1. Get to the relation's details: juju run --unit ceph-osd/4 'relation-ids secrets-storage' will get you the relation id. juju run --unit ceph-osd/4 'relation-get -r 311 - vault/0' juju run --unit ceph-osd/4 'relation-get -r 311 - vault/1' juju run --unit ceph-osd/4 'relation-get -r 311 - vault/2' You need to query all the units (maybe just the leader is enough), to see which relation stores the `ceph-osd/4_role_id` and `4_token_id` variables. 1. you have the token, need to find the last-token. Install sqlite3 to be able to browse the unit's KV store (`apt install sqlite3`, not necessarily on the node, if that's not allowed). then fetch the last-token: juju ssh ceph-osd/4 sudo -i apt install sqlite3 sqlite3 /var/lib/juju/agents/unit-ceph-osd-4/charm/.unit-state.db 'select data from kv where key="last-token";' Probably there are easier ways to get this data, but this works for sure. 1. Match and update the last token id with the current one: juju run --unit vault/2 -- 'relation-set -r 311 ceph-osd/4_token="WHAT you got from the DB"' e.g.: juju run --unit vault/2 -- relation-set -r 311 ceph-osd/4_token='"s.bk3GMbPxKwgGXyODysVjihuA"' Pay attention to the escape characters and dots, etc. 4. make sure you got the correct relation data updated. juju run --unit ceph-osd/4 'relation-get -r 311 - vault/2'