IMPORTANT NOTE: As pointed out in the AWS documentation for storing sensible information Amazon recommends to use AWS KMS instead of environment variables like this plugin.
npm install --save-dev serverless-secrets-plugin
After that you need to add the plugin to your serverless.yml
of you service.
Run the command serverless --help
and verify the list of commands contain an encrypt
and a decrypt
command.
Create a secrets.{stage}.yml
file for each stage e.g. secrets.dev.yml
.
Store the keys in there, that you want to keep private e.g.
EMAIL_SERVICE_API_KEY: DEV_API_EXAMPLE_KEY_12
SESSION_KEY: DEV_SESSION_EXAMPLE_KEY_12
You can also provide a path prefix if you like to keep your secrets in a different directory e.g.
custom:
secretsFilePathPrefix: config
Encrypt the secrets file for the desired stage by running
serverless encrypt --stage dev --password '{your super secure password}'
This will result in an encrypted file e.g. secrets.dev.yml.encrypted
. You can check the encrypted file into your version control system e.g. Git. It's recommened to add your unencrypted file to .gitignore
or similar so you and your colleagues can't check it in by accident.
In your serverless.yaml
you can use the file variable syntax to import the secrets and set them as environment variables. When you create or update Lambda functions that use environment variables, AWS Lambda encrypts them using the AWS Key Management Service. Read more about that in the AWS documentation here.
Whenever you want to deploy there needs to be the unencrypted version of the secrets file available otherwise the plugin will prevent the deployment.
You can check out a full example in the Serverless Examples repository: serverless/examples/aws-node-env-variables-encrypted-in-a-file.