forked from TrueCloudLab/certificates
176 lines
6 KiB
Markdown
176 lines
6 KiB
Markdown
# Installing `autocert`
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### Prerequisites
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To get started you'll need [`kubectl`](https://kubernetes.io/docs/tasks/tools/install-kubectl/#install-kubectl) and a cluster running kubernetes `1.9` or later with [admission webhooks](https://kubernetes.io/docs/reference/access-authn-authz/extensible-admission-controllers/#admission-webhooks) enabled:
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```bash
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$ kubectl version --short
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Client Version: v1.13.1
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Server Version: v1.10.11
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$ kubectl api-versions | grep "admissionregistration.k8s.io/v1beta1"
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admissionregistration.k8s.io/v1beta1
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```
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### Install
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The easiest way to install `autocert` is to run:
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```bash
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kubectl run autocert-init -it --rm --image smallstep/autocert-init --restart Never
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```
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💥 installation complete.
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> You might want to [check out what this command does](init/autocert.sh) before running it.
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## Manual install
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To install manually you'll need to [install step](https://github.com/smallstep/cli#installing) version `0.8.3` or later.
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```
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$ step version
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Smallstep CLI/0.8.3 (darwin/amd64)
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Release Date: 2019-01-16 01:46 UTC
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```
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### Create a CA
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Set your `STEPPATH` to a working directory where we can stage our CA artifacts before we push them to kubernetes. You can delete this directory once installation is complete.
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```
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$ export STEPPATH=$(mktemp -d /tmp/step.XXX)
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$ step path
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/tmp/step.0kE
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```
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Run `step ca init` to generate a root certificate and CA configuration for your cluster. You'll be prompted for a password that will be used to encrypt key material.
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```
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$ step ca init \
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--name Autocert \
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--dns "ca.step.svc.cluster.local,127.0.0.1" \
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--address ":4443" \
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--provisioner admin \
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--with-ca-url "ca.step.svc.cluster.local"
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```
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For older versions of `step` run this command without the flags.
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Add provisioning credentials for use by `autocert`. You'll be prompted for a password for `autocert`.
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```
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$ step ca provisioner add autocert --create
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```
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For older versions of `step`:
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* Run `step ca init` and follow prompts
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* Edit `$(step path)/config/ca.json` and change base paths to `/home/step`
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* Edit `$(step path)/config/defaults.json` to change base paths to `/home/step` and remove port from CA URL
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```
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$ sed -i "" "s|$(step path)|/home/step/.step|g" $(step path)/config/ca.json
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$ sed -i "" "s|$(step path)|/home/step/.step|g" $(step path)/config/defaults.json
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$ sed -i "" "s|ca.step.svc.cluster.local:4443|ca.step.svc.cluster.local|" $(step path)/config/defaults.json
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```
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### Install the CA in Kubernetes
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We'll be creating a new kubernetes namespace and setting up some RBAC rules during installation. You'll need appropriate permissions in your cluster (e.g., you may need to be cluster-admin). GKE, in particular, does not give the cluster owner these rights by default. You can give yourself cluster-admin rights on GKE by running:
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```bash
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kubectl create clusterrolebinding cluster-admin-binding \
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--clusterrole cluster-admin \
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--user $(gcloud config get-value account)
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```
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We'll install our CA and the `autocert` controller in the `step` namespace.
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```
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$ kubectl create namespace step
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```
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To install the CA we need to configmap the CA certificates, signing keys, and configuration artifacts. Note that key material is encrypted so we don't need to use secrets.
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```
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$ kubectl -n step create configmap config --from-file $(step path)/config
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$ kubectl -n step create configmap certs --from-file $(step path)/certs
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$ kubectl -n step create configmap secrets --from-file $(step path)/secrets
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```
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But we will need to create secrets for the CA and autocert to decrypt their keys:
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```
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$ kubectl -n step create secret generic ca-password --from-literal password=<ca-password>
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$ kubectl -n step create secret generic autocert-password --from-literal password=<autocert-password>
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```
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Where `<ca-password>` is the password you entered during `step ca init` and `<autocert-password>` is the password you entered during `step ca provisioner add`.
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Next, we'll install the CA.
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```
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$ kubectl apply -f https://raw.githubusercontent.com/smallstep/certificates/master/autocert/install/01-step-ca.yaml
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```
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Once you've done this you can delete the temporary `$STEPPATH` directory and `unset STEPPATH` (though you may want to retain it as a backup).
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### Install `autocert` in Kubernetes
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Install the `autocert` controller.
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```
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$ kubectl apply -f https://raw.githubusercontent.com/smallstep/certificates/master/autocert/install/02-autocert.yaml
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```
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Autocert creates secrets containing single-use bootstrap tokens for pods to authenticate with the CA and obtain a certificate. The tokens are automatically cleaned up after they expire. To do this, `autocert` needs permission to create and delete secrets in your cluster.
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If you have RBAC enabled in your cluster, apply `rbac.yaml` to give `autocert` these permissions.
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```
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$ kubectl apply -f https://raw.githubusercontent.com/smallstep/certificates/master/autocert/install/03-rbac.yaml
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```
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Finally, register the `autocert` mutation webhook with kubernetes.
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```
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$ cat <<EOF | kubectl apply -f -
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apiVersion: admissionregistration.k8s.io/v1beta1
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kind: MutatingWebhookConfiguration
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metadata:
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name: autocert-webhook-config
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labels: {app: autocert}
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webhooks:
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- name: autocert.step.sm
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clientConfig:
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service:
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name: autocert
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namespace: step
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path: "/mutate"
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caBundle: $(cat $(step path)/certs/root_ca.crt | base64)
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rules:
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- operations: ["CREATE"]
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apiGroups: [""]
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apiVersions: ["v1"]
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resources: ["pods"]
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failurePolicy: Ignore
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namespaceSelector:
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matchLabels:
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autocert.step.sm: enabled
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EOF
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```
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### Check your work
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If everything worked you should have CA and controller pods running in the `step` namespace and your webhook configuration should be installed:
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```
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$ kubectl -n step get pods
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NAME READY STATUS RESTARTS AGE
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ca-7577d7d667-vtfq5 1/1 Running 0 1m
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controller-86bd99bd96-s9zlc 1/1 Running 0 28s
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$ kubectl get mutatingwebhookconfiguration
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NAME CREATED AT
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autocert-webhook-config 2019-01-17T22:57:57Z
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```
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