| Protect your secrets, protect your sensitive data.
: Explore VMware Secrets Manager docs at https://vsecm.com/
</
<>/ keep your secrets… secret
VMware Secrets Manager is a delightfully-secure Kubernetes-native secrets store.
VMware Secrets Manager (VSecM) keeps your secrets secret.
With VMware Secrets Manager, you can rest assured that your sensitive data is always secure and protected.
VMware Secrets Manager is perfect for securely storing arbitrary configuration information at a central location and securely dispatching it to workloads.
VMware Secrets Manager is a cloud-native secure store for secrets management. It provides a minimal and intuitive API, ensuring practical security without compromising user experience.
VMware Secrets Manager is resilient and secure by default, storing sensitive data in memory and encrypting any data saved to disk.
Endorsed by industry experts, VMware Secrets Manager is a ground-up re-imagination of secrets management, leveraging SPIFFE for authentication and providing a cloud-native way to manage secrets end-to-end.
Before trying VMware Secrets Manager, you might want to learn about its architecture and design goals.
Once you are ready to start, see the Quickstart guide.
Or, if you are one of those who “learn by doing”, you might want to dig into the implementation details later. If that’s the case, you can directly jump to the fun part and follow the steps here to install VMware Secrets Manager to your Kubernetes cluster.
There are several examples demonstrating VMware Secrets Manager sample use
cases inside the ./examples/
folder.
Pre-built container images of VMware Secrets Manager components can be found at: https://hub.docker.com/u/vsecm.
You can also build VMware Secrets Manager from the source.
We publicly track all VMware Secrets Manager plans on this roadmap page.
You can check it out to get a glimpse of the current planned features and how the future of VMware Secrets Manager looks like.
VMware Secrets Manager is under dynamic and progressive development.
The code we’ve officially signed and released maintains a high standard of stability and dependability. However, we do encourage it to be used in a production environment (at your own risk—see LICENSE).
It’s important to note that, technically speaking, VMware Secrets Manager
currently holds the status of an alpha software. This means that as we
journey towards our milestone of v1.0.0
, it's possible for changes to
occur—both major and minor. While this might mean some aspects are not backward
compatible, it's a testament to our unwavering commitment to refining and
enhancing VMware Secrets Manager.
In a nutshell, we are ceaselessly pushing the boundaries of what’s possible while ensuring our software stays dependable and effective for production use.
Official documentation on vsecm.com.
We take VMware Secrets Manager’s security seriously. If you believe you have found a vulnerability, please follow this guideline to responsibly disclose it.
Check out this quickstart guide for an overview of VMware Secrets Manager.
Open Source is better together.
If you are a security enthusiast, join VMware Secrets Manager’s Slack Workspace and let us change the world together 🤘.
- Homepage and Docs: https://vsecm.com/
- Changelog: https://vsecm.com/docs/changelog/
- Community: Join VSecM’s Slack Workspace
- Contact: https://vsecm.com/docs/community/
- Installation and Quickstart: https://vsecm.com/docs/quickstart/
- Local Development Instructions: https://vsecm.com/docs/use-the-source/
- Developer SDK: https://vsecm.com/docs/sdk/
- CLI: https://vsecm.com/docs/cli/
- Architecture: https://vsecm.com/docs/architecture/
- Configuration: https://vsecm.com/docs/configuration/
- Design Philosophy: https://vsecm.com/docs/philosophy/
- Production Deployment Tips: https://vsecm.com/docs/production/
Check out this quickstart guide for an overview of VMware Secrets Manager, which also covers installation and uninstallation instructions.
You need a Kubernetes cluster and sufficient admin rights on that cluster to install VMware Secrets Manager.
Here is a list of step-by-step tutorials covers several usage scenarios that can show you where and how VMware Secrets Manager could be used.
Check out this VMware Secrets Manager Deep Dive article for an overview of VMware Secrets Manager system design and how each component fits together.
VSecM == “VMware Secrets Manager for Cloud-Native Apps”
Here are the important folders and files in this repository:
./app
: Contains core VSecM components’ source code../app/init-container
: Contains the source code for the VSecM Init Container../app/safe
: Contains the VSecM Safe source code../app/sentinel
: Contains the source code for the VSecM Sentinel../app/sidecar
: Contains the source code for the VSecM Sidecar.
./helm-charts
: Contains VSecM helm charts../core
: Contains core modules shared across VSecM components../examples
: Contains the source code of example use cases../hack
: Contains scripts for building, publishing, development , and testing../k8s
: Contains Kubernetes manifests that are used to deploy VSecM and its use cases../sdk
: Contains the source code of the VSecM Developer SDK../docs
: Contains the source code of the VSecM Documentation website (https://vsecm.com)../CODE_OF_CONDUCT.md
: Contains VSecM Code of Conduct../CONTRIBUTING_DCO.md
: Contains VSecM Contributing Guidelines../SECURITY.md
: Contains VSecM Security Policy../LICENSE
: Contains VSecM License../Makefile
: TheMakefile
used for building, publishing, deploying, and testing the project.
You can find the changelog and migration/upgrade instructions (if any) on VMware Secrets Manager’s Changelog Page.
You can see the project’s progress in this VMware Secrets Manager roadmap.
To contribute to VMware Secrets Manager, follow the contributing guidelines to get started.
Use GitHub issues to request features or file bugs.
Check out the Maintainers Page for a list of maintainers of VMware Secrets Manager.
Please send your feedback, suggestions, recommendations, and comments to feedback@vsecm.com.
We’d love to have them.