This project supports automatically getting a certificate for OpenShift routes from any cert-manager Issuer, similar to annotating an Ingress or Gateway resource in vanilla Kubernetes!
helm repo add jetstack https://charts.jetstack.io --force-update
helm install \
cert-manager jetstack/cert-manager \
--namespace cert-manager \
--create-namespace \
--set crds.enabled=true
Both ClusterIssuer and namespace based Issuer are possible. Here a ClusterIssuer is used:
apiVersion: v1
items:
- apiVersion: cert-manager.io/v1
kind: ClusterIssuer
metadata:
annotations:
name: letsencrypt-prod
spec:
acme:
email: mymail@example.com
preferredChain: ""
privateKeySecretRef:
name: letsencrypt-prod
server: https://acme-v02.api.letsencrypt.org/directory
solvers:
- http01:
ingress: {}
oc apply -f clusterissuer.yaml
CNAME:
Name: *.service.clustername.domain.com
Alias: your-lb-domain.cloud
The openshift-routes component can be installed using the Helm chart:
helm install openshift-routes -n cert-manager oci://ghcr.io/cert-manager/charts/openshift-routes
or using templated static manifests:
oc apply -f <(helm template openshift-routes -n cert-manager oci://ghcr.io/cert-manager/charts/openshift-routes --set omitHelmLabels=true)
Please review the values.yaml file for all configuration options.
If you follow the above prerequisites, use this annotations below
---
metadata:
annotations:
cert-manager.io/issuer-kind: ClusterIssuer
cert-manager.io/issuer-name: letsencrypt-prod
---
spec:
host: app.service.clustername.domain.com
Annotate your routes:
apiVersion: route.openshift.io/v1
kind: Route
metadata:
name: example-route
annotations:
cert-manager.io/issuer-name: my-issuer # This is the only required annotation
cert-manager.io/issuer-group: cert-manager.io # Optional, defaults to cert-manager.io
cert-manager.io/issuer-kind: Issuer # Optional, defaults to Issuer, could be ClusterIssuer or an External Issuer
cert-manager.io/duration: 1h # Optional, defaults to 90 days
cert-manager.io/renew-before: 30m # Optional, defaults to 1/3 of total certificate duration.
cert-manager.io/common-name: "My Certificate" # Optional, no default.
cert-manager.io/alt-names: "mycooldomain.com,mysecondarydomain.com" # Optional, no default
cert-manager.io/ip-sans: "10.20.30.40,192.168.192.168" # Optional, no default
cert-manager.io/uri-sans: "spiffe://trustdomain/workload" # Optional, no default
cert-manager.io/private-key-algorithm: "ECDSA" # Optional, defaults to RSA
cert-manager.io/private-key-size: "384" # Optional, defaults to 265 for ECDSA and 2048 for RSA
cert-manager.io/email-sans: "me@example.com,you@example.com" # Optional, no default
cert-manager.io/subject-organizations: "company" # Optional, no default
cert-manager.io/subject-organizationalunits: "company division" # Optional, no default
cert-manager.io/subject-countries: "My Country" # Optional, no default
cert-manager.io/subject-provinces: "My Province" # Optional, no default
cert-manager.io/subject-localities: "My City" # Optional, no default
cert-manager.io/subject-postalcodes: "123ABC" # Optional, no default
cert-manager.io/subject-streetaddresses: "1 Example St" # Optional, no default
cert-manager.io/subject-serialnumber: "123456" # Optional, no default
spec:
host: app.service.clustername.domain.com # will be added to the Subject Alternative Names of the CertificateRequest
port:
targetPort: 8080
to:
kind: Service
name: hello-openshift
Observe the route.Spec.TLS
section of your route being populated automatically by cert-manager.
The route's TLS certificate will be rotated 2/3 of the way through the certificate's lifetime, or
cert-manager.io/renew-before
time before it expires.
Now the website can be called: https://app.service.clustername.domain.com
The source code for the controller can be found in the ./internal/
folder.
After modifying the source code, you can execute the tests with:
go test ./...
We do not wish to support non Kubernetes (or kubernetes-sigs) APIs in cert-manager core. This adds a large maintenance burden, and it's hard for us to e2e test everyone's CRDs. However, OpenShift is widely used, so it makes sense to have some support for it in the cert-manager ecosystem.
Ideally we would have contributed this controller to an existing project, e.g. https://github.com/redhat-cop/cert-utils-operator. Unfortunately, cert-manager is not really designed to be imported as a module. It has a large number of transitive dependencies that would add an unfair amount of maintenance to whichever project we submitted it to. In the future, we would like to split the cert-manager APIs and typed clients out of the main cert-manager repo, at which point it would be easier for other people to consume in their projects.
The release process is documented in RELEASE.md.