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Manage TLS Certificates in a Cluster
Kubernetes provides a certificates.k8s.io
API, which lets you provision TLS
certificates signed by a Certificate Authority (CA) that you control. These CA
and certificates can be used by your workloads to establish trust.
certificates.k8s.io
API uses a protocol that is similar to the ACME
draft.
certificates.k8s.io
API are signed by a
dedicated CA. It is possible to configure your cluster to use the cluster root
CA for this purpose, but you should never rely on this. Do not assume that
these certificates will validate against the cluster root CA.Before you begin
You need to have a Kubernetes cluster, and the kubectl command-line tool must be configured to communicate with your cluster. It is recommended to run this tutorial on a cluster with at least two nodes that are not acting as control plane hosts. If you do not already have a cluster, you can create one by using minikube or you can use one of these Kubernetes playgrounds:
You need the cfssl
tool. You can download cfssl
from
https://github.com/cloudflare/cfssl/releases.
Some steps in this page use the jq
tool. If you don't have jq
, you can
install it via your operating system's software sources, or fetch it from
https://stedolan.github.io/jq/.
Trusting TLS in a cluster
Trusting the custom CA from an application running as a pod usually requires
some extra application configuration. You will need to add the CA certificate
bundle to the list of CA certificates that the TLS client or server trusts. For
example, you would do this with a golang TLS config by parsing the certificate
chain and adding the parsed certificates to the RootCAs
field in the
tls.Config
struct.
Even though the custom CA certificate may be included in the filesystem (in the
ConfigMap kube-root-ca.crt
),
you should not use that certificate authority for any purpose other than to verify internal
Kubernetes endpoints. An example of an internal Kubernetes endpoint is the
Service named kubernetes
in the default namespace.
If you want to use a custom certificate authority for your workloads, you should generate that CA separately, and distribute its CA certificate using a ConfigMap that your pods have access to read.
Requesting a certificate
The following section demonstrates how to create a TLS certificate for a Kubernetes service accessed through DNS.
Create a certificate signing request
Generate a private key and certificate signing request (or CSR) by running the following command:
cat <<EOF | cfssl genkey - | cfssljson -bare server
{
"hosts": [
"my-svc.my-namespace.svc.cluster.local",
"my-pod.my-namespace.pod.cluster.local",
"192.0.2.24",
"10.0.34.2"
],
"CN": "my-pod.my-namespace.pod.cluster.local",
"key": {
"algo": "ecdsa",
"size": 256
}
}
EOF
Where 192.0.2.24
is the service's cluster IP,
my-svc.my-namespace.svc.cluster.local
is the service's DNS name,
10.0.34.2
is the pod's IP and my-pod.my-namespace.pod.cluster.local
is the pod's DNS name. You should see the output similar to:
2022/02/01 11:45:32 [INFO] generate received request
2022/02/01 11:45:32 [INFO] received CSR
2022/02/01 11:45:32 [INFO] generating key: ecdsa-256
2022/02/01 11:45:32 [INFO] encoded CSR
This command generates two files; it generates server.csr
containing the PEM
encoded PKCS#10 certification request,
and server-key.pem
containing the PEM encoded key to the certificate that
is still to be created.
Create a CertificateSigningRequest object to send to the Kubernetes API
Generate a CSR manifest (in YAML), and send it to the API server. You can do that by running the following command:
cat <<EOF | kubectl apply -f -
apiVersion: certificates.k8s.io/v1
kind: CertificateSigningRequest
metadata:
name: my-svc.my-namespace
spec:
request: $(cat server.csr | base64 | tr -d '\n')
signerName: example.com/serving
usages:
- digital signature
- key encipherment
- server auth
EOF
Notice that the server.csr
file created in step 1 is base64 encoded
and stashed in the .spec.request
field. You are also requesting a
certificate with the "digital signature", "key encipherment", and "server
auth" key usages, signed by an example example.com/serving
signer.
A specific signerName
must be requested.
View documentation for supported signer names
for more information.
The CSR should now be visible from the API in a Pending state. You can see it by running:
kubectl describe csr my-svc.my-namespace
Name: my-svc.my-namespace
Labels: <none>
Annotations: <none>
CreationTimestamp: Tue, 01 Feb 2022 11:49:15 -0500
Requesting User: yourname@example.com
Signer: example.com/serving
Status: Pending
Subject:
Common Name: my-pod.my-namespace.pod.cluster.local
Serial Number:
Subject Alternative Names:
DNS Names: my-pod.my-namespace.pod.cluster.local
my-svc.my-namespace.svc.cluster.local
IP Addresses: 192.0.2.24
10.0.34.2
Events: <none>
Get the CertificateSigningRequest approved
Approving the certificate signing request
is either done by an automated approval process or on a one off basis by a cluster
administrator. If you're authorized to approve a certificate request, you can do that
manually using kubectl
; for example:
kubectl certificate approve my-svc.my-namespace
certificatesigningrequest.certificates.k8s.io/my-svc.my-namespace approved
You should now see the following:
kubectl get csr
NAME AGE SIGNERNAME REQUESTOR REQUESTEDDURATION CONDITION
my-svc.my-namespace 10m example.com/serving yourname@example.com <none> Approved
This means the certificate request has been approved and is waiting for the requested signer to sign it.
Sign the CertificateSigningRequest
Next, you'll play the part of a certificate signer, issue the certificate, and upload it to the API.
A signer would typically watch the CertificateSigningRequest API for objects with its signerName
,
check that they have been approved, sign certificates for those requests,
and update the API object status with the issued certificate.
Create a Certificate Authority
You need an authority to provide the digital signature on the new certificate.
First, create a signing certificate by running the following:
cat <<EOF | cfssl gencert -initca - | cfssljson -bare ca
{
"CN": "My Example Signer",
"key": {
"algo": "rsa",
"size": 2048
}
}
EOF
You should see output similar to:
2022/02/01 11:50:39 [INFO] generating a new CA key and certificate from CSR
2022/02/01 11:50:39 [INFO] generate received request
2022/02/01 11:50:39 [INFO] received CSR
2022/02/01 11:50:39 [INFO] generating key: rsa-2048
2022/02/01 11:50:39 [INFO] encoded CSR
2022/02/01 11:50:39 [INFO] signed certificate with serial number 263983151013686720899716354349605500797834580472
This produces a certificate authority key file (ca-key.pem
) and certificate (ca.pem
).
Issue a certificate
{
"signing": {
"default": {
"usages": [
"digital signature",
"key encipherment",
"server auth"
],
"expiry": "876000h",
"ca_constraint": {
"is_ca": false
}
}
}
}
Use a server-signing-config.json
signing configuration and the certificate authority key file
and certificate to sign the certificate request:
kubectl get csr my-svc.my-namespace -o jsonpath='{.spec.request}' | \
base64 --decode | \
cfssl sign -ca ca.pem -ca-key ca-key.pem -config server-signing-config.json - | \
cfssljson -bare ca-signed-server
You should see the output similar to:
2022/02/01 11:52:26 [INFO] signed certificate with serial number 576048928624926584381415936700914530534472870337
This produces a signed serving certificate file, ca-signed-server.pem
.
Upload the signed certificate
Finally, populate the signed certificate in the API object's status:
kubectl get csr my-svc.my-namespace -o json | \
jq '.status.certificate = "'$(base64 ca-signed-server.pem | tr -d '\n')'"' | \
kubectl replace --raw /apis/certificates.k8s.io/v1/certificatesigningrequests/my-svc.my-namespace/status -f -
jq
to populate the base64-encoded
content in the .status.certificate
field.
If you do not have jq
, you can also save the JSON output to a file, populate this field manually, and
upload the resulting file.Once the CSR is approved and the signed certificate is uploaded, run:
kubectl get csr
The output is similar to:
NAME AGE SIGNERNAME REQUESTOR REQUESTEDDURATION CONDITION
my-svc.my-namespace 20m example.com/serving yourname@example.com <none> Approved,Issued
Download the certificate and use it
Now, as the requesting user, you can download the issued certificate
and save it to a server.crt
file by running the following:
kubectl get csr my-svc.my-namespace -o jsonpath='{.status.certificate}' \
| base64 --decode > server.crt
Now you can populate server.crt
and server-key.pem
in a
Secret
that you could later mount into a Pod (for example, to use with a webserver
that serves HTTPS).
kubectl create secret tls server --cert server.crt --key server-key.pem
secret/server created
Finally, you can populate ca.pem
into a ConfigMap
and use it as the trust root to verify the serving certificate:
kubectl create configmap example-serving-ca --from-file ca.crt=ca.pem
configmap/example-serving-ca created
Approving CertificateSigningRequests
A Kubernetes administrator (with appropriate permissions) can manually approve
(or deny) CertificateSigningRequests by using the kubectl certificate approve
and kubectl certificate deny
commands. However if you intend
to make heavy usage of this API, you might consider writing an automated
certificates controller.
The ability to approve CSRs decides who trusts whom within your environment. The ability to approve CSRs should not be granted broadly or lightly.
You should make sure that you confidently understand both the verification requirements
that fall on the approver and the repercussions of issuing a specific certificate
before you grant the approve
permission.
Whether a machine or a human using kubectl as above, the role of the approver is to verify that the CSR satisfies two requirements:
- The subject of the CSR controls the private key used to sign the CSR. This addresses the threat of a third party masquerading as an authorized subject. In the above example, this step would be to verify that the pod controls the private key used to generate the CSR.
- The subject of the CSR is authorized to act in the requested context. This addresses the threat of an undesired subject joining the cluster. In the above example, this step would be to verify that the pod is allowed to participate in the requested service.
If and only if these two requirements are met, the approver should approve the CSR and otherwise should deny the CSR.
For more information on certificate approval and access control, read the Certificate Signing Requests reference page.
Configuring your cluster to provide signing
This page assumes that a signer is set up to serve the certificates API. The
Kubernetes controller manager provides a default implementation of a signer. To
enable it, pass the --cluster-signing-cert-file
and
--cluster-signing-key-file
parameters to the controller manager with paths to
your Certificate Authority's keypair.