c12s-kubespray/docs/cert_manager.md

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Installation Guide

Cert-Manager is a native Kubernetes certificate management controller. It can help with issuing certificates from a variety of sources, such as Lets Encrypt, HashiCorp Vault, Venafi, a simple signing key pair, or self signed. It will ensure certificates are valid and up to date, and attempt to renew certificates at a configured time before expiry.

Kubernetes TLS Root CA Certificate/Key Secret

If you're planning to secure your ingress resources using TLS client certificates, you'll need to create and deploy the Kubernetes ca-key-pair secret consisting of the Root CA certificate and key to your K8s cluster.

For further information, read the official Cert-Manager CA Configuration doc.

cert-manager can now be enabled by editing your K8s cluster addons inventory e.g. inventory\sample\group_vars\k8s_cluster\addons.yml and setting cert_manager_enabled to true.

# Cert manager deployment
cert_manager_enabled: true

If you don't have a TLS Root CA certificate and key available, you can create these by following the steps outlined in section Create New TLS Root CA Certificate and Key using the Cloudflare PKI/TLS cfssl toolkit. TLS Root CA certificates and keys can also be created using ssh-keygen and OpenSSL, if cfssl is not available.

Securing Ingress Resources

A common use-case for cert-manager is requesting TLS signed certificates to secure your ingress resources. This can be done by simply adding annotations to your Ingress resources and cert-manager will facilitate creating the Certificate resource for you. A small sub-component of cert-manager, ingress-shim, is responsible for this.

To enable the Nginx Ingress controller as part of your Kubespray deployment, simply edit your K8s cluster addons inventory e.g. inventory\sample\group_vars\k8s_cluster\addons.yml and set ingress_nginx_enabled to true.

# Nginx ingress controller deployment
ingress_nginx_enabled: true

For example, if you're using the Nginx ingress controller, you can secure the Prometheus ingress by adding the annotation cert-manager.io/cluster-issuer: ca-issuer and the spec.tls section to the Ingress resource definition.

apiVersion: networking.k8s.io/v1
kind: Ingress
metadata:
  name: prometheus-k8s
  namespace: monitoring
  labels:
    prometheus: k8s
  annotations:
    kubernetes.io/ingress.class: "nginx"
    cert-manager.io/cluster-issuer: ca-issuer
spec:
  tls:
  - hosts:
    - prometheus.example.com
    secretName: prometheus-dashboard-certs
  rules:
  - host: prometheus.example.com
    http:
      paths:
      - path: /
        pathType: ImplementationSpecific
        backend:
          service:
            name: prometheus-k8s
            port:
              name: web

Once deployed to your K8s cluster, every 3 months cert-manager will automatically rotate the Prometheus prometheus.example.com TLS client certificate and key, and store these as the Kubernetes prometheus-dashboard-certs secret.

Please consult the official upstream documentation:

ACME

The ACME Issuer type represents a single account registered with the Automated Certificate Management Environment (ACME) Certificate Authority server. When you create a new ACME Issuer, cert-manager will generate a private key which is used to identify you with the ACME server.

Certificates issued by public ACME servers are typically trusted by clients computers by default. This means that, for example, visiting a website that is backed by an ACME certificate issued for that URL, will be trusted by default by most clients web browsers. ACME certificates are typically free.

Create New TLS Root CA Certificate and Key

Install Cloudflare PKI/TLS cfssl Toolkit

e.g. For Ubuntu/Debian distributions, the toolkit is part of the golang-cfssl package.

sudo apt-get install -y golang-cfssl

Create Root Certificate Authority (CA) Configuration File

The default TLS certificate expiry time period is 8760h which is 5 years from the date the certificate is created.

$ cat > ca-config.json <<EOF
{
  "signing": {
    "default": {
      "expiry": "8760h"
    },
    "profiles": {
      "kubernetes": {
        "usages": ["signing", "key encipherment", "server auth", "client auth"],
        "expiry": "8760h"
      }
    }
  }
}
EOF

Create Certficate Signing Request (CSR) Configuration File

The TLS certificate names details can be updated to your own specific requirements.

$ cat > ca-csr.json <<EOF
{
  "CN": "Kubernetes",
  "key": {
    "algo": "rsa",
    "size": 2048
  },
  "names": [
    {
      "C": "US",
      "L": "Portland",
      "O": "Kubernetes",
      "OU": "CA",
      "ST": "Oregon"
    }
  ]
}
EOF

Create TLS Root CA Certificate and Key

$ cfssl gencert -initca ca-csr.json | cfssljson -bare ca
ca.pem
ca-key.pem

Check the TLS Root CA certificate has the correct Not Before and Not After dates, and ensure it is indeed a valid Certificate Authority with the X509v3 extension CA:TRUE.

$ openssl x509 -text -noout -in ca.pem

Certificate:
    Data:
        Version: 3 (0x2)
        Serial Number:
            6a:d4:d8:48:7f:98:4f:54:68:9a:e1:73:02:fa:d0:41:79:25:08:49
        Signature Algorithm: sha256WithRSAEncryption
        Issuer: C = US, ST = Oregon, L = Portland, O = Kubernetes, OU = CA, CN = Kubernetes
        Validity
            Not Before: Jul 10 15:21:00 2020 GMT
            Not After : Jul  9 15:21:00 2025 GMT
        Subject: C = US, ST = Oregon, L = Portland, O = Kubernetes, OU = CA, CN = Kubernetes
        Subject Public Key Info:
        ...
        X509v3 extensions:
            X509v3 Key Usage: critical
                Certificate Sign, CRL Sign
            X509v3 Basic Constraints: critical
                CA:TRUE
            X509v3 Subject Key Identifier:
                D4:38:B5:E2:26:49:5E:0D:E3:DC:D9:70:73:3B:C4:19:6A:43:4A:F2
                ...