Access control with IAM

This page describes the Identity and Access Management (IAM) roles you can use to configure Secret Manager. Roles limit a principal's ability to access resources. Always grant the minimum set of permissions required to perform a given task.

Secret Manager roles

Following are the IAM roles that are associated with Secret Manager. To learn how to grant, change, or revoke access to resources using IAM roles, see Granting, changing, and revoking access to resources.

Role Permissions

(roles/secretmanager.admin)

Full access to administer Secret Manager resources.

Lowest-level resources where you can grant this role:

  • Secret

resourcemanager.projects.get

resourcemanager.projects.list

secretmanager.*

  • secretmanager.locations.get
  • secretmanager.locations.list
  • secretmanager.secrets.create
  • secretmanager.secrets.createTagBinding
  • secretmanager.secrets.delete
  • secretmanager.secrets.deleteTagBinding
  • secretmanager.secrets.get
  • secretmanager.secrets.getIamPolicy
  • secretmanager.secrets.list
  • secretmanager.secrets.listEffectiveTags
  • secretmanager.secrets.listTagBindings
  • secretmanager.secrets.setIamPolicy
  • secretmanager.secrets.update
  • secretmanager.versions.access
  • secretmanager.versions.add
  • secretmanager.versions.destroy
  • secretmanager.versions.disable
  • secretmanager.versions.enable
  • secretmanager.versions.get
  • secretmanager.versions.list

(roles/secretmanager.secretAccessor)

Allows accessing the payload of secrets.

Lowest-level resources where you can grant this role:

  • Secret

resourcemanager.projects.get

resourcemanager.projects.list

secretmanager.versions.access

(roles/secretmanager.secretVersionAdder)

Allows adding versions to existing secrets.

Lowest-level resources where you can grant this role:

  • Secret

resourcemanager.projects.get

resourcemanager.projects.list

secretmanager.versions.add

(roles/secretmanager.secretVersionManager)

Allows creating and managing versions of existing secrets.

Lowest-level resources where you can grant this role:

  • Secret

resourcemanager.projects.get

resourcemanager.projects.list

secretmanager.versions.add

secretmanager.versions.destroy

secretmanager.versions.disable

secretmanager.versions.enable

secretmanager.versions.get

secretmanager.versions.list

(roles/secretmanager.viewer)

Allows viewing metadata of all Secret Manager resources

Lowest-level resources where you can grant this role:

  • Secret

resourcemanager.projects.get

resourcemanager.projects.list

secretmanager.locations.*

  • secretmanager.locations.get
  • secretmanager.locations.list

secretmanager.secrets.get

secretmanager.secrets.getIamPolicy

secretmanager.secrets.list

secretmanager.secrets.listEffectiveTags

secretmanager.secrets.listTagBindings

secretmanager.versions.get

secretmanager.versions.list

Principle of least privilege

When you follow the principle of least privilege, you grant the minimum level of access to resources required to perform a given task. For example, if a principal needs access to a single secret, don't give that principal access to other secrets or all secrets in the project or organization. If a principal only needs to read a secret, don't grant that principal the ability to modify the secret.

You can use IAM to grant IAM roles and permissions at the level of the Google Cloud secret, project, folder, or organization. Always apply permissions at the lowest level in the resource hierarchy.

The following table shows the effective capabilities of a service account, based on the level of the resource hierarchy where the Secret Manager Secret Accessor role (roles/secretmanager.secretAccessor) is granted.

Resource hierarchy Capability
Secret Access only that secret
Project Access all secrets in the project
Folder Access all secrets in all projects in the folder
Organization Access all secrets in all projects in the organization

The role roles/owner includes the `secretmanager.versions.access` permission, but the roles/editor and roles/viewer do not.

If a principal only needs to access a single secret's value, don't grant that principal the ability to access all secrets. For example, you can grant a service account the Secret Manager Secret Accessor role (roles/secretmanager.secretAccessor) on a single secret.

If a principal only needs to manage a single secret, don't grant that principal the ability to manage all secrets. For example, you can grant a service account the Secret Manager Admin role (roles/secretmanager.admin) on a single secret.

IAM conditions

IAM Conditions allow you to define and enforce conditional, attribute-based access control for some Google Cloud resources, including Secret Manager resources.

In Secret Manager, you can enforce conditional access based on the following attributes:

  • Date/time attributes: Use to set expirable, scheduled, or limited-duration access to Secret Manager resources. For example, you could allow a user to access a secret until a specified date.
  • Resource attributes: Use to configure conditional access based on a resource name, resource type, or resource service attributes. In Secret Manager, you can use attributes of secrets and secret versions to configure conditional access. For example, you can allow a user to manage secret versions only on secrets that begin with a specific prefix, or allow a user to access only a specific secret version.

For more information about IAM Conditions, see the Conditions overview.

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