This version is still in development and is not considered stable yet. For the latest stable version, please use Spring Cloud Config 4.1.4! |
Key Management
The Config Server can use a symmetric (shared) key or an asymmetric one (RSA key pair).
The asymmetric choice is superior in terms of security, but it is often more convenient to use a symmetric key since it is a single property value to configure in the application.properties
.
To configure a symmetric key, you need to set encrypt.key
to a secret String (or use the ENCRYPT_KEY
environment variable to keep it out of plain-text configuration files).
If you include spring-cloud-starter-bootstrap on the classpath or set spring.cloud.bootstrap.enabled=true as a system property, you will need to set encrypt.key in bootstrap.properties .
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You cannot configure an asymmetric key using encrypt.key .
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To configure an asymmetric key use a keystore (e.g. as
created by the keytool
utility that comes with the JDK). The
keystore properties are encrypt.keyStore.*
with *
equal to
Property | Description |
---|---|
|
Contains a |
|
Holds the password that unlocks the keystore |
|
Identifies which key in the store to use |
|
The type of KeyStore to create. Defaults to |
The encryption is done with the public key, and a private key is needed for decryption. Thus, in principle, you can configure only the public key in the server if you want to only encrypt (and are prepared to decrypt the values yourself locally with the private key). In practice, you might not want to do decrypt locally, because it spreads the key management process around all the clients, instead of concentrating it in the server. On the other hand, it can be a useful option if your config server is relatively insecure and only a handful of clients need the encrypted properties.