Certificates
When using client certificate authentication, you can generate certificates
manually through easyrsa
, openssl
or cfssl
.
easyrsa
easyrsa can manually generate certificates for your cluster.
Download, unpack, and initialize the patched version of easyrsa3.
curl -LO https://storage.googleapis.com/kubernetes-release/easy-rsa/easy-rsa.tar.gz tar xzf easy-rsa.tar.gz cd easy-rsa-master/easyrsa3 ./easyrsa init-pki
Generate a new certificate authority (CA).
--batch
sets automatic mode;--req-cn
specifies the Common Name (CN) for the CA’s new root certificate../easyrsa --batch "--req-cn=${MASTER_IP}@`date +%s`" build-ca nopass
Generate server certificate and key. The argument
--subject-alt-name
sets the possible IPs and DNS names the API server will be accessed with. TheMASTER_CLUSTER_IP
is usually the first IP from the service CIDR that is specified as the--service-cluster-ip-range
argument for both the API server and the controller manager component. The argument--days
is used to set the number of days after which the certificate expires. The sample below also assumes that you are usingcluster.local
as the default DNS domain name../easyrsa --subject-alt-name="IP:${MASTER_IP},"\ "IP:${MASTER_CLUSTER_IP},"\ "DNS:kubernetes,"\ "DNS:kubernetes.default,"\ "DNS:kubernetes.default.svc,"\ "DNS:kubernetes.default.svc.cluster,"\ "DNS:kubernetes.default.svc.cluster.local" \ --days=10000 \ build-server-full server nopass
Copy
pki/ca.crt
,pki/issued/server.crt
, andpki/private/server.key
to your directory.Fill in and add the following parameters into the API server start parameters:
--client-ca-file=/yourdirectory/ca.crt --tls-cert-file=/yourdirectory/server.crt --tls-private-key-file=/yourdirectory/server.key
openssl
openssl can manually generate certificates for your cluster.
Generate a ca.key with 2048bit:
openssl genrsa -out ca.key 2048
According to the ca.key generate a ca.crt (use -days to set the certificate effective time):
openssl req -x509 -new -nodes -key ca.key -subj "/CN=${MASTER_IP}" -days 10000 -out ca.crt
Generate a server.key with 2048bit:
openssl genrsa -out server.key 2048
Create a config file for generating a Certificate Signing Request (CSR). Be sure to substitute the values marked with angle brackets (e.g.
<MASTER_IP>
) with real values before saving this to a file (e.g.csr.conf
). Note that the value forMASTER_CLUSTER_IP
is the service cluster IP for the API server as described in previous subsection. The sample below also assumes that you are usingcluster.local
as the default DNS domain name.[ req ] default_bits = 2048 prompt = no default_md = sha256 req_extensions = req_ext distinguished_name = dn [ dn ] C = <country> ST = <state> L = <city> O = <organization> OU = <organization unit> CN = <MASTER_IP> [ req_ext ] subjectAltName = @alt_names [ alt_names ] DNS.1 = kubernetes DNS.2 = kubernetes.default DNS.3 = kubernetes.default.svc DNS.4 = kubernetes.default.svc.cluster DNS.5 = kubernetes.default.svc.cluster.local IP.1 = <MASTER_IP> IP.2 = <MASTER_CLUSTER_IP> [ v3_ext ] authorityKeyIdentifier=keyid,issuer:always basicConstraints=CA:FALSE keyUsage=keyEncipherment,dataEncipherment extendedKeyUsage=serverAuth,clientAuth subjectAltName=@alt_names
Generate the certificate signing request based on the config file:
openssl req -new -key server.key -out server.csr -config csr.conf
Generate the server certificate using the ca.key, ca.crt and server.csr:
openssl x509 -req -in server.csr -CA ca.crt -CAkey ca.key \ -CAcreateserial -out server.crt -days 10000 \ -extensions v3_ext -extfile csr.conf
View the certificate:
openssl x509 -noout -text -in ./server.crt
Finally, add the same parameters into the API server start parameters.
cfssl
cfssl is another tool for certificate generation.
Download, unpack and prepare the command line tools as shown below. Note that you may need to adapt the sample commands based on the hardware architecture and cfssl version you are using.
curl -L https://pkg.cfssl.org/R1.2/cfssl_linux-amd64 -o cfssl chmod +x cfssl curl -L https://pkg.cfssl.org/R1.2/cfssljson_linux-amd64 -o cfssljson chmod +x cfssljson curl -L https://pkg.cfssl.org/R1.2/cfssl-certinfo_linux-amd64 -o cfssl-certinfo chmod +x cfssl-certinfo
Create a directory to hold the artifacts and initialize cfssl:
mkdir cert cd cert ../cfssl print-defaults config > config.json ../cfssl print-defaults csr > csr.json
Create a JSON config file for generating the CA file, for example,
ca-config.json
:{ "signing": { "default": { "expiry": "8760h" }, "profiles": { "kubernetes": { "usages": [ "signing", "key encipherment", "server auth", "client auth" ], "expiry": "8760h" } } } }
Create a JSON config file for CA certificate signing request (CSR), for example,
ca-csr.json
. Be sure to replace the values marked with angle brackets with real values you want to use.{ "CN": "kubernetes", "key": { "algo": "rsa", "size": 2048 }, "names":[{ "C": "<country>", "ST": "<state>", "L": "<city>", "O": "<organization>", "OU": "<organization unit>" }] }
Generate CA key (
ca-key.pem
) and certificate (ca.pem
):../cfssl gencert -initca ca-csr.json | ../cfssljson -bare ca
Create a JSON config file for generating keys and certificates for the API server, for example,
server-csr.json
. Be sure to replace the values in angle brackets with real values you want to use. TheMASTER_CLUSTER_IP
is the service cluster IP for the API server as described in previous subsection. The sample below also assumes that you are usingcluster.local
as the default DNS domain name.{ "CN": "kubernetes", "hosts": [ "127.0.0.1", "<MASTER_IP>", "<MASTER_CLUSTER_IP>", "kubernetes", "kubernetes.default", "kubernetes.default.svc", "kubernetes.default.svc.cluster", "kubernetes.default.svc.cluster.local" ], "key": { "algo": "rsa", "size": 2048 }, "names": [{ "C": "<country>", "ST": "<state>", "L": "<city>", "O": "<organization>", "OU": "<organization unit>" }] }
Generate the key and certificate for the API server, which are by default saved into file
server-key.pem
andserver.pem
respectively:../cfssl gencert -ca=ca.pem -ca-key=ca-key.pem \ --config=ca-config.json -profile=kubernetes \ server-csr.json | ../cfssljson -bare server
Distributing Self-Signed CA Certificate
A client node may refuse to recognize a self-signed CA certificate as valid. For a non-production deployment, or for a deployment that runs behind a company firewall, you can distribute a self-signed CA certificate to all clients and refresh the local list for valid certificates.
On each client, perform the following operations:
sudo cp ca.crt /usr/local/share/ca-certificates/kubernetes.crt
sudo update-ca-certificates
Updating certificates in /etc/ssl/certs...
1 added, 0 removed; done.
Running hooks in /etc/ca-certificates/update.d....
done.
Certificates API
You can use the certificates.k8s.io
API to provision
x509 certificates to use for authentication as documented
here.
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