184 lines
6.8 KiB
Plaintext
184 lines
6.8 KiB
Plaintext
---
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layout: docs
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page_title: Connect - Certificate Management
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description: >-
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Consul can be used with AWS Certificate Manager Private CA to manage and sign
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certificates.
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---
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# AWS Certificate Manager Private CA as a Connect CA
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Consul can be used with [AWS Certificate Manager (ACM) Private Certificate
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Authority
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(CA)](https://aws.amazon.com/certificate-manager/private-certificate-authority/)
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to manage and sign certificates.
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-> This page documents the specifics of the AWS ACM Private CA provider.
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Please read the [certificate management overview](/docs/connect/ca)
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page first to understand how Consul manages certificates with configurable
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CA providers.
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## Requirements
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The ACM Private CA Provider was added in Consul 1.7.0.
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The ACM Private CA Provider needs to be authorized via IAM credentials to
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perform operations. Every Consul server needs to be running in an environment
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where a suitable IAM configuration is present.
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The [standard AWS SDK credential
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locations](https://docs.aws.amazon.com/sdk-for-go/v1/developer-guide/configuring-sdk.html#specifying-credentials)
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are used, which means that suitable credentials and region configuration need to be present in one of the following:
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1. Environment variables
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1. Shared credentials file
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1. Via an EC2 instance role
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The IAM credential provided must have permission for the following actions:
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- CreateCertificateAuthority - assuming an existing CA is not specified in `existing_arn`
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- DescribeCertificateAuthority
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- GetCertificate
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- IssueCertificate
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## Configuration
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The ACM Private CA provider is enabled by setting the CA provider to
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`"aws-pca"` in the agent's [`ca_provider`] configuration option, or via the
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[`/connect/ca/configuration`] API endpoint. At this time there is only one,
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optional configuration value.
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Example configurations are shown below:
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<CodeTabs heading="Connect CA configuration" tabs={["Agent configuration", "API"]}>
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<CodeBlockConfig filename="/etc/consul.d/config.hcl" highlight="4,6">
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```hcl
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# ...
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connect {
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enabled = true
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ca_provider = "aws-pca"
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ca_config {
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existing_arn = "arn:aws:acm-pca:region:account:certificate-authority/12345678-1234-1234-123456789012"
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}
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}
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```
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</CodeBlockConfig>
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<CodeBlockConfig highlight="2,4">
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```json
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{
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"Provider": "aws-pca",
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"Config": {
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"ExistingARN": "arn:aws:acm-pca:region:account:certificate-authority/12345678-1234-1234-123456789012"
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}
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}
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```
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</CodeBlockConfig>
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</CodeTabs>
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~> **Note**: Suitable AWS IAM credentials are necessary for the provider to
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work. However, these are not configured in the Consul config which is typically
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on disk, and instead rely on the [standard AWS SDK configuration
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locations](https://docs.aws.amazon.com/sdk-for-go/v1/developer-guide/configuring-sdk.html#specifying-credentials).
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The configuration options are listed below.
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-> **Note**: The first key is the value used in API calls, and the second key
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(after the `/`) is used if you are adding the configuration to the agent's
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configuration file.
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- `ExistingARN` / `existing_arn` (`string: <optional>`) - The Amazon Resource
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Name (ARN) of an existing private CA in your ACM account. If specified,
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Consul will attempt to use the existing CA to issue certificates.
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- In the primary datacenter this ARN **must identify a root CA**. See
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[limitations](#limitations).
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- In a secondary datacenter, it must identify a subordinate CA signed by
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the same root used in the primary datacenter. If it is signed by another
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root, Consul will automatically create a new subordinate signed by the
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primary's root instead.
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The default behavior with no `ExistingARN` specified is for Consul to
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create a new root CA in the primary datacenter and a subordinate CA in
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each secondary DC.
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@include 'http_api_connect_ca_common_options.mdx'
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## Limitations
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ACM Private CA has several
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[limits](https://docs.aws.amazon.com/acm-pca/latest/userguide/PcaLimits.html)
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that restrict how fast certificates can be issued. This may impact how quickly
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large clusters can rotate all issued certificates.
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Currently, the ACM Private CA provider for Connect has some additional
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limitations described below.
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### Unable to Cross-sign Other CAs
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It's not possible to cross-sign other CA provider's root certificates during a
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migration. ACM Private CA is capable of doing that through a different workflow
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but is not able to blindly cross-sign another root certificate without a CSR
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being generated. Both Consul's built-in CA and Vault can do this and the current
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workflow for managing CAs relies on it.
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For now, the limitation means that once ACM Private CA is configured as the CA
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provider, it is not possible to reconfigure a different CA provider, or rotate
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the root CA key without potentially observing some transient connection
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failures. See the section on [forced rotation without
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cross-signing](/docs/connect/ca#forced-rotation-without-cross-signing) for
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more details.
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### Primary DC Must be a Root CA
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Currently, if an existing ACM Private CA is used, the primary DC must use a Root
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CA directly to issue certificates.
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## Cost Planning
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To help estimate costs, an example is provided below of the resources that would
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be used.
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~> This is intended to illustrate the behavior of the CA for cost planning
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purposes. Please refer to the [pricing for ACM Private
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CA](https://aws.amazon.com/certificate-manager/pricing/) for actual cost
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information.
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Assume the following Consul datacenters exist and are configured to use ACM
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Private CA as their Connect CA with the default leaf certificate lifetime of
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72 hours:
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| Datacenter | Primary | CA Resource Created | Number of service instances |
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| ---------- | ------- | ------------------- | --------------------------- |
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| dc1 | yes | 1 ROOT | 100 |
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| dc2 | no | 1 SUBORDINATE | 50 |
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| dc3 | no | 1 SUBORDINATE | 500 |
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Leaf certificates are valid for 72 hours but are refreshed when
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between 60% and 90% of their lifetime has elapsed. On average each certificate
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will be reissued every 54 hours or roughly 13.3 times per month.
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So monthly cost would be calculated as:
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- 3 ⨉ Monthly CA cost, plus
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- 8630 ⨉ Certificate Issue cost, made up of:
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- 100 ⨉ 13.3 = 1,330 certificates issued in dc1
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- 50 ⨉ 13.3 = 665 certificates issued in dc2
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- 500 ⨉ 13.3 = 6,650 certificates issued in dc3
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The number of certificates issued could be reduced by increasing
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[`leaf_cert_ttl`](/docs/agent/config/agent-config-files#ca_leaf_cert_ttl) in the CA Provider
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configuration if the longer lived credentials are an acceptable risk tradeoff
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against the cost.
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<!-- Reference style links -->
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[`ca_config`]: /docs/agent/config/agent-config-files#connect_ca_config
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[`ca_provider`]: /docs/agent/config/agent-config-files#connect_ca_provider
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[`/connect/ca/configuration`]: /api-docs/connect/ca#update-ca-configuration
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