This page describes how to access a secret version. Accessing a secret version returns the secret
contents and additional metadata about the secret version. To access a secret version using the
Google Cloud CLI or the Secret Manager API, you must specify either its version ID or
its alias, if assigned. You can also access the latest version of a secret by specifying
latest
as the version id.
Required roles
To get the permissions that you need to access a secret version,
ask your administrator to grant you the
Secret Manager Secret Accessor (roles/secretmanager.secretAccessor
) IAM role on a secret.
For more information about granting roles, see Manage access to projects, folders, and organizations.
You might also be able to get the required permissions through custom roles or other predefined roles.
Access a secret version
To edit a secret, use one of the following methods:
Console
-
Go to the Secret Manager page in the Google Cloud console.
-
On the Secret Manager page, click the Regional secrets tab, and then click a secret to access its versions.
-
On the secret details page, in the Versions tab, select the secret version that you want to access.
-
Click the
Actions menu associated with the secret version, and then click View secret value. -
A dialog appears displaying the value of the secret version. Click Done to exit the dialog.
gcloud
Access a secret version
Before using any of the command data below, make the following replacements:
- VERSION_ID: the resource name of the secret version
- SECRET_ID: the ID of the secret or fully qualified identifier for the secret
- LOCATION: the Google Cloud location of the secret
Execute the following command:
Linux, macOS, or Cloud Shell
gcloud secrets versions access VERSION_ID --secret=SECRET_ID --location=LOCATION
Windows (PowerShell)
gcloud secrets versions access VERSION_ID --secret=SECRET_ID --location=LOCATION
Windows (cmd.exe)
gcloud secrets versions access VERSION_ID --secret=SECRET_ID --location=LOCATION
Access a binary secret version
To write raw bytes to a file use --out-file flag:
Before using any of the command data below, make the following replacements:
- VERSION_ID: the ID of the secret version
- SECRET_ID: the ID of the secret or fully qualified identifier for the secret
- LOCATION: the Google Cloud location of the secret
- PATH_TO_SECRET: the full path (including file name) where you want to save the retrieved secret value
Execute the following command:
Linux, macOS, or Cloud Shell
gcloud secrets versions access VERSION_ID --secret=SECRET_ID --location=LOCATION --out-file="PATH_TO_SECRET"
Windows (PowerShell)
gcloud secrets versions access VERSION_ID --secret=SECRET_ID --location=LOCATION --out-file="PATH_TO_SECRET"
Windows (cmd.exe)
gcloud secrets versions access VERSION_ID --secret=SECRET_ID --location=LOCATION --out-file="PATH_TO_SECRET"
Get the raw bytes
To get the raw bytes, have Cloud SDK print the response as base64-encoded and decode:
Before using any of the command data below, make the following replacements:
- VERSION_ID: the ID of the secret version
- SECRET_ID: the ID of the secret or fully qualified identifier for the secret
- LOCATION: the Google Cloud location of the secret
Execute the following command:
Linux, macOS, or Cloud Shell
gcloud secrets versions access VERSION_ID --secret=SECRET_ID --location=LOCATION --format='get(payload.data)' | tr '_-' '/+' | base64 -d
Windows (PowerShell)
gcloud secrets versions access VERSION_ID --secret=SECRET_ID --location=LOCATION --format='get(payload.data)' | tr '_-' '/+' | base64 -d
Windows (cmd.exe)
gcloud secrets versions access VERSION_ID --secret=SECRET_ID --location=LOCATION --format='get(payload.data)' | tr '_-' '/+' | base64 -d
The response contains the secret version.
REST
Access a secret version
Before using any of the request data, make the following replacements:
- LOCATION: the Google Cloud location of the secret
- PROJECT_ID: the Google Cloud project ID
- SECRET_ID: the ID of the secret or fully qualified identifier for the secret
- VERSION_ID: the ID of the secret version
HTTP method and URL:
GET https://secretmanager.LOCATION.rep.googleapis.com/v1/projects/PROJECT_ID/locations/LOCATION/secrets/SECRET_ID/versions/VERSION_ID:access
Request JSON body:
{}
To send your request, choose one of these options:
curl
Save the request body in a file named request.json
,
and execute the following command:
curl -X GET \
-H "Authorization: Bearer $(gcloud auth print-access-token)" \
-H "Content-Type: application/json; charset=utf-8" \
-d @request.json \
"https://secretmanager.LOCATION.rep.googleapis.com/v1/projects/PROJECT_ID/locations/LOCATION/secrets/SECRET_ID/versions/VERSION_ID:access"
PowerShell
Save the request body in a file named request.json
,
and execute the following command:
$cred = gcloud auth print-access-token
$headers = @{ "Authorization" = "Bearer $cred" }
Invoke-WebRequest `
-Method GET `
-Headers $headers `
-ContentType: "application/json; charset=utf-8" `
-InFile request.json `
-Uri "https://secretmanager.LOCATION.rep.googleapis.com/v1/projects/PROJECT_ID/locations/LOCATION/secrets/SECRET_ID/versions/VERSION_ID:access" | Select-Object -Expand Content
You should receive a JSON response similar to the following:
{ "name": "projects/PROJECT_ID/locations/LOCATION/secrets/SECRET_ID/versions/VERSION_ID", "payload": { "data": "c2VDcjN0Cg==", "dataCrc32c": "3131222104" } }
Extract the secret using the jq
tool
The response payload.data
is the base64-encoded contents of the secret version.
The following command is an example of extracting the secret using the jq
tool.
$ curl "https://secretmanager.LOCATION.rep.googleapis.com/v1/projects/PROJECT_ID/locations/LOCATION/secrets/SECRET_ID/versions/VERSION_ID:access" \
--request "GET" \
--header "authorization: Bearer $(gcloud auth print-access-token)" \
--header "content-type: application/json" \
| jq -r ".payload.data" | base64 --decode
Go
To run this code, first set up a Go development environment and install the Secret Manager Go SDK. On Compute Engine or GKE, you must authenticate with the cloud-platform scope.
Java
To run this code, first set up a Java development environment and install the Secret Manager Java SDK. On Compute Engine or GKE, you must authenticate with the cloud-platform scope.
Node.js
To run this code, first set up a Node.js development environment and install the Secret Manager Node.js SDK. On Compute Engine or GKE, you must authenticate with the cloud-platform scope.
Python
To run this code, first set up a Python development environment and install the Secret Manager Python SDK. On Compute Engine or GKE, you must authenticate with the cloud-platform scope.
Resource consistency
In Secret Manager, adding a secret version and then immediately accessing that secret version by version number is a strongly consistent operation.
Other operations within Secret Manager are eventually consistent. Eventually consistent operations typically converge within minutes, but may take a few hours.
Propagating IAM permissions is eventually consistent. This means granting or revoking access to secrets may not take effect immediately. For more information, see Access change propagation.
What's next
- Assign an alias to a regional secret version
- Disable a regional secret version
- Destroy a regional secret version