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Version: v4.8

Certificates for Helm 3-deployed sidecars

You can use Cyral's default sidecar-created certificate or use a custom certificate to secure the communications performed by the sidecar.

In this page we provide two ways of deploying a custom certificate to your helm sidecar:

  • using cert-manager to provision the certificate automatically on your cluster; or
  • provisioning a certificate signed by the Certificate Authority of your choice.

The first approach creates a stack for certificate management based on a set of certificate signing and validation methods. The second approach creates a kubernetes secret containing the information from the provisioned certificate.

cert-manager provisioned certificate

This set of instructions makes use of cert-manager, an extension to kubernetes that uses CRDs to easily manage certificates from different sources.

Prerequisites

  1. Have a Kubernetes cluster deployed.
  2. Install Helm 3.
  3. Have RBAC permissions to install CRDs.

Installing cert-manager

cert-manager installation is well documented in their documentation. We recommend installing it using helm.

To install the latest version of cert-manager, run the following command:

helm upgrade -i cert-manager cert-manager -n cert-manager --repo https://charts.jetstack.io --create-namespace --set installCRDs=true

Creating an issuer

An Issuer is a cert-manager resource that configures how your certificate will be validated. The issuer's configuration will vary with your cloud provider and validation method. Refer to the project documentation to create an issuer.

Creating the certificate

After creating an issuer, you need to create a Certificate resource so that cert-manager starts the validation process for your domain using the configuration created in the Issuer from the last step. The certificate should look something like this:

apiVersion: cert-manager.io/v1
kind: Certificate
metadata:
name: acme-crt
namespace: <sidecar namespace>
spec:
secretName: <certificate secret name>
dnsNames:
- my-sidecar.my-domain.com
issuerRef:
name: <your issuer name>
# We can reference ClusterIssuers by changing the kind here.
# The default value is Issuer (i.e. a locally namespaced Issuer)
kind: Issuer
group: cert-manager.io

This will trigger a chain that will eventually create a tls secret with the name <certificate secret name> on the <sidecar namespace> namespace.

The secret name must be provided to the sidecar Helm chart. See how to do it here.

warning

By default, the sidecar contains permissions to get and watch Secret resources in the namespace it's created in. If you are using a custom ServiceAccount, make sure it has these permissions attached to it.

Provide custom certificate to the sidecar

To provide a custom certificate to the sidecar, first create a secret then provide the secret name in the values file of the Helm chart.

The helm sidecar makes use of tls secrets to load custom certificates.

You can create the secret from a PEM encoded certificate file and a key file using the following command:

kubectl create secret tls my-tls-secret \
--cert=path/to/cert/file \
--key=path/to/key/file \
--namespace <sidecar namespace>

To make the sidecar use your custom certificate, provide the name of the secret to the sidecar Helm chart.

Suppose you created the secrets my-tls-secret and my-ca-secret, then provide the following to your values file:

certificateManager:
certificates:
tls:
existingSecret: "my-tls-secret"
ca:
existingSecret: "my-ca-secret"

The choice between providing a tls, a ca secret or both will depend on the repositories used by your sidecar. See the certificate type used by each repository in the sidecar certificates page.