delete_secret
(**kwargs)¶Deletes a secret and all of its versions. You can specify a recovery window during which you can restore the secret. The minimum recovery window is 7 days. The default recovery window is 30 days. Secrets Manager attaches a DeletionDate
stamp to the secret that specifies the end of the recovery window. At the end of the recovery window, Secrets Manager deletes the secret permanently.
You can't delete a primary secret that is replicated to other Regions. You must first delete the replicas using RemoveRegionsFromReplication, and then delete the primary secret. When you delete a replica, it is deleted immediately.
You can't directly delete a version of a secret. Instead, you remove all staging labels from the version using UpdateSecretVersionStage. This marks the version as deprecated, and then Secrets Manager can automatically delete the version in the background.
To determine whether an application still uses a secret, you can create an Amazon CloudWatch alarm to alert you to any attempts to access a secret during the recovery window. For more information, see Monitor secrets scheduled for deletion.
Secrets Manager performs the permanent secret deletion at the end of the waiting period as a background task with low priority. There is no guarantee of a specific time after the recovery window for the permanent delete to occur.
At any time before recovery window ends, you can use RestoreSecret to remove the DeletionDate
and cancel the deletion of the secret.
When a secret is scheduled for deletion, you cannot retrieve the secret value. You must first cancel the deletion with RestoreSecret and then you can retrieve the secret.
Secrets Manager generates a CloudTrail log entry when you call this action. Do not include sensitive information in request parameters because it might be logged. For more information, see Logging Secrets Manager events with CloudTrail.
Required permissions:secretsmanager:DeleteSecret
. For more information, see IAM policy actions for Secrets Manager and Authentication and access control in Secrets Manager.
See also: AWS API Documentation
Request Syntax
response = client.delete_secret(
SecretId='string',
RecoveryWindowInDays=123,
ForceDeleteWithoutRecovery=True|False
)
[REQUIRED]
The ARN or name of the secret to delete.
For an ARN, we recommend that you specify a complete ARN rather than a partial ARN. See Finding a secret from a partial ARN.
ForceDeleteWithoutRecovery
in the same call. If you don't use either, then Secrets Manager defaults to a 30 day recovery window.Specifies whether to delete the secret without any recovery window. You can't use both this parameter and RecoveryWindowInDays
in the same call. If you don't use either, then Secrets Manager defaults to a 30 day recovery window.
Secrets Manager performs the actual deletion with an asynchronous background process, so there might be a short delay before the secret is permanently deleted. If you delete a secret and then immediately create a secret with the same name, use appropriate back off and retry logic.
Warning
Use this parameter with caution. This parameter causes the operation to skip the normal recovery window before the permanent deletion that Secrets Manager would normally impose with the RecoveryWindowInDays
parameter. If you delete a secret with the ForceDeleteWithoutRecovery
parameter, then you have no opportunity to recover the secret. You lose the secret permanently.
dict
Response Syntax
{
'ARN': 'string',
'Name': 'string',
'DeletionDate': datetime(2015, 1, 1)
}
Response Structure
(dict) --
ARN (string) --
The ARN of the secret.
Name (string) --
The name of the secret.
DeletionDate (datetime) --
The date and time after which this secret Secrets Manager can permanently delete this secret, and it can no longer be restored. This value is the date and time of the delete request plus the number of days in RecoveryWindowInDays
.
Exceptions
SecretsManager.Client.exceptions.ResourceNotFoundException
SecretsManager.Client.exceptions.InvalidParameterException
SecretsManager.Client.exceptions.InvalidRequestException
SecretsManager.Client.exceptions.InternalServiceError
Examples
The following example shows how to delete a secret. The secret stays in your account in a deprecated and inaccessible state until the recovery window ends. After the date and time in the DeletionDate response field has passed, you can no longer recover this secret with restore-secret.
response = client.delete_secret(
RecoveryWindowInDays=7,
SecretId='MyTestDatabaseSecret1',
)
print(response)
Expected Output:
{
'ARN': 'arn:aws:secretsmanager:us-west-2:123456789012:secret:MyTestDatabaseSecret-a1b2c3',
'DeletionDate': datetime(2018, 4, 18, 21, 2, 29, 2, 108, 0),
'Name': 'MyTestDatabaseSecret',
'ResponseMetadata': {
'...': '...',
},
}