Vault Enterprise namespaces
Many organizations implement Vault as a service to provide centralized management of sensitive data and ensure that the different teams in an organization operate within isolated environments known as tenants.
Multi-tenant environments have the following implementation challenges:
- Tenant isolation. Teams within a Visualization as a Service (VaaS) environment require strong isolation for their policies, secrets, and identities. Tenant isolation may also be required due to organizational security and privacy requirements or to address compliance regulations like GDPR.
- Long-term management. Tenants typically have different policies and teams request changes to their tenants at different rates. As a result, managing a multi-tenant environment can become difficult for a single team as the number of tenants within the organization grows.
Namespaces support secure multi-tenancy (SMT) within a single Vault Enterprise instance with tenant isolation and administration delegation so Vault administrators can empower delegates to manage their own tenant environment.
When you create a namespace, you establish an isolated environment with separate login paths that functions as a mini-Vault instance within your Vault installation. Users can then create and manage their sensitive data within the confines of that namespace, including:
- secret engines
- authentication methods
- ACL, EGP, and RGP policies
- password policies
- entities
- identity groups
- tokens
Tip
Namespaces are isolated environments, but Vault administrators can still share and enforce global policies across namespaces with the group-policy-application endpoint of the Vault API.
Namespace naming restrictions
Valid Vault namespace names:
- CANNOT end with
/
- CANNOT contain spaces
- CANNOT be one of the following reserved strings:
Refer to the Namespace limits section of Vault limits and maximums for storage limits related to managing namespaces.
Related reading
Read the Vault namespace and mount structuring tutorial for best practices and recommendations for structuring your namespaces.
Child namespaces
A child namespace is any namespace that exists entirely within the scope of
another namespace. The containing namespace is the parent namespace. For
example, given the namespace path A/B/C
:
A
is the top-most namespace and exists under the root namespace for the Vault instance.B
is a child namespace ofA
and the parent namespace ofC
.C
is a child namespace ofB
and the grandchild namespace ofA
.
Children can inherit elements from their parent namespaces. For example, policies for a child namespace might reference entities or groups from the parent namespace. Parent namespaces can also assert policies on identities within a child namespace.
Vault administrators can configure the desired inheritance behavior with the group-policy-application endpoint of the Vault API.
Delegation and administrative namespaces
Vault system administrators can assign administration rights to delegate admins to allow teams to self-manage their namespace. In addition to basic management, delegate admins can create child namespaces and assign admin rights to subordinate delegate admins.
Additionally, administrative namespaces let Vault administrators grant access to a predefined subset of privileged endpoints by setting the relevant namespace parameters in their Vault configuration file.
Vault API and namespaces
Users can perform API operations under a specific namespace by setting the
X-Vault-Namespace
header to the absolute or relative namespace path. Relative
namespace paths are assumed to be child namespaces of the calling namespace.
You can also provide an absolute namespace path without using the
X-Vault-Namespace
header.
Vault constructs the fully qualified namespace path based on the calling
namespace and the X-Vault
header to route the request to the
appropriate namespace. For example, the following requests all route to the
ns1/ns2/secret/foo
namespace:
- Path:
ns1/ns2/secret/foo
- Path:
secret/foo
, Header:X-Vault-Namespace: ns1/ns2/
- Path:
ns2/secret/foo
, Header:X-Vault-Namespace: ns1/
Vault Enterprise has a namespaces API
Use the /sys/namespaces API or
namespace
CLI command to manage
your namespaces.
Restricted API paths
The Vault API includes system backend endpoints, which are mounted under the
sys/
path. System endpoints let you interact with the internal features of
your Vault instance.
By default, Vault allows non-root calls to the less-sensitive system backend endpoints. But, for security reasons, Vault restricts access to some of the system backend endpoints to calls from the root namespace or calls that use a token in the root namespace with elevated permissions.
Rather than granting access to the full set of privileged sys/
paths, Vault
administrators can also grant access to a predefined subset of the restricted
endpoints with an administrative namespace.
API path | Root | Admin |
---|---|---|
sys/audit | YES | NO |
sys/audit-hash | YES | YES |
sys/config/auditing/* | YES | NO |
sys/config/cors | YES | NO |
sys/config/group-policy-application | YES | NO |
sys/config/reload | YES | NO |
sys/config/state | YES | NO |
sys/config/ui | YES | NO |
sys/decode-token | YES | NO |
sys/experiments | YES | NO |
sys/generate-recovery-token | YES | NO |
sys/generate-root | YES | NO |
sys/health | YES | NO |
sys/host-info | YES | NO |
sys/in-flight-req | YES | NO |
sys/init | YES | NO |
sys/internal/counters/* | YES | NO |
sys/internal/inspect/router/* | YES | NO |
sys/key-status | YES | NO |
sys/loggers | YES | NO |
sys/managed-keys/* | YES | NO |
sys/metrics | YES | NO |
sys/mfa/method/* | YES | NO |
sys/monitor | YES | YES |
sys/pprof | YES | NO |
sys/pprof/* | YES | NO |
sys/quotas/config | YES | NO |
sys/quotas/lease-count | YES | NO |
sys/quotas/rate-limit | YES | NO |
sys/raw | YES | NO |
sys/rekey/* | YES | NO |
sys/rekey-recovery-key | YES | NO |
sys/replication/recover | YES | NO |
sys/replication/reindex | YES | NO |
sys/replication/status | YES | NO |
sys/rotate | YES | NO |
sys/rotate/config | YES | NO |
sys/seal | YES | NO |
sys/sealwrap/rewrap | YES | NO |
sys/step-down | YES | NO |
sys/storage/* | YES | NO |
sys/unseal | YES | NO |
Learn more
Refer to the following tutorials to learn more about Vault namespaces: