diff --git a/website/content/docs/secrets/databases/mssql.mdx b/website/content/docs/secrets/databases/mssql.mdx index 1e1fd36d4841..4f843e5a40b5 100644 --- a/website/content/docs/secrets/databases/mssql.mdx +++ b/website/content/docs/secrets/databases/mssql.mdx @@ -98,7 +98,7 @@ the proper permission, it can generate credentials. ## Example for Azure SQL Database -Here is a complete example using Azure SQL Database. Note that databases in Azure SQL Database are [contained databases](https://docs.microsoft.com/en-us/sql/relational-databases/databases/contained-databases) and that we do not create a login for the user; instead, we associate the password directly with the user itself. Also note that you will need a separate connection and role for each Azure SQL database for which you want to generate dynamic credentials. You can use a single database backend mount for all these databases or use a separate mount for of them. In this example, we use a custom path for the database backend. +Here is a complete example using Azure SQL Database. Note that databases in Azure SQL Database are [contained databases](https://docs.microsoft.com/en-us/sql/relational-databases/databases/contained-databases) and that we do not create a login for the user; instead, we associate the password directly with the user itself. Also note that you will need a separate connection and role for each Azure SQL database for which you want to generate dynamic credentials. You can use a single database backend mount for all these databases or use a separate mount for each of them. In this example, we use a custom path for the database backend. First, we mount a database backend at the azuresql path with `vault secrets enable -path=azuresql database`. Then we configure a connection called "testvault" to connect to a database called "test-vault", using "azuresql" at the beginning of our path: