- Use Azure Key Vault secrets in a CI/CD job
- Troubleshooting
The secrets provider can not be found. Check your CI/CD variables and try again.
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Use Azure Key Vault secrets in GitLab CI/CD
- Introduced in GitLab and GitLab Runner 16.3. Due to issue 424746 this feature did not work as expected.
- Issue 424746 resolved and this feature made generally available in GitLab Runner 16.6.
You can use secrets stored in the Azure Key Vault in your GitLab CI/CD pipelines.
Prerequisites:
- Have a Key Vault on Azure.
- Your IAM user must be granted the Key Vault Administrator role assignment for the resource group assigned to the Key Vault. Otherwise, you can’t create secrets inside the Key Vault.
- Configure OpenID Connect in Azure to retrieve temporary credentials. These steps include instructions on how to create an Azure AD application for Key Vault access.
- Add CI/CD variables to your project to provide details about your Vault server:
-
AZURE_KEY_VAULT_SERVER_URL
: The URL of your Azure Key Vault server, such ashttps://vault.example.com
. -
AZURE_CLIENT_ID
: The client ID of the Azure application. -
AZURE_TENANT_ID
: The tenant ID of the Azure application.
-
Use Azure Key Vault secrets in a CI/CD job
You can use a secret stored in your Azure Key Vault in a job by defining it with the
azure_key_vault
keyword:
job:
id_tokens:
AZURE_JWT:
aud: 'https://gitlab.com'
secrets:
DATABASE_PASSWORD:
token: $AZURE_JWT
azure_key_vault:
name: 'test'
version: '00000000000000000000000000000000'
In this example:
-
aud
is the audience, which must match the audience used when creating the federated identity credentials -
name
is the name of the secret in Azure Key Vault. -
version
is the version of the secret in Azure Key Vault. The version is a generated GUID without dashes, which can be found on the Azure Key Vault secrets page. - GitLab fetches the secret from Azure Key Vault and stores the value in a temporary file.
The path to this file is stored in a
DATABASE_PASSWORD
CI/CD variable, similar to file type CI/CD variables.
Troubleshooting
Refer to OIDC for Azure troubleshooting for general problems when setting up OIDC with Azure.
JWT token is invalid or malformed
message
You might receive this error when fetching secrets from Azure Key Vault:
RESPONSE 400 Bad Request
AADSTS50027: JWT token is invalid or malformed.
This occurs due to a known issue in GitLab Runner where the JWT token isn’t parsed correctly. To resolve this, upgrade to GitLab Runner 16.6 or later.
Caller is not authorized to perform action on resource
message
You might receive this error when fetching secrets from Azure Key Vault:
RESPONSE 403: 403 Forbidden
ERROR CODE: Forbidden
Caller is not authorized to perform action on resource.\r\nIf role assignments, deny assignments or role definitions were changed recently, please observe propagation time.
ForbiddenByRbac
If your Azure Key Vault is using RBAC, you must add the Key Vault Secrets User role assignment to your Azure AD application.
For example:
appId=$(az ad app list --display-name gitlab-oidc --query '[0].appId' -otsv)
az role assignment create --assignee $appId --role "Key Vault Secrets User" --scope /subscriptions/<subscription-id>
You can find your subscription ID in:
- The Azure Portal.
- The Azure CLI.
The secrets provider can not be found. Check your CI/CD variables and try again.
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You might receive this error when attempting to start a job configured to access Azure Key Vault:
The secrets provider can not be found. Check your CI/CD variables and try again.
The job can’t be created because one or more of the required variables are not defined:
AZURE_KEY_VAULT_SERVER_URL
AZURE_CLIENT_ID
AZURE_TENANT_ID