Extracts the remaining target connectors: - ssh.md (194 lines) — agentless SSH/SFTP deploy with full host-key-acceptance threat model (what's accepted, what's not, mitigations including known_hosts enforcement and SSH cert auth); V3-Pro forward path - wincertstore.md (118 lines) — non-IIS Windows services via local PowerShell or WinRM proxy mode; store selection (My / Root / WebHosting); private-key permissions guidance - jks.md (189 lines) — JKS / PKCS#12 via keytool with full atomic snapshot+rollback contract (Bundle 8 'snapshot → delete → import → reload'), keytool argv password exposure threat model + mitigations - aws-acm.md (208 lines) — ACM target with full IAM policy, IRSA / instance-profile / SSO auth recipes, atomic-rollback contract, ALB attachment Terraform recipe, procurement-checklist crib - azure-kv.md (195 lines) — Key Vault target with managed-identity / workload-identity / service-principal auth recipes, version- semantics rollback caveat (no in-place restore without soft-delete), App Gateway / Front Door attachment recipe Index forward-list expanded to enumerate all 15 target connectors (5 from Phase 4 structural + 5 from batch 3 + 5 from this batch) in alphabetical order. This is part 4 of 4 for the Phase 4 follow-on (per-connector page extraction) tracked in cowork/docs-overhaul-phase-2-restructure-2026-05-04/log.md. Net add: 5 files, 904 lines. No content removed from index.md. End-state of Phase 4 follow-on: - 13 issuer per-pages (5 batch 1 + 8 batch 2) - 15 target per-pages (5 Phase 4 structural + 5 batch 3 + 5 batch 4) - index.md keeps its inline reference content; per-pages add operator depth on top, matching the pattern set by apache/f5/iis/k8s/nginx in Phase 4 structural
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Azure Key Vault Target Connector — Operator Deep-Dive
Last reviewed: 2026-05-05
Operator-grade documentation for the Azure Key Vault target connector. For the connector-development context (interface contract, registry, atomic deploy primitive shared across all targets), see the connector index.
Overview
The Azure Key Vault target connector deploys certificates into Azure Key Vault — the Azure-managed cert/secret store that Application Gateway / Front Door / App Service / Container Apps consume by KID URI. Rank 5 (Azure half) of the 2026-05-03 Infisical deep-research deliverable.
Implementation lives at internal/connector/target/azurekv/.
When to use this connector
Use the Azure Key Vault target connector when:
- TLS terminates at Azure-managed edges (Application Gateway, Front Door, App Service, Container Apps) and those services consume certs by Key Vault KID URI.
- You need short-lived Azure credentials (managed identity, workload identity) rather than long-lived service-principal secrets.
- You need cross-region or cross-cloud-environment Key Vault
endpoints (US-Gov
.vault.usgovcloudapi.net, China.vault.azure.cn).
Look elsewhere when:
- The target is an Azure VM running NGINX / IIS / HAProxy directly — those connectors are simpler.
- The cert is for an internal Azure service that doesn't read from Key Vault (e.g. a custom .NET app reading PEM from disk).
Configuration
{
"vault_url": "https://my-vault.vault.azure.net",
"certificate_name": "api-prod",
"tags": {"env": "production", "app": "api-gateway"},
"credential_mode": "managed_identity"
}
| Field | Default | Description |
|---|---|---|
vault_url |
(required) | Key Vault DNS endpoint (https://<vault-name>.vault.azure.net). For US-Gov: .vault.usgovcloudapi.net; for China: .vault.azure.cn. |
certificate_name |
(required) | Cert object name in the vault (1-127 chars, alphanumeric + hyphens). Versions are auto-generated per import. |
tags |
— | Tags applied at every import (Key Vault carries tags forward across versions, unlike ACM). Reserved keys certctl-managed-by + certctl-certificate-id are set automatically. |
credential_mode |
default |
One of default / managed_identity / client_secret / workload_identity. See "Auth recipes" below. |
RBAC role (minimum permissions)
The off-the-shelf builtin role Key Vault Certificates Officer
covers everything. For minimum-permission deploys, use a custom
role with these data-plane operations on the vault scope
(/subscriptions/<sub>/resourceGroups/<rg>/providers/Microsoft.KeyVault/vaults/<vault-name>):
Microsoft.KeyVault/vaults/certificates/import/action
Microsoft.KeyVault/vaults/certificates/read
Microsoft.KeyVault/vaults/certificates/listversions/read
Auth recipes
- AKS workload identity (
credential_mode: workload_identity) — recommended for AKS deploys. Annotate the agent's ServiceAccount withazure.workload.identity/client-id=<app-id>. The AKS cluster's OIDC issuer + the federated credential on the app registration handle token exchange; no long-lived secrets. - Managed identity (
credential_mode: managed_identity) — recommended for VM / App Service deploys. Assign a system-assigned or user-assigned managed identity to the host; certctl-server / agent picks it up via IMDS. Pincredential_moderather than lettingdefaultfall through to env vars (defends against accidental local-dev creds leaking into production). - Service principal (
credential_mode: client_secret). ConfigureAZURE_TENANT_ID+AZURE_CLIENT_ID+AZURE_CLIENT_SECRETenv vars on the agent. NOT recommended for production — long-lived client secret risk; rotate via Key Vault soft-delete recovery if leaked. - Default (
credential_mode: defaultor unset). SDK'sDefaultAzureCredentialwalks env vars → managed identity → Azure CLI fallback. Useful for local-dev where the operator already hasaz loginactive. - Long-lived secrets in connector Config NOT supported — same procurement-readability rule as AWS ACM.
Atomic-rollback contract + Azure-version semantics
Every DeployCertificate snapshots the existing latest version
via GetCertificate(name, "" /* latest */) BEFORE calling
ImportCertificate. After import, the connector re-fetches the
latest version and compares serial numbers.
On serial-mismatch, the connector calls ImportCertificate
again with the snapshotted CER bytes (re-PFX'd with the
operator's key) — as a NEW VERSION. Key Vault doesn't
support "version-restore" without soft-delete recovery (which we
keep off the minimum-RBAC surface). The version history will
show e.g. v1=initial, v2=failed-renewal, v3=rollback-of-v2;
operators reading audit dashboards filter by tag.
Soft-delete caveat
V2 doesn't manage Key Vault soft-delete recovery. If a previous
version was soft-deleted out-of-band (e.g. operator ran
az keyvault certificate delete), the rollback re-imports the
snapshot bytes as a new version rather than restoring the
soft-deleted version. Operators alerting on rollback frequency
should also watch for soft-delete events.
App Gateway / Front Door attachment recipe
data "azurerm_key_vault_certificate" "certctl_managed" {
name = "api-prod"
key_vault_id = azurerm_key_vault.main.id
}
resource "azurerm_application_gateway" "main" {
# ...
ssl_certificate {
name = "certctl-managed"
key_vault_secret_id = data.azurerm_key_vault_certificate.certctl_managed.secret_id
}
}
Application Gateway / Front Door reference the cert by KID URI;
certctl rotates the version under the same name, and the AGW /
Front Door reference auto-resolves to the latest version (the
SDK's behaviour when the KID points to
/certificates/<name>/<version> vs /certificates/<name>
differs — the latter auto-tracks "latest"; the former pins).
Pin the version-less KID for auto-tracking renewals.
Threat model carve-outs
- Cert key bytes never written to disk on the agent. PFX
wrapping happens in memory (PKCS#12 via
software.sslmate.com/src/go-pkcs12); the base64-encoded PFX is passed straight to the SDK'sImportCertificatecall. - Provenance tags are mandatory. Same
certctl-managed-by=certctl+certctl-certificate-id=<mc-id>shape as AWS ACM. Operators identifying a stray Key Vault cert match againstcertctl-managed-by. - No long-lived Azure credentials in
Config.Configcarries vault URL + cert name + operator tags + credential mode only. Auth is the Azure SDK credential chain. credential_mode: managed_identityis the recommended production posture. Defends against accidental env-var creds leaking into deployments where the host already has a managed identity assigned.
Procurement checklist crib
Paste into security review:
- certctl uses Azure managed identity (or workload identity for AKS), not long-lived service-principal secrets.
- The cert key is held only in agent memory during the PFX wrap
- import call; never written to disk.
- Every imported Key Vault cert is tagged with
certctl-managed-by=certctl+certctl-certificate-id=<mc-id>for forensic traceability. - Failed imports trigger automatic rollback by re-importing the snapshotted previous version's bytes; both outcomes are surfaced via Prometheus.
- The minimum RBAC role is 3 data-plane actions; Activity Log captures every API call for compliance audits.
ValidateOnly contract
Key Vault has no dry-run API; ValidateOnly returns
target.ErrValidateOnlyNotSupported. Operators preview deploys
via ValidateConfig + az keyvault certificate show --vault-name <name> --name <cert>.
Related docs
- Connector index — interface contract, registry, deploy primitive
- AWS ACM target — AWS equivalent target
- Cloud targets runbook — operator playbook covering both AWS ACM and Azure KV