SberTech Database Integration With OneKey Service Strengthens Data Protection
SberTech and ABP2B announced compatibility between the Russian DBMS Platform V Pangolin DB and the enterprise password and secrets manager OdinKlyuch (OneKey). The solution is deployed on the customer’s infrastructure and enables encryption keys to be stored in OdinKlyuch and applied to protect database data. This marks an important step in import substitution. Customers receive a ready-to-use integrated system for high-security environments – from financial and personal data to analytical warehouses and complex enterprise infrastructures.

Information about this compatibility is primarily aimed at CIOs, CISOs, enterprise architects, and system integrators. Both solutions – Platform V Pangolin DB and OdinKlyuch – are included in the Russian software registry and positioned as enterprise-grade on-premise tools for high-load systems and corporate data protection.
Building a Domestic Security Stack
The integration aligns with a broader shift toward domestic technology stacks, where databases, backup systems, and security tools operate as a unified environment. It reflects a strengthening of Russia’s enterprise infrastructure as organizations transition to locally developed operating systems and application software.
For users and businesses, the impact comes through more reliable handling of personal and financial data, reduced reliance on foreign solutions, and lower exposure to data leaks. It also advances technological resilience and the competitiveness of Russian software, particularly as global security strategies continue to move toward data-centric models.

Expanding the Ecosystem
The solution is primarily designed for the domestic market, where demand for independent and interoperable IT systems continues to grow. Pangolin DB and OdinKlyuch are tailored for import substitution, local deployment, and compliance with national regulatory and cybersecurity requirements.
The integration is likely to attract interest from banks, government agencies, industrial enterprises, telecom operators, and large B2B platforms. These sectors require centralized key management, strict access control, and minimized data leakage risks when operating on their own infrastructure. The market is already shifting from point replacements of foreign systems to building cohesive domestic stacks, making real-world compatibility a critical factor.
Export potential is likely limited to aligned jurisdictions. Further development will depend on expanding the ecosystem – including integration with Russian operating systems, backup solutions, PAM/IDM platforms, and DevSecOps tools – moving closer to a fully sovereign IT environment.

From Integration to Standard Practice
The current compatibility builds on a series of integrations in recent years, as Pangolin DB and OdinKlyuch have been gradually embedded into domestic infrastructure stacks. In August 2024, Pangolin DB compatibility with RuBackup was confirmed for data protection and recovery. In November 2024, OdinKlyuch became compatible with RED OS. In March 2025, Pangolin DB was validated in the Astra Linux SE 1.7.6 environment. These milestones reinforce a pattern of integrated combinations – “DBMS + backup” and “OS + secrets management” – suitable for trusted environments.
Against this backdrop, the February 2026 announcement of Pangolin DB integration with the Russian password and secrets manager Passwork, along with the current release with OdinKlyuch, signals the emergence of a distinct segment: “DBMS + secrets management” solutions for protecting critical data. For customers, this means an expanding ecosystem of validated integrations around Russian DBMS platforms, reducing migration risk.
Globally, similar architectures have become standard. In December 2022, Amazon RDS integrated with AWS Secrets Manager to manage master credentials and automate rotation. HashiCorp Vault uses dynamic credentials for PostgreSQL via its database secrets engine, issuing short-lived roles instead of static secrets. In enterprise PostgreSQL deployments, including Postgres Pro Enterprise, external key management systems are recommended for Transparent Data Encryption, with Vault often cited as an example. As a result, pairing databases with external KMS has become a mature architectural standard for securing data access in both cloud and enterprise environments.

Toward Integrated Security Architectures
Projects like this signal increasing maturity in Russia’s infrastructure software landscape. The case shows a shift toward building interoperable, manageable stacks for critical systems. A domestic enterprise ecosystem is taking shape, where databases, secrets management, operating systems, and backup are treated as components of a unified, secure infrastructure.
Import substitution is moving into a new phase – assembling full-stack solutions where core infrastructure components operate as a single system. This trend mirrors both Russian and global practices in building secure IT environments.
In the near term, more announcements are expected around combinations such as “DBMS + secrets,” “DBMS + backup,” and “DBMS + OS.” These integrations reduce implementation risk and make it easier for organizations to justify migration to domestic technology stacks.









































