Microsoft Azure Key Vault Secrets Client Library for Python
Project description
Azure Key Vault Secret client library for Python
This client library helps you to set, get, update, and delete Azure Key Vault Secrets. Secrets are a resource for storing secret values, such as passwords, API keys, and connection strings, and controlling access to them.
Use this library to:
- Set, get, and delete secrets.
- Update secrets and their attributes.
- Backup and restore secrets.
- List the secrets in a vault, or the versions of a particular secret.
Source code | Package (PyPI) | API reference documentation | Product documentation | Samples
Getting started
Install the package
Install the Azure Key Vault client library for Python with pip:
pip install azure-keyvault-secrets
Prerequisites
-
Python 2.7, 3.4 or later to use this package.
-
An existing Key Vault. If you need to create a Key Vault, you can use the Azure Cloud Shell to create one with this Azure CLI command. Replace
<your-resource-group-name>
and<your-key-vault-name>
with your own, unique names:az keyvault create --resource-group <your-resource-group-name> --name <your-key-vault-name>
Authenticate the client
In order to interact with secrets in a vault, you'll need to create an instance
of SecretClient
. That requires a vault url, and a
credential that can authenticate the client to the vault. This document
shows authentication with a client secret credential configured via environment
variables, but other credential types can be used. See
azure-identity documentation for more information.
Create/Get credentials
Use the Azure Cloud Shell snippet below to create/get client secret credentials.
-
Create a service principal and configure its access to Azure resources:
az ad sp create-for-rbac -n <your-application-name> --skip-assignment
Output:
{ "appId": "generated-app-ID", "displayName": "dummy-app-name", "name": "http://dummy-app-name", "password": "random-password", "tenant": "tenant-ID" }
-
Use the credentials returned above to set AZURE_CLIENT_ID(appId), AZURE_CLIENT_SECRET(password) and (password) and AZURE_TENANT_ID(tenant) environment variables. The following example shows a way to do this in Bash:
export AZURE_CLIENT_ID="generated-app-ID" export AZURE_CLIENT_SECRET="random-password" export AZURE_TENANT_ID="tenant-ID"
-
Grant the above mentioned application authorization to perform secret operations on the keyvault:
az keyvault set-policy --name <your-key-vault-name> --spn $AZURE_CLIENT_ID --secret-permissions backup delete get list set
--secret-permissions: Accepted values: backup, delete, get, list, purge, recover, restore, set
-
Use the above mentioned Key Vault name to retrieve details of your Vault which also contains your Key Vault URL:
az keyvault show --name <your-key-vault-name>
Create Secret client
Once you've populated the AZURE_CLIENT_ID, AZURE_CLIENT_SECRET and
AZURE_TENANT_ID environment variables and replaced your-vault-url
with the above returned URI, you can create the SecretClient
:
from azure.identity import DefaultAzureCredential
from azure.keyvault.secrets import SecretClient
credential = DefaultAzureCredential()
# Create a new secret client using the default credential
secret_client = SecretClient(vault_url=<your-vault-url>, credential=credential)
Key concepts
Secret
In Azure Key Vault, a Secret consists of a secret value and its associated metadata and management information. From the perspective of a developer, the secret values themselves are strings.
Secret Client:
The Secret client performs the interactions with the Azure Key Vault service for getting, setting, updating,deleting, and listing secrets and its versions. An asynchronous and synchronous, SecretClient, client exists in the SDK allowing for selection of a client based on an application's use case. Once you've initialized a SecretClient, you can interact with the primary resource types in Key Vault.
Examples
The following section provides several code snippets using the above created secret_client
, covering some of the most common Azure Key Vault Secret service related tasks, including:
- Create a Secret
- Retrieve a Secret
- Update an existing Secret
- Delete a Secret
- List Secrets
- Async create a Secret
- Async list Secrets
Create a Secret
set_secret
creates a Secret to be stored in the Azure Key Vault. If a secret with the same name already exists, then a new version of the secret is created.
secret = secret_client.set_secret("secret-name", "secret-value")
print(secret.name)
print(secret.value)
print(secret.version)
Retrieve a Secret
get_secret
retrieves a secret previously stored in the Key Vault.
secret = secret_client.get_secret("secret-name")
print(secret.name)
print(secret.value)
Update an existing Secret
update_secret
updates a secret previously stored in the Key Vault.
# Clients may specify the content type of a secret to assist in interpreting the secret data when it's retrieved
content_type = "text/plain"
# You can specify additional application-specific metadata in the form of tags.
tags = {"foo": "updated tag"}
updated_secret = secret_client.update_secret("secret-name", content_type=content_type, tags=tags)
print(updated_secret.name)
print(updated_secret.version)
print(updated_secret.updated)
print(updated_secret.content_type)
print(updated_secret.tags)
Delete a Secret
delete_secret
deletes a secret previously stored in the Key Vault. When soft-delete is not enabled for the Key Vault, this operation permanently deletes the secret.
deleted_secret = secret_client.delete_secret("secret-name")
print(deleted_secret.name)
print(deleted_secret.deleted_date)
List secrets
This example lists all the secrets in the specified Key Vault.
secrets = secret_client.list_secrets()
for secret in secrets:
# the list doesn't include values or versions of the secrets
print(secret.name)
Async operations
This library includes a complete async API supported on Python 3.5+. To use it, you must
first install an async transport, such as aiohttp
.
See
azure-core documentation
for more information.
Async create a secret
This example creates a secret in the Key Vault with the specified optional arguments.
from azure.identity.aio import DefaultAzureCredential
from azure.keyvault.secrets.aio import SecretClient
# for async operations use DefaultAzureCredential
credential = DefaultAzureCredential()
# Create a new secret client using the default credential
secret_client = SecretClient(vault_url=vault_url, credential=credential)
secret = await secret_client.set_secret("secret-name", "secret-value")
print(secret.name)
print(secret.value)
print(secret.version)
Async list secrets
This example lists all the secrets in the specified Key Vault.
secrets = secret_client.list_secrets()
async for secret in secrets:
# the list doesn't include values or versions of the secrets
print(secret.name)
Troubleshooting
General
Key Vault clients raise exceptions defined in azure-core. For more detailed infromation about exceptions and how to deal with them, see Azure Core exceptions.
For example, if you try to retrieve a secret after it is deleted a 404
error is returned, indicating resource not found. In the following snippet, the error is handled gracefully by catching the exception and displaying additional information about the error.
try:
secret_client.get_secret("deleted_secret")
except ResourceNotFoundError as e:
print(e.message)
Output: "Secret not found:deleted_secret"
Logging
Network trace logging is disabled by default for this library. When enabled, this will be logged at DEBUG level. The logging policy is used to output the HTTP network trace to the configured logger. You can configure logging to print out debugging information to the stdout or write it to a file using the following example:
import sys
import logging
# Create a logger for the 'azure' SDK
logger = logging.getLogger(__name__)
logger.setLevel(logging.DEBUG)
# Configure a console output
handler = logging.StreamHandler(stream=sys.stdout)
logger.addHandler(handler)
# Configure a file output
file_handler = logging.FileHandler(filename)
logger.addHandler(file_handler)
# Enable network trace logging. This will be logged at DEBUG level.
# By default, network trace logging is disabled.
config = SecretClient.create_config(credential, logging_enable=True)
client = SecretClient(url, credential, config=config)
The logger can also be enabled per operation.
secret = secret_client.get_secret("secret-name", logging_enable=True)
Next steps
Several KeyVault Python SDK samples are available to you in the SDK's GitHub repository. These samples provide example code for additional scenarios commonly encountered while working with Key Vault:
- test_samples_secrets.py and test_samples_secrets_async.py - Contains the code snippets working with Key Vault secrets.
- hello_world.py and hello_world_async.py - Python code for working with Azure Key Vault, including:
- Create a secret
- Get an existing secret
- Update an existing secret
- Delete secret
- list_operations.py and list_operations_async.py - Example code for working with Key Vault secrets backup and recovery, including:
- Create secrets
- List all secrets in the Key Vault
- Update secrets in the Key Vault
- List versions of a specified secret
- Delete secrets from the Key Vault
- List deleted secrets in the Key Vault
Additional Documentation
For more extensive documentation on Azure Key Vault, see the API reference documentation.
Contributing
This project welcomes contributions and suggestions. Most contributions require you to agree to a Contributor License Agreement (CLA) declaring that you have the right to, and actually do, grant us the rights to use your contribution. For details, visit https://cla.microsoft.com.
When you submit a pull request, a CLA-bot will automatically determine whether you need to provide a CLA and decorate the PR appropriately (e.g., label, comment). Simply follow the instructions provided by the bot. You will only need to do this once across all repos using our CLA.
This project has adopted the Microsoft Open Source Code of Conduct. For more information see the Code of Conduct FAQ or contact opencode@microsoft.com with any additional questions or comments.
Release History
4.0.0b2 (2019-08-06)
Breaking changes:
- Removed
azure.core.Configuration
from the public API in preparation for a revamped configuration API. Staticcreate_config
methods have been renamed_create_config
, and will be removed in a future release. - This version of the library requires
azure-core
1.0.0b2- If you later want to revert to a version requiring azure-core 1.0.0b1,
of this or another Azure SDK library, you must explicitly install azure-core
1.0.0b1 as well. For example:
pip install azure-core==1.0.0b1 azure-keyvault-secrets==4.0.0b1
- If you later want to revert to a version requiring azure-core 1.0.0b1,
of this or another Azure SDK library, you must explicitly install azure-core
1.0.0b1 as well. For example:
New features:
- Distributed tracing framework OpenCensus is now supported
- Added support for HTTP challenge based authentication, allowing clients to interact with vaults in sovereign clouds.
4.0.0b1 (2019-06-28)
Version 4.0.0b1 is the first preview of our efforts to create a user-friendly and Pythonic client library for Azure Key Vault. For more information about preview releases of other Azure SDK libraries, please visit https://aka.ms/azure-sdk-preview1-python.
This library is not a direct replacement for azure-keyvault
. Applications
using that library would require code changes to use azure-keyvault-secrets
.
This package's
documentation
and
samples
demonstrate the new API.
Major changes from azure-keyvault
- Packages scoped by functionality
azure-keyvault-secrets
contains a client for secret operations,azure-keyvault-keys
contains a client for key operations
- Client instances are scoped to vaults (an instance interacts with one vault only)
- Asynchronous API supported on Python 3.5.3+
- the
azure.keyvault.secrets.aio
namespace contains an async equivalent of the synchronous client inazure.keyvault.secrets
- the
- Authentication using
azure-identity
credentials- see this package's documentation , and the Azure Identity documentation for more information
azure-keyvault
features not implemented in this library
- Certificate management APIs
- National cloud support. This release supports public global cloud vaults, e.g. https://{vault-name}.vault.azure.net
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