AspNetCore.Docs/aspnetcore/security/app-secrets.md

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title author description ms.author monikerRange ms.custom ms.date uid
Safe storage of app secrets in development in ASP.NET Core tdykstra Learn how to store and retrieve sensitive information during the development of an ASP.NET Core app. tdykstra >= aspnetcore-3.0 mvc 10/30/2024 security/app-secrets

Safe storage of app secrets in development in ASP.NET Core

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By Rick Anderson and Kirk Larkin

View or download sample code (how to download)

This article explains how to manage sensitive data for an ASP.NET Core app on a development machine. Never store passwords or other sensitive data in source code or configuration files. Production secrets shouldn't be used for development or test. Secrets shouldn't be deployed with the app. Production secrets should be accessed through a controlled means like Azure Key Vault. Azure test and production secrets can be stored and protected with the Azure Key Vault configuration provider.

For more information on authentication for deployed test and production apps, see Secure authentication flows.

To use user secrets in a .NET console app, see this GitHub issue.

Environment variables

Environment variables are used to avoid storage of app secrets in code or in local configuration files. Environment variables override configuration values for all previously specified configuration sources.

Consider an ASP.NET Core web app in which Individual User Accounts security is enabled. A default database connection string is included in the project's appsettings.json file with the key DefaultConnection. The default connection string is for LocalDB, which runs in user mode and doesn't require a password. During app deployment, the DefaultConnection key value can be overridden with an environment variable's value. The environment variable may store the complete connection string with sensitive credentials.

[!WARNING] Environment variables are generally stored in plain, unencrypted text. If the machine or process is compromised, environment variables can be accessed by untrusted parties. Additional measures to prevent disclosure of user secrets may be required.

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Secret Manager

The Secret Manager tool stores sensitive data during application development. In this context, a piece of sensitive data is an app secret. App secrets are stored in a separate location from the project tree. The app secrets are associated with a specific project or shared across several projects. The app secrets aren't checked into source control.

[!WARNING] The Secret Manager tool doesn't encrypt the stored secrets and shouldn't be treated as a trusted store. It's for development purposes only. The keys and values are stored in a JSON configuration file in the user profile directory.

How the Secret Manager tool works

The Secret Manager tool hides implementation details, such as where and how the values are stored. You can use the tool without knowing these implementation details. The values are stored in a JSON file in the local machine's user profile folder:

Windows

File system path:

%APPDATA%\Microsoft\UserSecrets\<user_secrets_id>\secrets.json

Linux / macOS

File system path:

~/.microsoft/usersecrets/<user_secrets_id>/secrets.json


In the preceding file paths, replace <user_secrets_id> with the UserSecretsId value specified in the project file.

Don't write code that depends on the location or format of data saved with the Secret Manager tool. These implementation details may change. For example, the secret values aren't encrypted.

Enable secret storage

The Secret Manager tool operates on project-specific configuration settings stored in your user profile.

Use the CLI

The Secret Manager tool includes an init command. To use user secrets, run the following command in the project directory:

dotnet user-secrets init

The preceding command adds a UserSecretsId element within a PropertyGroup of the project file. By default, the inner text of UserSecretsId is a GUID. The inner text is arbitrary, but is unique to the project.

[!code-xml]

Use Visual Studio

In Visual Studio, right-click the project in Solution Explorer, and select Manage User Secrets from the context menu. This gesture adds a UserSecretsId element, populated with a GUID, to the project file.

If GenerateAssemblyInfo is false

If the generation of assembly info attributes is disabled, manually add the xref:Microsoft.Extensions.Configuration.UserSecrets.UserSecretsIdAttribute in AssemblyInfo.cs. For example:

[assembly: UserSecretsId("your_user_secrets_id")]

When manually adding the UserSecretsId attribute to AssemblyInfo.cs, the UserSecretsId value must match the value in the project file.

Set a secret

Define an app secret consisting of a key and its value. The secret is associated with the project's UserSecretsId value. For example, run the following command from the directory in which the project file exists:

dotnet user-secrets set "Movies:ServiceApiKey" "12345"

In the preceding example, the colon denotes that Movies is an object literal with a ServiceApiKey property.

The Secret Manager tool can be used from other directories too. Use the --project option to supply the file system path at which the project file exists. For example:

dotnet user-secrets set "Movies:ServiceApiKey" "12345" --project "C:\apps\WebApp1\src\WebApp1"

JSON structure flattening in Visual Studio

Visual Studio's Manage User Secrets gesture opens a secrets.json file in the text editor. Replace the contents of secrets.json with the key-value pairs to be stored. For example:

{
  "Movies": {
    "ConnectionString": "Server=(localdb)\\mssqllocaldb;Database=Movie-1;Trusted_Connection=True;MultipleActiveResultSets=true",
    "ServiceApiKey": "12345"
  }
}

The JSON structure is flattened after modifications via dotnet user-secrets remove or dotnet user-secrets set. For example, running dotnet user-secrets remove "Movies:ConnectionString" collapses the Movies object literal. The modified file resembles the following JSON:

{
  "Movies:ServiceApiKey": "12345"
}

Set multiple secrets

A batch of secrets can be set by piping JSON to the set command. In the following example, the input.json file's contents are piped to the set command.

Windows

Open a command shell, and execute the following command:

type .\input.json | dotnet user-secrets set

Linux / macOS

Open a command shell, and execute the following command:

cat ./input.json | dotnet user-secrets set

Access a secret

To access a secret, complete the following steps:

  1. Register the user secrets configuration source
  2. Read the secret via the Configuration API

Register the user secrets configuration source

The user secrets configuration provider registers the appropriate configuration source with the .NET Configuration API.

ASP.NET Core web apps created with dotnet new or Visual Studio generate the following code:

[!code-csharp]

WebApplication.CreateBuilder initializes a new instance of the xref:Microsoft.AspNetCore.Builder.WebApplicationBuilder class with preconfigured defaults. The initialized WebApplicationBuilder (builder) provides default configuration and calls xref:Microsoft.Extensions.Configuration.UserSecretsConfigurationExtensions.AddUserSecrets%2A when the xref:Microsoft.Extensions.Hosting.IHostEnvironment.EnvironmentName is xref:Microsoft.Extensions.Hosting.EnvironmentName.Development:

Read the secret via the Configuration API

Consider the following examples of reading the Movies:ServiceApiKey key:

Program.cs file:

[!code-csharp]

Razor Pages page model:

[!code-csharp]

For more information, see xref:fundamentals/configuration/index.

Map secrets to a POCO

Mapping an entire object literal to a POCO (a simple .NET class with properties) is useful for aggregating related properties.

[!INCLUDEsecrets.json file]

To map the preceding secrets to a POCO, use the .NET Configuration API's object graph binding feature. The following code binds to a custom MovieSettings POCO and accesses the ServiceApiKey property value:

[!code-csharp]

The Movies:ConnectionString and Movies:ServiceApiKey secrets are mapped to the respective properties in MovieSettings:

[!code-csharp]

String replacement with secrets

Storing passwords in plain text is insecure. Never store secrets in a configuration file such as appsettings.json, which might get checked in to a source code repository.

For example, a database connection string stored in appsettings.json should not include a password. Instead, store the password as a secret, and include the password in the connection string at runtime. For example:

dotnet user-secrets set "DbPassword" "`<secret value>`"

Replace the <secret value> placeholder in the preceding example with the password value. Set the secret's value on a xref:System.Data.SqlClient.SqlConnectionStringBuilder object's xref:System.Data.SqlClient.SqlConnectionStringBuilder.Password%2A property to include it as the password value in the connection string:

[!code-csharp]

List the secrets

[!INCLUDEsecrets.json file]

Run the following command from the directory in which the project file exists:

dotnet user-secrets list

The following output appears:

Movies:ConnectionString = Server=(localdb)\mssqllocaldb;Database=Movie-1;Trusted_Connection=True;MultipleActiveResultSets=true
Movies:ServiceApiKey = 12345

In the preceding example, a colon in the key names denotes the object hierarchy within secrets.json.

Remove a single secret

[!INCLUDEsecrets.json file]

Run the following command from the directory in which the project file exists:

dotnet user-secrets remove "Movies:ConnectionString"

The app's secrets.json file was modified to remove the key-value pair associated with the Movies:ConnectionString key:

{
  "Movies": {
    "ServiceApiKey": "12345"
  }
}

dotnet user-secrets list displays the following message:

Movies:ServiceApiKey = 12345

Remove all secrets

[!INCLUDEsecrets.json file]

Run the following command from the directory in which the project file exists:

dotnet user-secrets clear

All user secrets for the app have been deleted from the secrets.json file:

{}

Running dotnet user-secrets list displays the following message:

No secrets configured for this application.

Manage user secrets with Visual Studio

To manage user secrets in Visual Studio, right click the project in solution explorer and select Manage User Secrets:

Visual Studio showing Manage User Secrets

Migrating User Secrets from ASP.NET Framework to ASP.NET Core

See this GitHub issue.

User secrets in non-web applications

Projects that target Microsoft.NET.Sdk.Web automatically include support for user secrets. For projects that target Microsoft.NET.Sdk, such as console applications, install the configuration extension and user secrets NuGet packages explicitly.

Using PowerShell:

Install-Package Microsoft.Extensions.Configuration
Install-Package Microsoft.Extensions.Configuration.UserSecrets

Using the .NET CLI:

dotnet add package Microsoft.Extensions.Configuration
dotnet add package Microsoft.Extensions.Configuration.UserSecrets

Once the packages are installed, initialize the project and set secrets the same way as for a web app. The following example shows a console application that retrieves the value of a secret that was set with the key "AppSecret":

using Microsoft.Extensions.Configuration;

namespace ConsoleApp;

class Program
{
    static void Main(string[] args)
    {
        IConfigurationRoot config = new ConfigurationBuilder()
            .AddUserSecrets<Program>()
            .Build();

        Console.WriteLine(config["AppSecret"]);
    }
}

Additional resources

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