4.4 KiB
Setting up a Certificate Authority and TLS Cert Generation
In this lab you will setup the necessary PKI infrastructure to secure the Kubernetes components. This lab will leverage CloudFlare's PKI toolkit, cfssl, to bootstrap a Certificate Authority and generate TLS certificates.
In this lab you will generate a single set of TLS certificates that can be used to secure the following Kubernetes components:
- etcd
- Kubernetes API Server
- Kubernetes Kubelet
In production you should strongly consider generating individual TLS certificates for each component.
After completing this lab you should have the following TLS keys and certificates:
ca-key.pem
ca.pem
kubernetes-key.pem
kubernetes.pem
Install CFSSL
This lab requires the cfssl
and cfssljson
binaries. Download them from the cfssl repository.
OS X
wget https://pkg.cfssl.org/R1.2/cfssl_darwin-amd64
chmod +x cfssl_darwin-amd64
sudo mv cfssl_darwin-amd64 /usr/local/bin/cfssl
wget https://pkg.cfssl.org/R1.2/cfssljson_darwin-amd64
chmod +x cfssljson_darwin-amd64
sudo mv cfssljson_darwin-amd64 /usr/local/bin/cfssljson
Linux
wget https://pkg.cfssl.org/R1.2/cfssl_linux-amd64
chmod +x cfssl_linux-amd64
sudo mv cfssl_darwin-amd64 /usr/local/bin/cfssl
wget https://pkg.cfssl.org/R1.2/cfssljson_linux-amd64
chmod +x cfssljson_linux-amd64
sudo mv cfssljson_linux-amd64 /usr/local/bin/cfssljson
Setting up a Certificate Authority
Create the CA configuration file
echo '{
"signing": {
"default": {
"expiry": "8760h"
},
"profiles": {
"kubernetes": {
"usages": ["signing", "key encipherment", "server auth", "client auth"],
"expiry": "8760h"
}
}
}
}' > ca-config.json
Generate the CA certificate and private key
Create the CA CSR:
echo '{
"CN": "Kubernetes",
"key": {
"algo": "rsa",
"size": 2048
},
"names": [
{
"C": "US",
"L": "Portland",
"O": "Kubernetes",
"OU": "CA",
"ST": "Oregon"
}
]
}' > ca-csr.json
Generate the CA certificate and private key:
cfssl gencert -initca ca-csr.json | cfssljson -bare ca
Results:
ca-key.pem
ca.csr
ca.pem
Verification
openssl x509 -in ca.pem -text -noout
Generate the single Kubernetes TLS Cert
In this section we will generate a TLS certificate that will be valid for all Kubernetes components. This is being done for ease of use. In production you should strongly consider generating individual TLS certificates for each component.
Create the kubernetes-csr.json
file:
export KUBERNETES_PUBLIC_IP_ADDRESS=$(gcloud compute addresses describe kubernetes \
--format 'value(address)')
cat > kubernetes-csr.json <<EOF
{
"CN": "kubernetes",
"hosts": [
"worker0",
"worker1",
"worker2",
"10.32.0.1",
"10.240.0.10",
"10.240.0.11",
"10.240.0.12",
"10.240.0.20",
"10.240.0.21",
"10.240.0.22",
"10.240.0.30",
"10.240.0.31",
"10.240.0.32",
"${KUBERNETES_PUBLIC_IP_ADDRESS}",
"127.0.0.1"
],
"key": {
"algo": "rsa",
"size": 2048
},
"names": [
{
"C": "US",
"L": "Portland",
"O": "Kubernetes",
"OU": "Cluster",
"ST": "Oregon"
}
]
}
EOF
Generate the Kubernetes certificate and private key:
cfssl gencert \
-ca=ca.pem \
-ca-key=ca-key.pem \
-config=ca-config.json \
-profile=kubernetes \
kubernetes-csr.json | cfssljson -bare kubernetes
Results:
kubernetes-key.pem
kubernetes.csr
kubernetes.pem
Verification
openssl x509 -in kubernetes.pem -text -noout
Copy TLS Certs
gcloud compute copy-files ca.pem kubernetes-key.pem kubernetes.pem controller0:~/
gcloud compute copy-files ca.pem kubernetes-key.pem kubernetes.pem controller1:~/
gcloud compute copy-files ca.pem kubernetes-key.pem kubernetes.pem controller2:~/
gcloud compute copy-files ca.pem kubernetes-key.pem kubernetes.pem etcd0:~/
gcloud compute copy-files ca.pem kubernetes-key.pem kubernetes.pem etcd1:~/
gcloud compute copy-files ca.pem kubernetes-key.pem kubernetes.pem etcd2:~/
gcloud compute copy-files ca.pem kubernetes-key.pem kubernetes.pem worker0:~/
gcloud compute copy-files ca.pem kubernetes-key.pem kubernetes.pem worker1:~/
gcloud compute copy-files ca.pem kubernetes-key.pem kubernetes.pem worker2:~/