5.2 KiB
title, description
| title | description |
|---|---|
| Install cert-manager in Kubernetes | Cert Manager generates and renews LetsEncrypt certificates |
Cert Manager
To interact with your cluster externally, you'll almost certainly be using a web browser, and you'll almost certainly be wanting your browsing session to be SSL-secured. Some Ingress Controllers (i.e. Traefik) will include a default, self-signed, nasty old cert which will permit you to use SSL, but it's faaaar better to use valid certs.
Cert Manager adds certificates and certificate issuers as resource types in Kubernetes clusters, and simplifies the process of obtaining, renewing and using those certificates.
It can issue certificates from a variety of supported sources, including Let’s Encrypt, HashiCorp Vault, and Venafi as well as private PKI.
It will ensure certificates are valid and up to date, and attempt to renew certificates at a configured time before expiry.
!!! summary "Ingredients"
* [x] A [Kubernetes cluster](/kubernetes/cluster/)
* [x] [Flux deployment process](/kubernetes/deployment/flux/) bootstrapped
Preparation
Namespace
We need a namespace to deploy our HelmRelease and associated ConfigMaps into. Per the flux design, I create this example yaml in my flux repo:
apiVersion: v1
kind: Namespace
metadata:
name: cert-manager
HelmRepository
Next, we need to define a HelmRepository (a repository of helm charts), to which we'll refer when we create the HelmRelease. We only need to do this once per-repository. Per the flux design, I create this example yaml in my flux repo:
apiVersion: source.toolkit.fluxcd.io/v1beta1
kind: HelmRepository
metadata:
name: jetstack
namespace: flux-system
spec:
interval: 15m
url: https://charts.jetstack.io
Kustomization
Now that the "global" elements of this deployment (just the HelmRepository in this case) have been defined, we do some "flux-ception", and go one layer deeper, adding another Kustomization, telling flux to deploy any YAMLs found in the repo at /cert-manager. I create this example Kustomization in my flux repo:
apiVersion: kustomize.toolkit.fluxcd.io/v1beta1
kind: Kustomization
metadata:
name: cert-manager
namespace: flux-system
spec:
interval: 15m
path: ./cert-manager
prune: true # remove any elements later removed from the above path
timeout: 2m # if not set, this defaults to interval duration, which is 1h
sourceRef:
kind: GitRepository
name: flux-system
validation: server
healthChecks:
- apiVersion: apps/v1
kind: Deployment
name: cert-manager
namespace: cert-manager
ConfigMap
Now we're into the cert-manager-specific YAMLs. First, we create a ConfigMap, containing the entire contents of the helm chart's values.yaml. Paste the values into a values.yaml key as illustrated below, indented 4 spaces (since they're "encapsulated" within the ConfigMap YAML). I create this example yaml in my flux repo:
apiVersion: v1
kind: ConfigMap
metadata:
name: cert-manager-helm-chart-value-overrides
namespace: cert-manager
data:
values.yaml: |-
# paste chart values.yaml (indented) here and alter as required>
--8<-- "kubernetes-why-full-values-in-configmap.md"
Then work your way through the values you pasted, and change any which are specific to your configuration.
HelmRelease
Lastly, having set the scene above, we define the HelmRelease which will actually deploy the cert-manager controller into the cluster, with the config we defined above. I save this in my flux repo:
apiVersion: helm.toolkit.fluxcd.io/v2beta1
kind: HelmRelease
metadata:
name: cert-manager
namespace: cert-manager
spec:
chart:
spec:
chart: cert-manager
version: 1.6.x
sourceRef:
kind: HelmRepository
name: jetstack
namespace: flux-system
interval: 15m
timeout: 5m
releaseName: cert-manager
valuesFrom:
- kind: ConfigMap
name: cert-manager-helm-chart-value-overrides
valuesKey: values.yaml # This is the default, but best to be explicit for clarity
--8<-- "kubernetes-why-not-config-in-helmrelease.md"
Serving
Once you've committed your YAML files into your repo, you should soon see some pods appear in the cert-manager namespace!
What do we have now? Well, we've got the cert-manager controller running, but it won't do anything until we define some certificate issuers, credentials, and certificates..
Troubleshooting
If your certificate is not created aren't created as you expect, then the best approach is to check the cert-manager logs, by running kubectl logs -n cert-manager -l app.kubernetes.io/name=cert-manager.
--8<-- "recipe-footer.md"