open-consul/docs/service-mesh/ca
Daniel Nephin e0084abe8e contrib: add CA manager states diagram 2022-01-26 12:14:29 -05:00
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README.md contrib: add CA manager states diagram 2022-01-26 12:14:29 -05:00
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cert-relationship.mmd
cert-relationship.svg
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hl-ca-overview.svg add HL diagram on the ca generation sequence 2022-01-26 12:14:29 -05:00
state-machine.mmd contrib: add CA manager states diagram 2022-01-26 12:14:29 -05:00
state-machine.svg contrib: add CA manager states diagram 2022-01-26 12:14:29 -05:00

README.md

Certificate Authority (Connect CA)

The Certificate Authority Subsystem manages a CA trust chain for issuing certificates to services and client agents (via auto-encrypt and auto-config).

The code for the Certificate Authority is in the following packages:

  1. most of the core logic is in agent/consul/leader_connect_ca.go
  2. the providers are in agent/connect/ca
  3. the RPC interface is in agent/consul/connect_ca_endpoint.go

Architecture

High level overview

In Consul the leader is responsible for handling the CA management. When a leader election happen, and the elected leader do not have any root CA available it will start a process of creating a set of CA certificate. Those certificates will be used to authenticate/encrypt communication between services (service mesh) or between Consul client agent (auto-encrypt/auto-config). This process is described in the following diagram:

CA creation

source

The features that benefit from Consul CA management are:

CA and Certificate relationship

This diagram shows the relationship between the CA certificates in Consul primary and secondary.

CA relationship

source

In most cases there is an external root CA that provides an intermediate CA that Consul uses as the Primary Root CA. The only except to this is when the Consul CA Provider is used without specifying a RootCert. In this one case Consul will generate the Root CA from the provided primary key, and it will be used in the primary as the top of the chain of trust.

In the primary datacenter, the Consul and AWS providers use the Primary Root CA to sign leaf certificates. The Vault provider uses an intermediate CA to sign leaf certificates.

Leaf certificates are created for two purposes:

  1. the Leaf Cert Service is used by envoy proxies in the mesh to perform mTLS with other services.
  2. the Leaf Cert Client Agent is created by auto-encrypt and auto-config. It is used by client agents for HTTP API TLS, and for mTLS for RPC requests to servers.

Any secondary datacenters receive an intermediate certificate, signed by the Primary Root CA, which is used as the CA certificate to sign leaf certificates in the secondary datacenter.

Operations

When trying to learn the CA subsystem it can be helpful to understand the operations that it can perform. The sections below are the complete set of read, write, and periodic operations that provide the full behaviour of the CA subsystem.

Periodic Operations

Periodic (or background) opeartions are started automatically by the Consul leader. They run at some interval (often 1 hour).

  • CAManager.InitializeCA - attempts to initialize the CA when a leader is ellected. If the synchronous InitializeCA fails, CAManager.backgroundCAInitialization runs InitializeCA periodically in a goroutine until it succeeds.
  • CAManager.RenewIntermediate - (called by CAManager.intermediateCertRenewalWatch) runs in the primary if the provider uses a separate signing cert (the Vault provider). The operation always runs in the secondary. Renews the signing cert once half its lifetime has passed.
  • CAManager.secondaryCARootWatch - runs in secondary only. Performs a blocking query to the primary to retrieve any updates to the CA roots and stores them locally.
  • Server.runCARootPruning - removes non-active and expired roots from state.CARoots

Read Operations

  • RPC.ConnectCA.ConfigurationGet - returns the CA provider configuration. Only called by user, not by any internal subsystems.
  • RPC.ConnectCA.Roots - returns all the roots, the trust domain ID, and the ID of the active root. Each "root" also includes the signing key/cert, and any intermediate certs in the chain. It is used (via the cache) by all the connect proxy types.

Write Operations

  • CAManager.UpdateConfiguration - (via RPC.ConnectCA.ConfigurationSet) called by a user when they want to change the provider or provider configuration (ex: rotate root CA).
  • CAManager.Provider.SignIntermediate - (via RPC.ConnectCA.SignIntermediate) called from the secondary DC:
    1. by CAManager.RenewIntermediate to sign the new intermediate when the old intermediate is about to expire
    2. by CAMananger.initializeSecondary when setting up a new secondary, when the provider is changed in the secondary by a user action, or when the primary roots changed and the secondary needs to generate a new intermediate for the new primary roots.
  • CAMananger.SignCertificate - is used by:
    1. (via RPC.ConnectCA.Sign) - called by client agents to sign a leaf cert for a connect proxy (via agent/cache-types/connect_ca_leaf.go)
    2. (via in-process call to RPC.ConnectCA.Sign) - called by auto-encrypt to sign a leaf cert for a client agent
    3. called by Auto-Config to sign a leaf cert for a client agent

detailed call flow

CA Leader Sequence

source

####TODO:

  • sequence diagram for leaf signing
  • sequence diagram for CA cert rotation

CAManager states

This section is a work in progress

TODO: style the diagram to match the others, and add some narative text to describe the diagram.

CA Mananger states