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Disabling the Admin Interface |
:::caution[Backup Reminder]
Before proceeding, ensure that you have backed up important configurations, especially when making changes to configuration files or secrets. It's also advisable to back up the Vaultwarden database to prevent potential data loss.
:::
This guide is a combination of the upstream documentation and how we implemented it.
Modify the Host Secret
To start with the deactivation, you must first modify the secret on the host's shell. Execute the following command:
k3s kubectl patch secret vaultwarden-vaultwardensecret -n ix-vaultwarden --type='json' -p='[{"op": "remove", "path": "/data/ADMIN_TOKEN"}]'
:::tip[Command Explanation]
The command above utilizes kubectl
, a command-line tool for interacting with Kubernetes clusters. Here's a breakdown:
k3s
: This is a lightweight version of Kubernetes.patch secret vaultwarden-vaultwardensecret
: This indicates that we are patching (modifying) the secret namedvaultwarden-vaultwardensecret
.-n ix-vaultwarden
: This specifies the namespace (ix-vaultwarden
) in which the secret resides.--type='json'
: Specifies that the patch content is of type JSON.-p='[{"op": "remove", "path": "/data/ADMIN_TOKEN"}]'
: This JSON patch instruction tells Kubernetes to remove theADMIN_TOKEN
field from the secret.
:::
Update Container Config
Next, while inside the Vaultwarden container, run the command below to modify the config.json
file:
sed -i.bak '/admin_token/d' /data/config.json
:::tip[Command Explanation]
- The
sed
command is used to search and delete the line containingadmin_token
from theconfig.json
file. - A backup of the original
config.json
is created with the.bak
extension before making the change.
:::
Adjust the App Configuration
Finally, head to the Vaultwarden app's configuration:
- Find and disable the admin interface option (if it is still enabled).
- Click "Save" at the bottom to apply the changes.