoEO8
Injected Application Credential Sources:
Credential Store ID: csvlt_EsUGNcboLT
ID: clvlt_i5ZCg7LH4Q
Attributes:
Default Port: 2222
Enable Session Recording: false
Inject credentials into sessions
Now you are ready to inject credentials directly into the shell session. You can
accomplish this using the boundary connect
command, which has a helper called
ssh
.
Enter yes
when prompted to establish the connection.
$ boundary connect ssh -target-id $SSH_TARGET_ID
The authenticity of host '[127.0.0.1]:58677 ([127.0.0.1]:58677)' can't be established.
ED25519 key fingerprint is SHA256:WDPtMwr4whbVp5VUJwvzee7x9O25XhqMyApnz1mmNfg.
This host key is known by the following other names/addresses:
~/.ssh/known_hosts:9: hst_7jeh2z1mkk
Are you sure you want to continue connecting (yes/no/[fingerprint])? yes
Warning: Permanently added '[127.0.0.1]:58677' (ED25519) to the list of known hosts.
Welcome to Ubuntu 22.04.2 LTS (GNU/Linux 5.19.0-1025-aws x86_64)
* Documentation: https://help.ubuntu.com
* Management: https://landscape.canonical.com
* Support: https://ubuntu.com/advantage
ubuntu@ip-172-32-88-177:~
Notice that you do not have to pass the target credentials to the boundary
connect
command. The credentials are injected by Boundary directly from Vault,
and never returned to the client.
Troubleshooting
If the boundary connect ssh
command fails with the following error message, then the Vault credential store token may have expired.
Expand the accordion below to continue troubleshooting.
$ Error from controller when performing authorize-session action against given target
Error information:
Kind: FailedPrecondition
Message: No egress workers can handle this session, as they have all been filtered
out.
Status: 400
context: Error from controller when performing authorize-session action against
given target
The error information states that No egress workers can handle this session, as they have all been filtered
.
This implies that Boundary does not understand which worker should handle the session, and cannot route traffic through the worker it selected.
In this example the error could be due to either of the following errors:
- Boundary is unable to log into Vault using the provided credential store token.
- The ubuntu target's worker filters are unset, or incorrect.
First, troubleshoot the Vault credential store by generating a new Vault token.
$ export CRED_STORE_TOKEN=$(vault token create \
-no-default-policy=true \
-policy="boundary-controller" \
-policy="kv-read" \
-orphan=true \
-period=20m \
-renewable=true \
-field=token) && echo $CRED_STORE_TOKEN
Copy this token (such as hvs.CAESIAbmG5WIi0qILYm87ucbJSGa0rv879aJAchvFR6wG0pbGh4KHGh2cy5xY1BzTGpHUW91ZEx4ZGFTcFVDTkdPMTY
), and then update Boundary's Vault cred store with the new token value.
Log in to the Boundary Admin UI and select the
testing-org
scope. Select thessh-project
, then click Credential Stores.Select the Vault credential store (such as
csvlt_EsUGNcboLT
). Scroll down to the bottom of the credential store's Details page, and click Edit Form.Paste the newly generated vault token into the Token field, then click Save at the bottom of the page.
With the updated token in place, attempt to connect to the SSH target again.
$ boundary connect ssh -target-id $SSH_TARGET_ID
If you are still unable to establish a connection, check that the filter has been defined correctly on the SSH target.
Navigate to Targets using the sidebar and select the ubuntu ssh target.
Select the Workers tab.
Ensure that the Egress worker filter is not set, because any worker can be used to connect to the public instance.
If this is enabled, click Edit worker filters and delete the filter expression. When finished, click Save.
After verifying the correct filter value, attempt to establish a session.
$ boundary connect ssh -target-id $SSH_TARGET_ID
When finished, the user can close the connection to the server using exit
, or
the session can be canceled directly from Boundary in a new authenticated
terminal window.
Inject credentials with the Desktop App
To log into Boundary using the Desktop App, the BOUNDARY_ADDR
(Boundary
cluster address) and BOUNDARY_AUTH_METHOD_ID
(user Auth Method ID) values must be
gathered from the HCP Boundary Admin Console, as demonstrated in the HCP
Boundary Getting Started
tutorial.
Open the Boundary desktop app.
Enter the Boundary cluster URL (for example,
https://ffee961b-5fd8-4e68-ba1d-2bbb487b576e.boundary.hashicorp.cloud
) and
click Submit.
Authenticate using your HCP Boundary user credentials.
Under the Targets page, notice the target details for the ubuntu ssh target
.
Click Connect to initiate a session.
The Successfully Connected page will display the target ID (Target Connection details) and Proxy URL. Copy the Proxy URL and port.
To start a session, open your terminal or SSH client. A session can be started using SSH and the Proxy URL from the Boundary Desktop app.
Start an SSH connection on 127.0.0.1
and provide the proxy port using the
-p
option. Enter yes
when prompted to establish a connection.
$ ssh 127.0.0.1 -p 51968
The authenticity of host '[127.0.0.1]:53639 ([127.0.0.1]:53639)' can't be established.
ED25519 key fingerprint is SHA256:FkCPEt0izeFdyNkD1iRDa8IygT0UoHMxC2+NmneAyT8.
This key is not known by any other names
Are you sure you want to continue connecting (yes/no/[fingerprint])? yes
Warning: Permanently added '[127.0.0.1]:53639' (ED25519) to the list of known hosts.
Welcome to Ubuntu 22.04.2 LTS (GNU/Linux 5.19.0-1025-aws x86_64)
* Documentation: https://help.ubuntu.com
* Management: https://landscape.canonical.com
* Support: https://ubuntu.com/advantage
ubuntu@ip-172-32-88-177:~
When finished, the user can close the connection to the server by entering
exit
, or the session can be canceled directly from the Boundary desktop app
under the Sessions view.
Cleanup and teardown
Locate the terminal session used to execute the
vault dev
server command, and executectrl+c
to stop Vault.Locate the terminal session used to deploy the HCP worker server command, and execute
ctrl+c
to stop the Boundary worker.Unset the environment variables used in any active terminal windows for this tutorial.
$ unset VAULT_ADDR; unset VAULT_TOKEN
Clean up the Ubuntu target in Amazon EC2. Refer to the instructions for terminating your Ubuntu instance.
Next steps
This tutorial demonstrated the steps to set up credential injection using HCP Boundary and an SSH target previously configured in this tutorial collection. You set up Vault, configured a self-managed worker to access Vault, and configured an SSH target within Boundary. Then you associated a vault credential store with the SSH target, and tested credential injection.
To learn more about credential injection, check out the SSH credential injection with private Vault tutorial.