To enrich the ZITADEL configuration with secrets, that are already available in the cluster, you can use the configSecretName
property in the ZITADEL values file.
This is especially handy in case you manage your Kubernetes secrets using a secret manager like Hashicorp Vault.
By running the commands below, you deploy a simple insecure Postgres database to your Kubernetes cluster by using the Bitnami chart. Also, you deploy a correctly configured ZITADEL.
Warning
Anybody with network access to the Postgres database can connect to it and read and write data. Use this example only for testing purposes. For deploying a secure Postgres database, see the secure Postgres example.
# Install Postgres
helm repo add bitnami https://charts.bitnami.com/bitnami
helm install --wait db bitnami/postgresql --version 12.10.0 --values https://raw.githubusercontent.com/zitadel/zitadel-charts/main/examples/5-referenced-secrets/postgres-values.yaml
# Create a secret for arbitrary ZITADEL configuration as well as the ZITADEL masterkey
kubectl apply --filename https://raw.githubusercontent.com/zitadel/zitadel-charts/main/examples/5-referenced-secrets/zitadel-masterkey.yaml,https://raw.githubusercontent.com/zitadel/zitadel-charts/main/examples/5-referenced-secrets/zitadel-secrets.yaml
# Install ZITADEL
helm repo add zitadel https://charts.zitadel.com
helm install my-zitadel zitadel/zitadel --values https://raw.githubusercontent.com/zitadel/zitadel-charts/main/examples/5-referenced-secrets/zitadel-values.yaml
When ZITADEL is ready, you can access the GUI via port-forwarding:
kubectl port-forward svc/my-zitadel 8080
Now, open http://127.0.0.1.sslip.io:8080 in your browser and log in with the following credentials:
Username: [email protected] Password: Password1!