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Version: 3.1

(Other Schedulers) Encrypt Portworx Volumes using Vault Transit

You can use one of the following methods to encrypt Portworx volumes with Vault Transit, depending on how you provide the secret password to Portworx:

Encrypt volumes using per volume secrets

  1. Create an encrypted volume by entering the pxctl volume create command with the following parameters:

    • --secure

      pxctl volume create --secure enc_vol
      Encrypted volume successfully created: 374663852714325215

      With Portworx, you can create two types of encrypted volumes:

    • Encrypted Volumes. You can access a regular volume from a single node.

    • Shared Encrypted Volumes. You can access an encrypted sharedv4 volume from multiple nodes.

      To create a shared encrypted volume, you must specify the --sharedv4 parameter as follows:

      pxctl volume create --sharedv4 --secure enc_shared_vol
      Encrypted Shared volume successfully created: 77957787758406722

      If you are using Vault Namespaces, and your secret key key1 resides in a namespace called ns1 then use the following command to create an encrypted volume:

      pxctl volume create --secure --secret_options=vault-namespace=ns1 enc_vol
      Encrypted volume successfully created: 374663852714325215

      Docker users:

      Use the following command to create an encrypted volume named enc_vol:

      docker volume create --volume-driver pxd name=enc_vol

      To create an encrypted sharedv4 volume using a specific secret through docker, you must specify the -sharedv4=true option.

      Example:

      docker volume create --volume-driver pxd sharedv4=true,name=enc_shared_vol
  2. You can use the pxctl volume list command to list your volumes:

    pxctl volume list
    ID                      NAME        SIZE    HA SHARED   ENCRYPTED   IO_PRIORITY SCALE   STATUS
    822124500500459627 enc_volume 10 GiB 1 no yes LOW 1 up - detached

Encrypt volumes using a cluster-wide secret

A cluster wide secret key is a common key that can be used to encrypt all your volumes. This common key needs to be pre-created in Vault. Portworx will use this cluster-wide secret as a passphrase to encrypt your volume.

  1. Set the cluster-wide secret key. Run the following command specifying the --secret parameter with the secret name you created in Vault (this example uses mysecret):

    pxctl secrets set-cluster-key --secret mysecret
    Successfully set cluster secret key!
    caution

    You must set the cluster-wide secret only once. If you overwrite the cluster-wide secret, the volumes encrypted with the old secret will become unusable.

    If you are using Vault Namespaces use the following command to set the cluster-wide secret key in a specific vault namespace (this example uses ns1 as the vault namespace)

    pxctl secrets set-cluster-key --secret_options=vault-namespace=ns1 --secret mysecret
  2. Create a new encrypted volume. Enter the pxctl volume create command, specifying the following arguments:

  • --secure

  • --secret_key default the default key used for cluster-wide secret

  • The size of your encrypted volume (this example use 10 GiB)

  • The name of the encrypted volume (this example uses enc_vol)

    pxctl volume create --secure --secret_key default --size 10 enc_vol
    Volume successfully created: 822124500500459627

    With Portworx, you can create two types of encrypted volumes:

    • Encrypted Volumes. You can access a regular volume from a single node.
    • Shared Encrypted Volumes. You can access an encrypted sharedv4 volume from multiple nodes.

    To create a shared encrypted volume, you must specify the --sharedv4 parameter as follows:

    pxctl volume create --sharedv4 --secure --secret_key default --size 10 enc_vol
    Encrypted Shared volume successfully created: 77957787758406722
  1. You can use the pxctl volume list command to list your volumes:

    pxctl volume list
    ID                      NAME        SIZE    HA SHARED   ENCRYPTED   IO_PRIORITY SCALE   STATUS
    822124500500459627 enc_vol 10 GiB 1 no yes LOW 1 up - detached
  2. Attach your volume by entering the pxctl host attach command with the following arguments:

    • The name of your encrypted volume (this example uses enc_vol)

    • The --secret-key flag with the default vaule

      pxctl host attach enc_vol --secret_key default
      Volume successfully attached at: /dev/mapper/pxd-enc822124500500459627
  3. Mount the volume by entering the pxctl host mount command with the following parameters:

    • The name of your encrypted volume (this example uses enc_vol)
    • The mount point (this example uses mnt)
    pxctl host mount enc_vol /mnt
    Volume enc_vol successfully mounted at /mnt
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