AspNetCore.Docs/aspnetcore/security/key-vault-configuration.md

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Azure Key Vault configuration provider in ASP.NET Core rick-anderson Learn how to use the Azure Key Vault configuration provider to configure an app using name-value pairs loaded at runtime. >= aspnetcore-2.1 riande mvc, devx-track-azurecli, contperf-fy21q3 03/17/2021
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security/key-vault-configuration

Azure Key Vault configuration provider in ASP.NET Core

::: moniker range=">= aspnetcore-3.0"

This document explains how to use the Azure Key Vault configuration provider to load app configuration values from Azure Key Vault secrets. Azure Key Vault is a cloud-based service that helps safeguard cryptographic keys and secrets used by apps and services. Common scenarios for using Azure Key Vault with ASP.NET Core apps include:

  • Controlling access to sensitive configuration data.
  • Meeting the requirement for FIPS 140-2 Level 2 validated Hardware Security Modules (HSMs) when storing configuration data.

View or download sample code (how to download)

Packages

Add package references for the following packages:

Sample app

The sample app runs in either of two modes determined by the #define preprocessor directive at the top of Program.cs:

  • Certificate: Demonstrates using an Azure Key Vault Client ID and X.509 certificate to access secrets stored in Azure Key Vault. This sample can be run from any location, whether deployed to Azure App Service or any host that can serve an ASP.NET Core app.
  • Managed: Demonstrates how to use Managed identities for Azure resources. The managed identity authenticates the app to Azure Key Vault with Azure Active Directory (AD) authentication without credentials stored in the app's code or configuration. When using managed identities to authenticate, an Azure AD Application ID and Password (Client Secret) aren't required. The Managed version of the sample must be deployed to Azure. Follow the guidance in the Use the managed identities for Azure resources section.

For more information configuring a sample app using preprocessor directives (#define), see xref:index#preprocessor-directives-in-sample-code.

Secret storage in the Development environment

Set secrets locally using Secret Manager. When the sample app runs on the local machine in the Development environment, secrets are loaded from the local user secrets store.

Secret Manager requires a <UserSecretsId> property in the app's project file. Set the property value ({GUID}) to any unique GUID:

<PropertyGroup>
  <UserSecretsId>{GUID}</UserSecretsId>
</PropertyGroup>

Secrets are created as name-value pairs. Hierarchical values (configuration sections) use a : (colon) as a separator in ASP.NET Core configuration key names.

Secret Manager is used from a command shell opened to the project's content root, where {SECRET NAME} is the name and {SECRET VALUE} is the value:

dotnet user-secrets set "{SECRET NAME}" "{SECRET VALUE}"

Execute the following commands in a command shell from the project's content root to set the secrets for the sample app:

dotnet user-secrets set "SecretName" "secret_value_1_dev"
dotnet user-secrets set "Section:SecretName" "secret_value_2_dev"

When these secrets are stored in Azure Key Vault in the Secret storage in the Production environment with Azure Key Vault section, the _dev suffix is changed to _prod. The suffix provides a visual cue in the app's output indicating the source of the configuration values.

Secret storage in the Production environment with Azure Key Vault

Complete the following steps to create an Azure Key Vault and store the sample app's secrets in it. For more information, see Quickstart: Set and retrieve a secret from Azure Key Vault using Azure CLI.

  1. Open Azure Cloud Shell using any one of the following methods in the Azure portal:

    • Select Try It in the upper-right corner of a code block. Use the search string "Azure CLI" in the text box.
    • Open Cloud Shell in your browser with the Launch Cloud Shell button.
    • Select the Cloud Shell button on the menu in the upper-right corner of the Azure portal.

    For more information, see Azure CLI and Overview of Azure Cloud Shell.

  2. If you aren't already authenticated, sign in with the az login command.

  3. Create a resource group with the following command, where {RESOURCE GROUP NAME} is the new resource group's name and {LOCATION} is the Azure region:

    az group create --name "{RESOURCE GROUP NAME}" --location {LOCATION}
    
  4. Create a key vault in the resource group with the following command, where {KEY VAULT NAME} is the new key vault's name and {LOCATION} is the Azure region:

    az keyvault create --name {KEY VAULT NAME} --resource-group "{RESOURCE GROUP NAME}" --location {LOCATION}
    
  5. Create secrets in the key vault as name-value pairs.

    Azure Key Vault secret names are limited to alphanumeric characters and dashes. Hierarchical values (configuration sections) use -- (two dashes) as a delimiter, as colons aren't allowed in key vault secret names. Colons delimit a section from a subkey in ASP.NET Core configuration. The two-dash sequence is replaced with a colon when the secrets are loaded into the app's configuration.

    The following secrets are for use with the sample app. The values include a _prod suffix to distinguish them from the _dev suffix values loaded in the Development environment from Secret Manager. Replace {KEY VAULT NAME} with the name of the key vault you created in the prior step:

    az keyvault secret set --vault-name {KEY VAULT NAME} --name "SecretName" --value "secret_value_1_prod"
    az keyvault secret set --vault-name {KEY VAULT NAME} --name "Section--SecretName" --value "secret_value_2_prod"
    

Use Application ID and X.509 certificate for non-Azure-hosted apps

Configure Azure AD, Azure Key Vault, and the app to use an Azure AD Application ID and X.509 certificate to authenticate to a key vault when the app is hosted outside of Azure. For more information, see About keys, secrets, and certificates.

[!NOTE] Although using an Application ID and X.509 certificate is supported for apps hosted in Azure, it's not recommended. Instead, use Managed identities for Azure resources when hosting an app in Azure. Managed identities don't require storing a certificate in the app or in the development environment.

The sample app uses an Application ID and X.509 certificate when the #define preprocessor directive at the top of Program.cs is set to Certificate.

  1. Create a PKCS#12 archive (.pfx) certificate. Options for creating certificates include MakeCert on Windows and OpenSSL.
  2. Install the certificate into the current user's personal certificate store. Marking the key as exportable is optional. Note the certificate's thumbprint, which is used later in this process.
  3. Export the PKCS#12 archive (.pfx) certificate as a DER-encoded certificate (.cer).
  4. Register the app with Azure AD (App registrations).
  5. Upload the DER-encoded certificate (.cer) to Azure AD:
    1. Select the app in Azure AD.
    2. Navigate to Certificates & secrets.
    3. Select Upload certificate to upload the certificate, which contains the public key. A .cer, .pem, or .crt certificate is acceptable.
  6. Store the key vault name, Application ID, and certificate thumbprint in the app's appsettings.json file.
  7. Navigate to Key vaults in the Azure portal.
  8. Select the key vault you created in the Secret storage in the Production environment with Azure Key Vault section.
  9. Select Access policies.
  10. Select Add Access Policy.
  11. Open Secret permissions and provide the app with Get and List permissions.
  12. Select Select principal and select the registered app by name. Select the Select button.
  13. Select OK.
  14. Select Save.
  15. Deploy the app.

The Certificate sample app obtains its configuration values from IConfigurationRoot with the same name as the secret name:

  • Non-hierarchical values: The value for SecretName is obtained with config["SecretName"].
  • Hierarchical values (sections): Use : (colon) notation or the GetSection extension method. Use either of these approaches to obtain the configuration value:
    • config["Section:SecretName"]
    • config.GetSection("Section")["SecretName"]

The X.509 certificate is managed by the OS. The app calls AddAzureKeyVault with values supplied by the appsettings.json file:

[!code-csharp]

Example values:

  • Key vault name: contosovault
  • Application ID: 627e911e-43cc-61d4-992e-12db9c81b413
  • Certificate thumbprint: fe14593dd66b2406c5269d742d04b6e1ab03adb1

appsettings.json:

[!code-json]

When you run the app, a webpage shows the loaded secret values. In the Development environment, secret values load with the _dev suffix. In the Production environment, the values load with the _prod suffix.

Use managed identities for Azure resources

An app deployed to Azure can take advantage of Managed identities for Azure resources. A managed identity allows the app to authenticate with Azure Key Vault using Azure AD authentication without credentials (Application ID and Password/Client Secret) stored in the app.

The sample app uses managed identities for Azure resources when the #define preprocessor directive at the top of Program.cs is set to Managed.

Enter the vault name into the app's appsettings.json file. The sample app doesn't require an Application ID and Password (Client Secret) when set to the Managed version, so you can ignore those configuration entries. The app is deployed to Azure, and Azure authenticates the app to access Azure Key Vault only using the vault name stored in the appsettings.json file.

Deploy the sample app to Azure App Service.

An app deployed to Azure App Service is automatically registered with Azure AD when the service is created. Obtain the Object ID from the deployment for use in the following command. The Object ID is shown in the Azure portal on the Identity panel of the App Service.

Using Azure CLI and the app's Object ID, provide the app with list and get permissions to access the key vault:

az keyvault set-policy --name {KEY VAULT NAME} --object-id {OBJECT ID} --secret-permissions get list

Restart the app using Azure CLI, PowerShell, or the Azure portal.

The sample app:

[!code-csharp]

Key vault name example value: contosovault

appsettings.json:

{
  "KeyVaultName": "Key Vault Name"
}

When you run the app, a webpage shows the loaded secret values. In the Development environment, secret values have the _dev suffix because they're provided by Secret Manager. In the Production environment, the values load with the _prod suffix because they're provided by Azure Key Vault.

If you receive an Access denied error, confirm that the app is registered with Azure AD and provided access to the key vault. Confirm that you've restarted the service in Azure.

For information on using the provider with a managed identity and Azure Pipelines, see Create an Azure Resource Manager service connection to a VM with a managed service identity.

Configuration options

AddAzureKeyVault can accept an xref:Microsoft.Extensions.Configuration.AzureKeyVault.AzureKeyVaultConfigurationOptions object:

config.AddAzureKeyVault(
    new SecretClient(
        new Uri("Your Key Vault Endpoint"),
        new DefaultAzureCredential()),
        new AzureKeyVaultConfigurationOptions())
    {
        ...
    });

The AzureKeyVaultConfigurationOptions object contains the following properties.

Property Description
xref:Microsoft.Extensions.Configuration.AzureKeyVault.AzureKeyVaultConfigurationOptions.Manager%2A xref:Microsoft.Extensions.Configuration.AzureKeyVault.IKeyVaultSecretManager instance used to control secret loading.
xref:Microsoft.Extensions.Configuration.AzureKeyVault.AzureKeyVaultConfigurationOptions.ReloadInterval%2A TimeSpan to wait between attempts at polling the key vault for changes. The default value is null (configuration isn't reloaded).

Use a key name prefix

AddAzureKeyVault provides an overload that accepts an implementation of xref:Microsoft.Extensions.Configuration.AzureKeyVault.IKeyVaultSecretManager, which allows you to control how key vault secrets are converted into configuration keys. For example, you can implement the interface to load secret values based on a prefix value you provide at app startup. This technique allows you, for example, to load secrets based on the version of the app.

[!WARNING] Don't use prefixes on key vault secrets to:

  • Place secrets for multiple apps into the same vault.
  • Place environmental secrets (for example, development versus production secrets) into the same vault.

Different apps and development/production environments should use separate key vaults to isolate app environments for the highest level of security.

In the following example, a secret is established in the key vault (and using Secret Manager for the Development environment) for 5000-AppSecret (periods aren't allowed in key vault secret names). This secret represents an app secret for version 5.0.0.0 of the app. For another version of the app, 5.1.0.0, a secret is added to the key vault (and using Secret Manager) for 5100-AppSecret. Each app version loads its versioned secret value into its configuration as AppSecret, removing the version as it loads the secret.

AddAzureKeyVault is called with a custom IKeyVaultSecretManager implementation:

[!code-csharp]

The implementation reacts to the version prefixes of secrets to load the proper secret into configuration:

  • Load loads a secret when its name starts with the prefix. Other secrets aren't loaded.
  • GetKey:
    • Removes the prefix from the secret name.
    • Replaces two dashes in any name with the KeyDelimiter, which is the delimiter used in configuration (usually a colon). Azure Key Vault doesn't allow a colon in secret names.

[!code-csharp]

The Load method is called by a provider algorithm that iterates through the vault secrets to find the version-prefixed secrets. When a version prefix is found with Load, the algorithm uses the GetKey method to return the configuration name of the secret name. It removes the version prefix from the secret's name. The rest of the secret name is returned for loading into the app's configuration name-value pairs.

When this approach is implemented:

  1. The app's version specified in the app's project file. In the following example, the app's version is set to 5.0.0.0:

    <PropertyGroup>
      <Version>5.0.0.0</Version>
    </PropertyGroup>
    
  2. Confirm that a <UserSecretsId> property is present in the app's project file, where {GUID} is a user-supplied GUID:

    <PropertyGroup>
      <UserSecretsId>{GUID}</UserSecretsId>
    </PropertyGroup>
    

    Save the following secrets locally with Secret Manager:

    dotnet user-secrets set "5000-AppSecret" "5.0.0.0_secret_value_dev"
    dotnet user-secrets set "5100-AppSecret" "5.1.0.0_secret_value_dev"
    
  3. Secrets are saved in Azure Key Vault using the following Azure CLI commands:

    az keyvault secret set --vault-name {KEY VAULT NAME} --name "5000-AppSecret" --value "5.0.0.0_secret_value_prod"
    az keyvault secret set --vault-name {KEY VAULT NAME} --name "5100-AppSecret" --value "5.1.0.0_secret_value_prod"
    
  4. When the app is run, the key vault secrets are loaded. The string secret for 5000-AppSecret is matched to the app's version specified in the app's project file (5.0.0.0).

  5. The version, 5000 (with the dash), is stripped from the key name. Throughout the app, reading configuration with the key AppSecret loads the secret value.

  6. If the app's version is changed in the project file to 5.1.0.0 and the app is run again, the secret value returned is 5.1.0.0_secret_value_dev in the Development environment and 5.1.0.0_secret_value_prod in Production.

[!NOTE] You can also provide your own xref:Azure.Security.KeyVault.Secrets.SecretClient implementation to AddAzureKeyVault. A custom client permits sharing a single instance of the client across the app.

Bind an array to a class

The provider can read configuration values into an array for binding to a POCO array.

When reading from a configuration source that allows keys to contain colon (:) separators, a numeric key segment is used to distinguish the keys that make up an array (:0:, :1:, … :{n}:). For more information, see Configuration: Bind an array to a class.

Azure Key Vault keys can't use a colon as a separator. The approach described in this document uses double dashes (--) as a separator for hierarchical values (sections). Array keys are stored in Azure Key Vault with double dashes and numeric key segments (--0--, --1--, … --{n}--).

Examine the following Serilog logging provider configuration provided by a JSON file. There are two object literals defined in the WriteTo array that reflect two Serilog sinks, which describe destinations for logging output:

"Serilog": {
  "WriteTo": [
    {
      "Name": "AzureTableStorage",
      "Args": {
        "storageTableName": "logs",
        "connectionString": "DefaultEnd...ountKey=Eby8...GMGw=="
      }
    },
    {
      "Name": "AzureDocumentDB",
      "Args": {
        "endpointUrl": "https://contoso.documents.azure.com:443",
        "authorizationKey": "Eby8...GMGw=="
      }
    }
  ]
}

The configuration shown in the preceding JSON file is stored in Azure Key Vault using double dash (--) notation and numeric segments:

Key Value
Serilog--WriteTo--0--Name AzureTableStorage
Serilog--WriteTo--0--Args--storageTableName logs
Serilog--WriteTo--0--Args--connectionString DefaultEnd...ountKey=Eby8...GMGw==
Serilog--WriteTo--1--Name AzureDocumentDB
Serilog--WriteTo--1--Args--endpointUrl https://contoso.documents.azure.com:443
Serilog--WriteTo--1--Args--authorizationKey Eby8...GMGw==

Reload secrets

Secrets are cached until IConfigurationRoot.Reload() is called. Expired, disabled, and updated secrets in the key vault aren't respected by the app until Reload is executed.

Configuration.Reload();

Disabled and expired secrets

Disabled and expired secrets throw a xref:Azure.RequestFailedException. To prevent the app from throwing, provide the configuration using a different configuration provider or update the disabled or expired secret.

Troubleshoot

When the app fails to load configuration using the provider, an error message is written to the ASP.NET Core Logging infrastructure. The following conditions will prevent configuration from loading:

  • The app or certificate isn't configured correctly in Azure AD.
  • The key vault doesn't exist in Azure Key Vault.
  • The app isn't authorized to access the key vault.
  • The access policy doesn't include Get and List permissions.
  • In the key vault, the configuration data (name-value pair) is incorrectly named, missing, disabled, or expired.
  • The app has the wrong key vault name (KeyVaultName), Azure AD Application ID (AzureADApplicationId), or Azure AD certificate thumbprint (AzureADCertThumbprint), or Azure AD Directory ID (AzureADDirectoryId).
  • The configuration key (name) is incorrect in the app for the value you're trying to load.
  • When adding the key vault access policy for the app, the policy was created, but the Save button wasn't selected in the Access policies UI.

Additional resources

::: moniker-end

::: moniker range="< aspnetcore-3.0"

This document explains how to use the Microsoft Azure Key Vault configuration provider to load app configuration values from Azure Key Vault secrets. Azure Key Vault is a cloud-based service that helps safeguard cryptographic keys and secrets used by apps and services. Common scenarios for using Azure Key Vault with ASP.NET Core apps include:

  • Controlling access to sensitive configuration data.
  • Meeting the requirement for FIPS 140-2 Level 2 validated Hardware Security Modules (HSMs) when storing configuration data.

View or download sample code (how to download)

Packages

Add a package reference to the Microsoft.Extensions.Configuration.AzureKeyVault package.

Sample app

The sample app runs in either of two modes determined by the #define preprocessor directive at the top of Program.cs:

  • Certificate: Demonstrates using an Azure Key Vault Client ID and X.509 certificate to access secrets stored in Azure Key Vault. This sample can be run from any location, whether deployed to Azure App Service or any host that can serve an ASP.NET Core app.
  • Managed: Demonstrates using Managed identities for Azure resources to authenticate the app to Azure Key Vault with Azure Active Directory (AD) authentication without credentials stored in the app's code or configuration. When using managed identities to authenticate, an Azure AD Application ID and Password (Client Secret) aren't required. The Managed version of the sample must be deployed to Azure. Follow the guidance in the Use the managed identities for Azure resources section.

For more information configuring a sample app using preprocessor directives (#define), see xref:index#preprocessor-directives-in-sample-code.

Secret storage in the Development environment

Set secrets locally using Secret Manager. When the sample app runs on the local machine in the Development environment, secrets are loaded from the local user secrets store.

Secret Manager requires a <UserSecretsId> property in the app's project file. Set the property value ({GUID}) to any unique GUID:

<PropertyGroup>
  <UserSecretsId>{GUID}</UserSecretsId>
</PropertyGroup>

Secrets are created as name-value pairs. Hierarchical values (configuration sections) use a : (colon) as a separator in ASP.NET Core configuration key names.

Secret Manager is used from a command shell opened to the project's content root, where {SECRET NAME} is the name and {SECRET VALUE} is the value:

dotnet user-secrets set "{SECRET NAME}" "{SECRET VALUE}"

Execute the following commands in a command shell from the project's content root to set the secrets for the sample app:

dotnet user-secrets set "SecretName" "secret_value_1_dev"
dotnet user-secrets set "Section:SecretName" "secret_value_2_dev"

When these secrets are stored in Azure Key Vault in the Secret storage in the Production environment with Azure Key Vault section, the _dev suffix is changed to _prod. The suffix provides a visual cue in the app's output indicating the source of the configuration values.

Secret storage in the Production environment with Azure Key Vault

The instructions provided by Quickstart: Set and retrieve a secret from Azure Key Vault using Azure CLI are summarized here for creating an Azure Key Vault and storing secrets used by the sample app.

  1. Open Azure Cloud Shell using any one of the following methods in the Azure portal:

    • Select Try It in the upper-right corner of a code block. Use the search string "Azure CLI" in the text box.
    • Open Cloud Shell in your browser with the Launch Cloud Shell button.
    • Select the Cloud Shell button on the menu in the upper-right corner of the Azure portal.

    For more information, see Azure CLI and Overview of Azure Cloud Shell.

  2. If you aren't already authenticated, sign in with the az login command.

  3. Create a resource group with the following command, where {RESOURCE GROUP NAME} is the new resource group's name and {LOCATION} is the Azure region:

    az group create --name "{RESOURCE GROUP NAME}" --location {LOCATION}
    
  4. Create a key vault in the resource group with the following command, where {KEY VAULT NAME} is the new key vault's name and {LOCATION} is the Azure region:

    az keyvault create --name {KEY VAULT NAME} --resource-group "{RESOURCE GROUP NAME}" --location {LOCATION}
    
  5. Create secrets in the key vault as name-value pairs.

    Azure Key Vault secret names are limited to alphanumeric characters and dashes. Hierarchical values (configuration sections) use -- (two dashes) as a delimiter, as colons aren't allowed in key vault secret names. Colons delimit a section from a subkey in ASP.NET Core configuration. The two-dash sequence is replaced with a colon when the secrets are loaded into the app's configuration.

    The following secrets are for use with the sample app. The values include a _prod suffix to distinguish them from the _dev suffix values loaded in the Development environment from Secret Manager. Replace {KEY VAULT NAME} with the name of the key vault you created in the prior step:

    az keyvault secret set --vault-name {KEY VAULT NAME} --name "SecretName" --value "secret_value_1_prod"
    az keyvault secret set --vault-name {KEY VAULT NAME} --name "Section--SecretName" --value "secret_value_2_prod"
    

Use Application ID and X.509 certificate for non-Azure-hosted apps

Configure Azure AD, Azure Key Vault, and the app to use an Azure AD Application ID and X.509 certificate to authenticate to a key vault when the app is hosted outside of Azure. For more information, see About keys, secrets, and certificates.

[!NOTE] Although using an Application ID and X.509 certificate is supported for apps hosted in Azure, it's not recommended. Instead, use Managed identities for Azure resources when hosting an app in Azure. Managed identities don't require storing a certificate in the app or in the development environment.

The sample app uses an Application ID and X.509 certificate when the #define statement at the top of the Program.cs file is set to Certificate.

  1. Create a PKCS#12 archive (.pfx) certificate. Options for creating certificates include MakeCert on Windows and OpenSSL.
  2. Install the certificate into the current user's personal certificate store. Marking the key as exportable is optional. Note the certificate's thumbprint, which is used later in this process.
  3. Export the PKCS#12 archive (.pfx) certificate as a DER-encoded certificate (.cer).
  4. Register the app with Azure AD (App registrations).
  5. Upload the DER-encoded certificate (.cer) to Azure AD:
    1. Select the app in Azure AD.
    2. Navigate to Certificates & secrets.
    3. Select Upload certificate to upload the certificate, which contains the public key. A .cer, .pem, or .crt certificate is acceptable.
  6. Store the key vault name, Application ID, and certificate thumbprint in the app's appsettings.json file.
  7. Navigate to Key vaults in the Azure portal.
  8. Select the key vault you created in the Secret storage in the Production environment with Azure Key Vault section.
  9. Select Access policies.
  10. Select Add Access Policy.
  11. Open Secret permissions and provide the app with Get and List permissions.
  12. Select Select principal and select the registered app by name. Select the Select button.
  13. Select OK.
  14. Select Save.
  15. Deploy the app.

The Certificate sample app obtains its configuration values from IConfigurationRoot with the same name as the secret name:

  • Non-hierarchical values: The value for SecretName is obtained with config["SecretName"].
  • Hierarchical values (sections): Use : (colon) notation or the GetSection extension method. Use either of these approaches to obtain the configuration value:
    • config["Section:SecretName"]
    • config.GetSection("Section")["SecretName"]

The X.509 certificate is managed by the OS. The app calls xref:Microsoft.Extensions.Configuration.AzureKeyVaultConfigurationExtensions.AddAzureKeyVault%2A with values supplied by the appsettings.json file:

[!code-csharp]

Example values:

  • Key vault name: contosovault
  • Application ID: 627e911e-43cc-61d4-992e-12db9c81b413
  • Certificate thumbprint: fe14593dd66b2406c5269d742d04b6e1ab03adb1

appsettings.json:

[!code-json]

When you run the app, a webpage shows the loaded secret values. In the Development environment, secret values load with the _dev suffix. In the Production environment, the values load with the _prod suffix.

Use managed identities for Azure resources

An app deployed to Azure can take advantage of Managed identities for Azure resources. A managed identity allows the app to authenticate with Azure Key Vault using Azure AD authentication without credentials (Application ID and Password/Client Secret) stored in the app.

The sample app uses managed identities for Azure resources when the #define statement at the top of the Program.cs file is set to Managed.

Enter the vault name into the app's appsettings.json file. The sample app doesn't require an Application ID and Password (Client Secret) when set to the Managed version, so you can ignore those configuration entries. The app is deployed to Azure, and Azure authenticates the app to access Azure Key Vault only using the vault name stored in the appsettings.json file.

Deploy the sample app to Azure App Service.

An app deployed to Azure App Service is automatically registered with Azure AD when the service is created. Obtain the Object ID from the deployment for use in the following command. The Object ID is shown in the Azure portal on the Identity panel of the App Service.

Using Azure CLI and the app's Object ID, provide the app with list and get permissions to access the key vault:

az keyvault set-policy --name {KEY VAULT NAME} --object-id {OBJECT ID} --secret-permissions get list

Restart the app using Azure CLI, PowerShell, or the Azure portal.

The sample app:

[!code-csharp]

Key vault name example value: contosovault

appsettings.json:

{
  "KeyVaultName": "Key Vault Name"
}

When you run the app, a webpage shows the loaded secret values. In the Development environment, secret values have the _dev suffix because they're provided by Secret Manager. In the Production environment, the values load with the _prod suffix because they're provided by Azure Key Vault.

If you receive an Access denied error, confirm that the app is registered with Azure AD and provided access to the key vault. Confirm that you've restarted the service in Azure.

For information on using the provider with a managed identity and Azure Pipelines, see Create an Azure Resource Manager service connection to a VM with a managed service identity.

Use a key name prefix

xref:Microsoft.Extensions.Configuration.AzureKeyVaultConfigurationExtensions.AddAzureKeyVault%2A provides an overload that accepts an implementation of xref:Microsoft.Extensions.Configuration.AzureKeyVault.IKeyVaultSecretManager. This overload allows you to control how key vault secrets are converted into configuration keys. For example, you can implement the interface to load secret values based on a prefix value you provide at app startup. This technique allows you, for example, to load secrets based on the version of the app.

[!WARNING] Don't use prefixes on key vault secrets to place secrets for multiple apps into the same key vault or to place environmental secrets (for example, development versus production secrets) into the same vault. We recommend that different apps and development/production environments use separate key vaults to isolate app environments for the highest level of security.

In the following example, a secret is established in the key vault (and using Secret Manager for the Development environment) for 5000-AppSecret (periods aren't allowed in key vault secret names). This secret represents an app secret for version 5.0.0.0 of the app. For another version of the app, 5.1.0.0, a secret is added to the key vault (and using Secret Manager) for 5100-AppSecret. Each app version loads its versioned secret value into its configuration as AppSecret, removing the version as it loads the secret.

xref:Microsoft.Extensions.Configuration.AzureKeyVaultConfigurationExtensions.AddAzureKeyVault%2A is called with a custom xref:Microsoft.Extensions.Configuration.AzureKeyVault.IKeyVaultSecretManager:

[!code-csharp]

The xref:Microsoft.Extensions.Configuration.AzureKeyVault.IKeyVaultSecretManager implementation reacts to the version prefixes of secrets to load the proper secret into configuration:

  • Load loads a secret when its name starts with the prefix. Other secrets aren't loaded.
  • GetKey:
    • Removes the prefix from the secret name.
    • Replaces two dashes in any name with the KeyDelimiter, which is the delimiter used in configuration (usually a colon). Azure Key Vault doesn't allow a colon in secret names.

[!code-csharp]

The Load method is called by a provider algorithm that iterates through the vault secrets to find the ones that have the version prefix. When a version prefix is found with Load, the algorithm uses the GetKey method to return the configuration name of the secret name. It removes the version prefix from the secret's name. The rest of the secret name is returned for loading into the app's configuration name-value pairs.

When this approach is implemented:

  1. The app's version specified in the app's project file. In the following example, the app's version is set to 5.0.0.0:

    <PropertyGroup>
      <Version>5.0.0.0</Version>
    </PropertyGroup>
    
  2. Confirm that a <UserSecretsId> property is present in the app's project file, where {GUID} is a user-supplied GUID:

    <PropertyGroup>
      <UserSecretsId>{GUID}</UserSecretsId>
    </PropertyGroup>
    

    Save the following secrets locally with Secret Manager:

    dotnet user-secrets set "5000-AppSecret" "5.0.0.0_secret_value_dev"
    dotnet user-secrets set "5100-AppSecret" "5.1.0.0_secret_value_dev"
    
  3. Secrets are saved in Azure Key Vault using the following Azure CLI commands:

    az keyvault secret set --vault-name {KEY VAULT NAME} --name "5000-AppSecret" --value "5.0.0.0_secret_value_prod"
    az keyvault secret set --vault-name {KEY VAULT NAME} --name "5100-AppSecret" --value "5.1.0.0_secret_value_prod"
    
  4. When the app is run, the key vault secrets are loaded. The string secret for 5000-AppSecret is matched to the app's version specified in the app's project file (5.0.0.0).

  5. The version, 5000 (with the dash), is stripped from the key name. Throughout the app, reading configuration with the key AppSecret loads the secret value.

  6. If the app's version is changed in the project file to 5.1.0.0 and the app is run again, the secret value returned is 5.1.0.0_secret_value_dev in the Development environment and 5.1.0.0_secret_value_prod in Production.

[!NOTE] You can also provide your own xref:Microsoft.Azure.KeyVault.KeyVaultClient implementation to xref:Microsoft.Extensions.Configuration.AzureKeyVaultConfigurationExtensions.AddAzureKeyVault%2A. A custom client permits sharing a single instance of the client across the app.

Bind an array to a class

The provider can read configuration values into an array for binding to a POCO array.

When reading from a configuration source that allows keys to contain colon (:) separators, a numeric key segment is used to distinguish the keys that make up an array (:0:, :1:, … :{n}:). For more information, see Configuration: Bind an array to a class.

Azure Key Vault keys can't use a colon as a separator. The approach described in this document uses double dashes (--) as a separator for hierarchical values (sections). Array keys are stored in Azure Key Vault with double dashes and numeric key segments (--0--, --1--, … --{n}--).

Examine the following Serilog logging provider configuration provided by a JSON file. There are two object literals defined in the WriteTo array that reflect two Serilog sinks, which describe destinations for logging output:

"Serilog": {
  "WriteTo": [
    {
      "Name": "AzureTableStorage",
      "Args": {
        "storageTableName": "logs",
        "connectionString": "DefaultEnd...ountKey=Eby8...GMGw=="
      }
    },
    {
      "Name": "AzureDocumentDB",
      "Args": {
        "endpointUrl": "https://contoso.documents.azure.com:443",
        "authorizationKey": "Eby8...GMGw=="
      }
    }
  ]
}

The configuration shown in the preceding JSON file is stored in Azure Key Vault using double dash (--) notation and numeric segments:

Key Value
Serilog--WriteTo--0--Name AzureTableStorage
Serilog--WriteTo--0--Args--storageTableName logs
Serilog--WriteTo--0--Args--connectionString DefaultEnd...ountKey=Eby8...GMGw==
Serilog--WriteTo--1--Name AzureDocumentDB
Serilog--WriteTo--1--Args--endpointUrl https://contoso.documents.azure.com:443
Serilog--WriteTo--1--Args--authorizationKey Eby8...GMGw==

Reload secrets

Secrets are cached until IConfigurationRoot.Reload() is called. Expired, disabled, and updated secrets in the key vault aren't respected by the app until Reload is executed.

Configuration.Reload();

Disabled and expired secrets

Disabled and expired secrets throw a xref:Microsoft.Azure.KeyVault.Models.KeyVaultErrorException. To prevent the app from throwing, provide the configuration using a different configuration provider or update the disabled or expired secret.

Troubleshoot

When the app fails to load configuration using the provider, an error message is written to the ASP.NET Core Logging infrastructure. The following conditions will prevent configuration from loading:

  • The app or certificate isn't configured correctly in Azure AD.
  • The key vault doesn't exist in Azure Key Vault.
  • The app isn't authorized to access the key vault.
  • The access policy doesn't include Get and List permissions.
  • In the key vault, the configuration data (name-value pair) is incorrectly named, missing, disabled, or expired.
  • The app has the wrong key vault name (KeyVaultName), Azure AD Application ID (AzureADApplicationId), or Azure AD certificate thumbprint (AzureADCertThumbprint).
  • The configuration key (name) is incorrect in the app for the value you're trying to load.
  • When adding the access policy for the app to the key vault, the policy was created, but the Save button wasn't selected in the Access policies UI.

Additional resources

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