--- title: How to provide your passwords eleventyNavigation: key: 🔒 Provide your passwords parent: How-to guides order: 2 --- ## Providing passwords and secrets to borgmatic If you want to use a Borg repository passphrase or database passwords with borgmatic, you can set them directly in your borgmatic configuration file, treating those secrets like any other option value. For instance, you can specify your Borg passhprase with: ```yaml encryption_passphrase: yourpassphrase ``` But if you'd rather store them outside of borgmatic, whether for convenience or security reasons, read on. ### Delegating to another application borgmatic supports calling another application such as a password manager to obtain the Borg passphrase to a repository. For example, to ask the *Pass* password manager to provide the passphrase: ```yaml encryption_passcommand: pass path/to/borg-repokey ``` ### Environment variable interpolation New in version 1.6.4 borgmatic supports interpolating arbitrary environment variables directly into option values in your configuration file. That means you can instruct borgmatic to pull your repository passphrase, your database passwords, or any other option values from environment variables. For instance: ```yaml encryption_passphrase: ${YOUR_PASSPHRASE} ``` Prior to version 1.8.0 Put this option in the `storage:` section of your configuration. This uses the `YOUR_PASSPHRASE` environment variable as your encryption passphrase. Note that the `{` `}` brackets are required. `$YOUR_PASSPHRASE` by itself will not work. In the case of `encryption_passphrase` in particular, an alternate approach is to use Borg's `BORG_PASSPHRASE` environment variable, which doesn't even require setting an explicit `encryption_passphrase` value in borgmatic's configuration file. For [database configuration](https://torsion.org/borgmatic/docs/how-to/backup-your-databases/), the same approach applies. For example: ```yaml postgresql_databases: - name: users password: ${YOUR_DATABASE_PASSWORD} ``` Prior to version 1.8.0 Put this option in the `hooks:` section of your configuration. This uses the `YOUR_DATABASE_PASSWORD` environment variable as your database password. #### Interpolation defaults If you'd like to set a default for your environment variables, you can do so with the following syntax: ```yaml encryption_passphrase: ${YOUR_PASSPHRASE:-defaultpass} ``` Here, "`defaultpass`" is the default passphrase if the `YOUR_PASSPHRASE` environment variable is not set. Without a default, if the environment variable doesn't exist, borgmatic will error. #### Disabling interpolation To disable this environment variable interpolation feature entirely, you can pass the `--no-environment-interpolation` flag on the command-line. Or if you'd like to disable interpolation within a single option value, you can escape it with a backslash. For instance, if your password is literally `${A}@!`: ```yaml encryption_passphrase: \${A}@! ``` ## Related features Another way to override particular options within a borgmatic configuration file is to use a [configuration override](https://torsion.org/borgmatic/docs/how-to/make-per-application-backups/#configuration-overrides) on the command-line. But please be aware of the security implications of specifying secrets on the command-line. Additionally, borgmatic action hooks support their own [variable interpolation](https://torsion.org/borgmatic/docs/how-to/add-preparation-and-cleanup-steps-to-backups/#variable-interpolation), although in that case it's for particular borgmatic runtime values rather than (only) environment variables. Lastly, if you do want to specify your passhprase directly within borgmatic configuration, but you'd like to keep it in a separate file from your main configuration, you can [use a configuration include or a merge include](https://torsion.org/borgmatic/docs/how-to/make-per-application-backups/#configuration-includes) to pull in an external password.