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Certificate Management with kubeadm
Kubernetes v1.15 [stable]
Client certificates generated by kubeadm expire after 1 year. This page explains how to manage certificate renewals with kubeadm. It also covers other tasks related to kubeadm certificate management.
Before you begin
You should be familiar with PKI certificates and requirements in Kubernetes.
Using custom certificates
By default, kubeadm generates all the certificates needed for a cluster to run. You can override this behavior by providing your own certificates.
To do so, you must place them in whatever directory is specified by the
--cert-dir
flag or the certificatesDir
field of kubeadm's ClusterConfiguration
.
By default this is /etc/kubernetes/pki
.
If a given certificate and private key pair exists before running kubeadm init
,
kubeadm does not overwrite them. This means you can, for example, copy an existing
CA into /etc/kubernetes/pki/ca.crt
and /etc/kubernetes/pki/ca.key
,
and kubeadm will use this CA for signing the rest of the certificates.
External CA mode
It is also possible to provide only the ca.crt
file and not the
ca.key
file (this is only available for the root CA file, not other cert pairs).
If all other certificates and kubeconfig files are in place, kubeadm recognizes
this condition and activates the "External CA" mode. kubeadm will proceed without the
CA key on disk.
Instead, run the controller-manager standalone with --controllers=csrsigner
and
point to the CA certificate and key.
There are various ways to prepare the component credentials when using external CA mode.
Manual preparation of component credentials
PKI certificates and requirements includes information on how to prepare all the required by kubeadm component credentials manually.
Preparation of credentials by signing CSRs generated by kubeadm
kubeadm can generate CSR files that you can sign manually with tools like
openssl
and your external CA. These CSR files will include all the specification for credentials
that components deployed by kubeadm require.
Automated preparation of component credentials by using kubeadm phases
Alternatively, it is possible to use kubeadm phase commands to automate this process.
- Go to a host that you want to prepare as a kubeadm control plane node with external CA.
- Copy the external CA files
ca.crt
andca.key
that you have into/etc/kubernetes/pki
on the node. - Prepare a temporary kubeadm configuration file
called
config.yaml
that can be used withkubeadm init
. Make sure that this file includes any relevant cluster wide or host-specific information that could be included in certificates, such as,ClusterConfiguration.controlPlaneEndpoint
,ClusterConfiguration.certSANs
andInitConfiguration.APIEndpoint
. - On the same host execute the commands
kubeadm init phase kubeconfig all --config config.yaml
andkubeadm init phase certs all --config config.yaml
. This will generate all required kubeconfig files and certificates under/etc/kubernetes/
and itspki
sub directory. - Inspect the generated files. Delete
/etc/kubernetes/pki/ca.key
, delete or move to a safe location the file/etc/kubernetes/super-admin.conf
. - On nodes where
kubeadm join
will be called also delete/etc/kubernetes/kubelet.conf
. This file is only required on the first node wherekubeadm init
will be called. - Note that some files such
pki/sa.*
,pki/front-proxy-ca.*
andpki/etc/ca.*
are shared between control plane nodes, You can generate them once and distribute them manually to nodes wherekubeadm join
will be called, or you can use the--upload-certs
functionality ofkubeadm init
and--certificate-key
ofkubeadm join
to automate this distribution.
Once the credentials are prepared on all nodes, call kubeadm init
and kubeadm join
for these nodes to
join the cluster. kubeadm will use the existing kubeconfig and certificate files under /etc/kubernetes/
and its pki
sub directory.
Check certificate expiration
You can use the check-expiration
subcommand to check when certificates expire:
kubeadm certs check-expiration
The output is similar to this:
CERTIFICATE EXPIRES RESIDUAL TIME CERTIFICATE AUTHORITY EXTERNALLY MANAGED
admin.conf Dec 30, 2020 23:36 UTC 364d no
apiserver Dec 30, 2020 23:36 UTC 364d ca no
apiserver-etcd-client Dec 30, 2020 23:36 UTC 364d etcd-ca no
apiserver-kubelet-client Dec 30, 2020 23:36 UTC 364d ca no
controller-manager.conf Dec 30, 2020 23:36 UTC 364d no
etcd-healthcheck-client Dec 30, 2020 23:36 UTC 364d etcd-ca no
etcd-peer Dec 30, 2020 23:36 UTC 364d etcd-ca no
etcd-server Dec 30, 2020 23:36 UTC 364d etcd-ca no
front-proxy-client Dec 30, 2020 23:36 UTC 364d front-proxy-ca no
scheduler.conf Dec 30, 2020 23:36 UTC 364d no
CERTIFICATE AUTHORITY EXPIRES RESIDUAL TIME EXTERNALLY MANAGED
ca Dec 28, 2029 23:36 UTC 9y no
etcd-ca Dec 28, 2029 23:36 UTC 9y no
front-proxy-ca Dec 28, 2029 23:36 UTC 9y no
The command shows expiration/residual time for the client certificates in the
/etc/kubernetes/pki
folder and for the client certificate embedded in the kubeconfig files used
by kubeadm (admin.conf
, controller-manager.conf
and scheduler.conf
).
Additionally, kubeadm informs the user if the certificate is externally managed; in this case, the user should take care of managing certificate renewal manually/using other tools.
kubeadm
cannot manage certificates signed by an external CA.
kubelet.conf
is not included in the list above because kubeadm configures kubelet
for automatic certificate renewal
with rotatable certificates under /var/lib/kubelet/pki
.
To repair an expired kubelet client certificate see
Kubelet client certificate rotation fails.
On nodes created with kubeadm init
, prior to kubeadm version 1.17, there is a
bug where you manually have to modify the
contents of kubelet.conf
. After kubeadm init
finishes, you should update kubelet.conf
to
point to the rotated kubelet client certificates, by replacing client-certificate-data
and
client-key-data
with:
client-certificate: /var/lib/kubelet/pki/kubelet-client-current.pem
client-key: /var/lib/kubelet/pki/kubelet-client-current.pem
Automatic certificate renewal
kubeadm renews all the certificates during control plane upgrade.
This feature is designed for addressing the simplest use cases; if you don't have specific requirements on certificate renewal and perform Kubernetes version upgrades regularly (less than 1 year in between each upgrade), kubeadm will take care of keeping your cluster up to date and reasonably secure.
If you have more complex requirements for certificate renewal, you can opt out from the default
behavior by passing --certificate-renewal=false
to kubeadm upgrade apply
or to kubeadm upgrade node
.
--certificate-renewal
is false
for the kubeadm upgrade node
command. In that case, you should explicitly set --certificate-renewal=true
.
Manual certificate renewal
You can renew your certificates manually at any time with the kubeadm certs renew
command, with the appropriate command line options.
This command performs the renewal using CA (or front-proxy-CA) certificate and key stored in /etc/kubernetes/pki
.
After running the command you should restart the control plane Pods. This is required since
dynamic certificate reload is currently not supported for all components and certificates.
Static Pods are managed by the local kubelet
and not by the API Server, thus kubectl cannot be used to delete and restart them.
To restart a static Pod you can temporarily remove its manifest file from /etc/kubernetes/manifests/
and wait for 20 seconds (see the fileCheckFrequency
value in KubeletConfiguration struct.
The kubelet will terminate the Pod if it's no longer in the manifest directory.
You can then move the file back and after another fileCheckFrequency
period, the kubelet will recreate
the Pod and the certificate renewal for the component can complete.
certs renew
uses the existing certificates as the authoritative source for attributes (Common
Name, Organization, SAN, etc.) instead of the kubeadm-config
ConfigMap. It is strongly recommended
to keep them both in sync.
kubeadm certs renew
can renew any specific certificate or, with the subcommand all
, it can renew all of them, as shown below:
kubeadm certs renew all
Clusters built with kubeadm often copy the admin.conf
certificate into
$HOME/.kube/config
, as instructed in Creating a cluster with kubeadm.
On such a system, to update the contents of $HOME/.kube/config
after renewing the admin.conf
, you must run the following commands:
sudo cp -i /etc/kubernetes/admin.conf $HOME/.kube/config
sudo chown $(id -u):$(id -g) $HOME/.kube/config
Renew certificates with the Kubernetes certificates API
This section provides more details about how to execute manual certificate renewal using the Kubernetes certificates API.
Set up a signer
The Kubernetes Certificate Authority does not work out of the box. You can configure an external signer such as cert-manager, or you can use the built-in signer.
The built-in signer is part of kube-controller-manager
.
To activate the built-in signer, you must pass the --cluster-signing-cert-file
and
--cluster-signing-key-file
flags.
If you're creating a new cluster, you can use a kubeadm configuration file:
apiVersion: kubeadm.k8s.io/v1beta3
kind: ClusterConfiguration
controllerManager:
extraArgs:
cluster-signing-cert-file: /etc/kubernetes/pki/ca.crt
cluster-signing-key-file: /etc/kubernetes/pki/ca.key
Create certificate signing requests (CSR)
See Create CertificateSigningRequest for creating CSRs with the Kubernetes API.
Renew certificates with external CA
This section provide more details about how to execute manual certificate renewal using an external CA.
To better integrate with external CAs, kubeadm can also produce certificate signing requests (CSRs). A CSR represents a request to a CA for a signed certificate for a client. In kubeadm terms, any certificate that would normally be signed by an on-disk CA can be produced as a CSR instead. A CA, however, cannot be produced as a CSR.
Renewal by using certificate signing requests (CSR)
Renewal of ceritficates is possible by generating new CSRs and signing them with the external CA. For more details about working with CSRs generated by kubeadm see the section Signing certificate signing requests (CSR) generated by kubeadm.
Certificate authority (CA) rotation
Kubeadm does not support rotation or replacement of CA certificates out of the box.
For more information about manual rotation or replacement of CA, see manual rotation of CA certificates.
Enabling signed kubelet serving certificates
By default the kubelet serving certificate deployed by kubeadm is self-signed. This means a connection from external services like the metrics-server to a kubelet cannot be secured with TLS.
To configure the kubelets in a new kubeadm cluster to obtain properly signed serving
certificates you must pass the following minimal configuration to kubeadm init
:
apiVersion: kubeadm.k8s.io/v1beta3
kind: ClusterConfiguration
---
apiVersion: kubelet.config.k8s.io/v1beta1
kind: KubeletConfiguration
serverTLSBootstrap: true
If you have already created the cluster you must adapt it by doing the following:
- Find and edit the
kubelet-config-1.29
ConfigMap in thekube-system
namespace. In that ConfigMap, thekubelet
key has a KubeletConfiguration document as its value. Edit the KubeletConfiguration document to setserverTLSBootstrap: true
. - On each node, add the
serverTLSBootstrap: true
field in/var/lib/kubelet/config.yaml
and restart the kubelet withsystemctl restart kubelet
The field serverTLSBootstrap: true
will enable the bootstrap of kubelet serving
certificates by requesting them from the certificates.k8s.io
API. One known limitation
is that the CSRs (Certificate Signing Requests) for these certificates cannot be automatically
approved by the default signer in the kube-controller-manager -
kubernetes.io/kubelet-serving
.
This will require action from the user or a third party controller.
These CSRs can be viewed using:
kubectl get csr
NAME AGE SIGNERNAME REQUESTOR CONDITION
csr-9wvgt 112s kubernetes.io/kubelet-serving system:node:worker-1 Pending
csr-lz97v 1m58s kubernetes.io/kubelet-serving system:node:control-plane-1 Pending
To approve them you can do the following:
kubectl certificate approve <CSR-name>
By default, these serving certificate will expire after one year. Kubeadm sets the
KubeletConfiguration
field rotateCertificates
to true
, which means that close
to expiration a new set of CSRs for the serving certificates will be created and must
be approved to complete the rotation. To understand more see
Certificate Rotation.
If you are looking for a solution for automatic approval of these CSRs it is recommended that you contact your cloud provider and ask if they have a CSR signer that verifies the node identity with an out of band mechanism.
Third party custom controllers can be used:
Such a controller is not a secure mechanism unless it not only verifies the CommonName in the CSR but also verifies the requested IPs and domain names. This would prevent a malicious actor that has access to a kubelet client certificate to create CSRs requesting serving certificates for any IP or domain name.
Generating kubeconfig files for additional users
During cluster creation, kubeadm init
signs the certificate in the super-admin.conf
to have Subject: O = system:masters, CN = kubernetes-super-admin
.
system:masters
is a break-glass, super user group that bypasses the authorization layer (for example,
RBAC). The file admin.conf
is also created
by kubeadm on control plane nodes and it contains a certificate with
Subject: O = kubeadm:cluster-admins, CN = kubernetes-admin
. kubeadm:cluster-admins
is a group logically belonging to kubeadm. If your cluster uses RBAC
(the kubeadm default), the kubeadm:cluster-admins
group is bound to the
cluster-admin
ClusterRole.
super-admin.conf
or admin.conf
files. Instead, create least
privileged access even for people who work as administrators and use that least
privilege alternative for anything other than break-glass (emergency) access.
You can use the kubeadm kubeconfig user
command to generate kubeconfig files for additional users.
The command accepts a mixture of command line flags and
kubeadm configuration options.
The generated kubeconfig will be written to stdout and can be piped to a file using
kubeadm kubeconfig user ... > somefile.conf
.
Example configuration file that can be used with --config
:
# example.yaml
apiVersion: kubeadm.k8s.io/v1beta3
kind: ClusterConfiguration
# Will be used as the target "cluster" in the kubeconfig
clusterName: "kubernetes"
# Will be used as the "server" (IP or DNS name) of this cluster in the kubeconfig
controlPlaneEndpoint: "some-dns-address:6443"
# The cluster CA key and certificate will be loaded from this local directory
certificatesDir: "/etc/kubernetes/pki"
Make sure that these settings match the desired target cluster settings. To see the settings of an existing cluster use:
kubectl get cm kubeadm-config -n kube-system -o=jsonpath="{.data.ClusterConfiguration}"
The following example will generate a kubeconfig file with credentials valid for 24 hours
for a new user johndoe
that is part of the appdevs
group:
kubeadm kubeconfig user --config example.yaml --org appdevs --client-name johndoe --validity-period 24h
The following example will generate a kubeconfig file with administrator credentials valid for 1 week:
kubeadm kubeconfig user --config example.yaml --client-name admin --validity-period 168h
Signing certificate signing requests (CSR) generated by kubeadm
You can create certificate signing requests with kubeadm certs generate-csr
.
Calling this command will generate .csr
/ .key
file pairs for regular
certificates. For certificates embedded in kubeconfig files, the command will
generate a .csr
/ .conf
pair where the key is already embedded in the .conf
file.
A CSR file contains all relevant information for a CA to sign a certificate. kubeadm uses a well defined specification for all its certificates and CSRs.
The default certificate directory is /etc/kubernetes/pki
, while the default
directory for kubeconfig files is /etc/kubernetes
. These defaults can be
overridden with the flags --cert-dir
and --kubeconfig-dir
, respectively.
To pass custom options to kubeadm certs generate-csr
use the --config
flag,
which accepts a kubeadm configuration
file, similarly to commands such as kubeadm init
. Any specification such
as extra SANs and custom IP addresses must be stored in the same configuration
file and used for all relevant kubeadm commands by passing it as --config
.
openssl
command for singing the CSRs,
but you can use your preferred tools.
/etc/kubernetes
, which requires
a super user. If you are following this guide with permissive directories
(by passing --cert-dir
and --kubeconfig-dir
) you can omit the sudo
command).
But note that the resulted files must be copied to the /etc/kubernetes
tree,
so that kubeadm init
or kubeadm join
will find them.
Preparing CA and service account files
On the primary control plane node, where kubeadm init
will be executed, call the following
commands:
sudo kubeadm init phase certs ca
sudo kubeadm init phase certs etcd-ca
sudo kubeadm init phase certs front-proxy-ca
sudo kubeadm init phase certs sa
This will populate the folders /etc/kubernetes/pki
and /etc/kubernetes/pki/etcd
with all self-signed CA files (certificates and keys) and service account (public and
private keys) that kubeadm needs for a control plane node.
/etc/kubernetes
. Once all CSRs
are signed, you can delete the root CA key (ca.key
) as noted in the
External CA mode section.
For secondary control plane nodes (kubeadm join --control-plane
) there is no need to call
the above commands. Depending on how you setup the
High Availability
cluster, you either have to manually copy the same files from the primary
control plane node, or use the automated --upload-certs
functionality of kubeadm init
.
Generate CSRs
The kubeadm certs generate-csr
command generates CSRs for all known certificates
managed by kubeadm. Once the command is done you must manually delete .csr
, .conf
or .key
files that you don't need.
Considerations for kubelet.conf
This section applies to both control plane and worker nodes.
If you have deleted the ca.key
file from control plane nodes
(External CA mode), the active kube-controller-manager in
this cluster will not be able to sign kubelet client certificates. If no external
method for signing these certificates exists in your setup (such as an
external signer, you could manually sign the kubelet.conf.csr
as explained in this guide.
Note that this also means that the automatic
kubelet client certificate rotation
will be disabled. If so, close to certificate expiration, you must generate
a new kubelet.conf.csr
, sign the certificate, embed it in kubelet.conf
and restart the kubelet.
If this does not apply to your setup, you can skip processing the kubelet.conf.csr
on secondary control plane and on workers nodes (all nodes that call kubeadm join ...
).
That is because the active kube-controller-manager will be responsible
for signing new kubelet client certificates.
kubelet.conf.csr
on the primary control plane node
(kubeadm init
) is required, because that is considered the node that
bootstraps the cluster and a pre-populated kubelet.conf
is needed.
Control plane nodes
Execute the following command on primary (kubeadm init
) and secondary
(kubeadm join --control-plane
) control plane nodes to generate all CSR files:
sudo kubeadm certs generate-csr
If external etcd is to be used, follow the
External etcd with kubeadm
guide to understand what CSR files are needed on the kubeadm and etcd nodes. Other
.csr
and .key
files under /etc/kubernetes/pki/etcd
can be removed.
Based on the explanation in
Considerations for kubelet.conf keep or delete
the kubelet.conf
and kubelet.conf.csr
files.
Worker nodes
Based on the explanation in Considerations for kubelet.conf, optionally call:
sudo kubeadm certs generate-csr
and keep only the kubelet.conf
and kubelet.conf.csr
files. Alternatively skip
the steps for worker nodes entirely.
Signing CSRs for all certificates
If you are using external CA and already have CA serial number files (.srl
) for
openssl
you can copy such files to a kubeadm node where CSRs will be processed.
.srl
files to copy are /etc/kubernetes/pki/ca.srl
,
/etc/kubernetes/pki/front-proxy-ca.srl
and /etc/kubernetes/pki/etcd/ca.srl
.
The files can be then moved to a new node where CSR files will be processed.
If a .srl
file is missing for a CA on a node, the script below will generate a new SRL file
with a random starting serial number.
To read more about .srl
files see the
openssl
documentation for the --CAserial
flag.
Repeat this step for all nodes that have CSR files.
Write the following script in the /etc/kubernetes
directory, navigate to the directory
and execute the script. The script will generate certificates for all CSR files that are
present in the /etc/kubernetes
tree.
#!/bin/bash
# Set certificate expiration time in days
DAYS=365
# Process all CSR files except those for front-proxy and etcd
find ./ -name "*.csr" | grep -v "pki/etcd" | grep -v "front-proxy" | while read -r FILE;
do
echo "* Processing ${FILE} ..."
FILE=${FILE%.*} # Trim the extension
if [ -f "./pki/ca.srl" ]; then
SERIAL_FLAG="-CAserial ./pki/ca.srl"
else
SERIAL_FLAG="-CAcreateserial"
fi
openssl x509 -req -days "${DAYS}" -CA ./pki/ca.crt -CAkey ./pki/ca.key ${SERIAL_FLAG} \
-in "${FILE}.csr" -out "${FILE}.crt"
sleep 2
done
# Process all etcd CSRs
find ./pki/etcd -name "*.csr" | while read -r FILE;
do
echo "* Processing ${FILE} ..."
FILE=${FILE%.*} # Trim the extension
if [ -f "./pki/etcd/ca.srl" ]; then
SERIAL_FLAG=-CAserial ./pki/etcd/ca.srl
else
SERIAL_FLAG=-CAcreateserial
fi
openssl x509 -req -days "${DAYS}" -CA ./pki/etcd/ca.crt -CAkey ./pki/etcd/ca.key ${SERIAL_FLAG} \
-in "${FILE}.csr" -out "${FILE}.crt"
done
# Process front-proxy CSRs
echo "* Processing ./pki/front-proxy-client.csr ..."
openssl x509 -req -days "${DAYS}" -CA ./pki/front-proxy-ca.crt -CAkey ./pki/front-proxy-ca.key -CAcreateserial \
-in ./pki/front-proxy-client.csr -out ./pki/front-proxy-client.crt
Embedding certificates in kubeconfig files
Repeat this step for all nodes that have CSR files.
Write the following script in the /etc/kubernetes
directory, navigate to the directory
and execute the script. The script will take the .crt
files that were signed for
kubeconfig files from CSRs in the previous step and will embed them in the kubeconfig files.
#!/bin/bash
CLUSTER=kubernetes
find ./ -name "*.conf" | while read -r FILE;
do
echo "* Processing ${FILE} ..."
KUBECONFIG="${FILE}" kubectl config set-cluster "${CLUSTER}" --certificate-authority ./pki/ca.crt --embed-certs
USER=$(KUBECONFIG="${FILE}" kubectl config view -o jsonpath='{.users[0].name}')
KUBECONFIG="${FILE}" kubectl config set-credentials "${USER}" --client-certificate "${FILE}.crt" --embed-certs
done
Performing cleanup
Perform this step on all nodes that have CSR files.
Write the following script in the /etc/kubernetes
directory, navigate to the directory
and execute the script.
#!/bin/bash
# Cleanup CSR files
rm -f ./*.csr ./pki/*.csr ./pki/etcd/*.csr # Clean all CSR files
# Cleanup CRT files that were already embedded in kubeconfig files
rm -f ./*.crt
Optionally, move .srl
files to the next node to be processed.
Optionally, if using external CA remove the /etc/kubernetes/pki/ca.key
file,
as explained in the External CA node section.
kubeadm node initialization
Once CSR files have been signed and required certificates are in place on the hosts
you want to use as nodes, you can use the commands kubeadm init
and kubeadm join
to create a Kubernetes cluster from these nodes. During init
and join
, kubeadm
uses existing certificates, encryption keys and kubeconfig files that it finds in the
/etc/kubernetes
tree on the host's local filesystem.
Items on this page refer to third party products or projects that provide functionality required by Kubernetes. The Kubernetes project authors aren't responsible for those third-party products or projects. See the CNCF website guidelines for more details.
You should read the content guide before proposing a change that adds an extra third-party link.