Creates a new secret. A secret can be a password, a set of credentials such as a user name and password, an OAuth token, or other secret information that you store in an encrypted form in Secrets Manager. The secret also includes the connection information to access a database or other service, which Secrets Manager doesn't encrypt. A secret in Secrets Manager consists of both the protected secret data and the important information needed to manage the secret.
See https://www.paws-r-sdk.com/docs/secretsmanager_create_secret/ for full documentation.
secretsmanager_create_secret(
Name,
ClientRequestToken = NULL,
Description = NULL,
KmsKeyId = NULL,
SecretBinary = NULL,
SecretString = NULL,
Tags = NULL,
AddReplicaRegions = NULL,
ForceOverwriteReplicaSecret = NULL
)
[required] The name of the new secret.
The secret name can contain ASCII letters, numbers, and the following characters: /_+=.@-
Do not end your secret name with a hyphen followed by six characters. If you do so, you risk confusion and unexpected results when searching for a secret by partial ARN. Secrets Manager automatically adds a hyphen and six random characters after the secret name at the end of the ARN.
If you include SecretString
or SecretBinary
, then Secrets Manager
creates an initial version for the secret, and this parameter specifies
the unique identifier for the new version.
If you use the Amazon Web Services CLI or one of the Amazon Web Services SDKs to call this operation, then you can leave this parameter empty. The CLI or SDK generates a random UUID for you and includes it as the value for this parameter in the request.
If you generate a raw HTTP request to the Secrets Manager service
endpoint, then you must generate a ClientRequestToken
and include it
in the request.
This value helps ensure idempotency. Secrets Manager uses this value to prevent the accidental creation of duplicate versions if there are failures and retries during a rotation. We recommend that you generate a UUID-type value to ensure uniqueness of your versions within the specified secret.
If the ClientRequestToken
value isn't already associated with a
version of the secret then a new version of the secret is created.
If a version with this value already exists and the version
SecretString
and SecretBinary
values are the same as those in
the request, then the request is ignored.
If a version with this value already exists and that version's
SecretString
and SecretBinary
values are different from those in
the request, then the request fails because you cannot modify an
existing version. Instead, use
put_secret_value
to create a
new version.
This value becomes the VersionId
of the new version.
The description of the secret.
The ARN, key ID, or alias of the KMS key that Secrets Manager uses to
encrypt the secret value in the secret. An alias is always prefixed by
alias/
, for example alias/aws/secretsmanager
. For more information,
see About aliases.
To use a KMS key in a different account, use the key ARN or the alias ARN.
If you don't specify this value, then Secrets Manager uses the key
aws/secretsmanager
. If that key doesn't yet exist, then Secrets
Manager creates it for you automatically the first time it encrypts the
secret value.
If the secret is in a different Amazon Web Services account from the
credentials calling the API, then you can't use aws/secretsmanager
to
encrypt the secret, and you must create and use a customer managed KMS
key.
The binary data to encrypt and store in the new version of the secret. We recommend that you store your binary data in a file and then pass the contents of the file as a parameter.
Either SecretString
or SecretBinary
must have a value, but not both.
This parameter is not available in the Secrets Manager console.
Sensitive: This field contains sensitive information, so the service does not include it in CloudTrail log entries. If you create your own log entries, you must also avoid logging the information in this field.
The text data to encrypt and store in this new version of the secret. We recommend you use a JSON structure of key/value pairs for your secret value.
Either SecretString
or SecretBinary
must have a value, but not both.
If you create a secret by using the Secrets Manager console then Secrets
Manager puts the protected secret text in only the SecretString
parameter. The Secrets Manager console stores the information as a JSON
structure of key/value pairs that a Lambda rotation function can parse.
Sensitive: This field contains sensitive information, so the service does not include it in CloudTrail log entries. If you create your own log entries, you must also avoid logging the information in this field.
A list of tags to attach to the secret. Each tag is a key and value pair of strings in a JSON text string, for example:
[{"Key":"CostCenter","Value":"12345"},{"Key":"environment","Value":"production"}]
Secrets Manager tag key names are case sensitive. A tag with the key "ABC" is a different tag from one with key "abc".
If you check tags in permissions policies as part of your security
strategy, then adding or removing a tag can change permissions. If the
completion of this operation would result in you losing your permissions
for this secret, then Secrets Manager blocks the operation and returns
an Access Denied
error. For more information, see Control access to secrets using tags
and Limit access to identities with tags that match secrets' tags.
For information about how to format a JSON parameter for the various command line tool environments, see Using JSON for Parameters. If your command-line tool or SDK requires quotation marks around the parameter, you should use single quotes to avoid confusion with the double quotes required in the JSON text.
For tag quotas and naming restrictions, see Service quotas for Tagging in the Amazon Web Services General Reference guide.
A list of Regions and KMS keys to replicate secrets.
Specifies whether to overwrite a secret with the same name in the destination Region. By default, secrets aren't overwritten.