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			273 lines
		
	
	
		
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			Markdown
		
	
	
	
	
	
			
		
		
	
	
			273 lines
		
	
	
		
			10 KiB
		
	
	
	
		
			Markdown
		
	
	
	
	
	
<!-- BEGIN MUNGE: UNVERSIONED_WARNING -->
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<!-- BEGIN STRIP_FOR_RELEASE -->
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<img src="http://kubernetes.io/img/warning.png" alt="WARNING"
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     width="25" height="25">
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<img src="http://kubernetes.io/img/warning.png" alt="WARNING"
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     width="25" height="25">
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<img src="http://kubernetes.io/img/warning.png" alt="WARNING"
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     width="25" height="25">
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<img src="http://kubernetes.io/img/warning.png" alt="WARNING"
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     width="25" height="25">
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<img src="http://kubernetes.io/img/warning.png" alt="WARNING"
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     width="25" height="25">
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<h2>PLEASE NOTE: This document applies to the HEAD of the source tree</h2>
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If you are using a released version of Kubernetes, you should
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refer to the docs that go with that version.
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Documentation for other releases can be found at
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[releases.k8s.io](http://releases.k8s.io).
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</strong>
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--
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<!-- END MUNGE: UNVERSIONED_WARNING -->
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# Kubelet TLS bootstrap
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Author: George Tankersley (george.tankersley@coreos.com)
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## Preface
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This document describes a method for a kubelet to bootstrap itself
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into a TLS-secured cluster. Crucially, it automates the provision and
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distribution of signed certificates.
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## Overview
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When a kubelet runs for the first time, it must be given TLS assets
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or generate them itself. In the first case, this is a burden on the cluster
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admin and a significant logistical barrier to secure Kubernetes rollouts. In
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the second, the kubelet must self-sign its certificate and forfeits many of the
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advantages of a PKI system. Instead, we propose that the kubelet generate a
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private key and a CSR for submission to a cluster-level certificate signing
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process.
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## Preliminaries
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We assume the existence of a functioning control plane. The
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apiserver should be configured for TLS initially or possess the ability to
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generate valid TLS credentials for itself. If secret information is passed in
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the request (e.g. auth tokens supplied with the request or included in
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ExtraInfo) then all communications from the node to the apiserver must take
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place over a verified TLS connection.
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Each node is additionally provisioned with the following information:
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1. Location of the apiserver
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2. Any CA certificates necessary to trust the apiserver's TLS certificate
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3. Access tokens (if needed) to communicate with the CSR endpoint
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These should not change often and are thus simple to include in a static
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provisioning script.
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## API Changes
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### CertificateSigningRequest Object
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We introduce a new API object to represent PKCS#10 certificate signing
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requests. It will be accessible under:
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`/apis/certificates/v1beta1/certificatesigningrequests/mycsr`
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It will have the following structure:
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```go
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// Describes a certificate signing request
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type CertificateSigningRequest struct {
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	unversioned.TypeMeta `json:",inline"`
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	api.ObjectMeta       `json:"metadata,omitempty"`
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	// The certificate request itself and any additonal information.
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	Spec CertificateSigningRequestSpec `json:"spec,omitempty"`
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	// Derived information about the request.
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	Status CertificateSigningRequestStatus `json:"status,omitempty"`
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}
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// This information is immutable after the request is created.
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type CertificateSigningRequestSpec struct {
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	// Base64-encoded PKCS#10 CSR data
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	Request string `json:"request"`
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	// Any extra information the node wishes to send with the request.
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	ExtraInfo []string `json:"extrainfo,omitempty"`
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}
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// This information is derived from the request by Kubernetes and cannot be
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// modified by users. All information is optional since it might not be
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// available in the underlying request. This is intented to aid approval
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// decisions.
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type CertificateSigningRequestStatus struct {
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	// Information about the requesting user (if relevant)
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	// See user.Info interface for details
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	Username string   `json:"username,omitempty"`
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	UID      string   `json:"uid,omitempty"`
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	Groups   []string `json:"groups,omitempty"`
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	// Fingerprint of the public key in request
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	Fingerprint string `json:"fingerprint,omitempty"`
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	// Subject fields from the request
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	Subject internal.Subject `json:"subject,omitempty"`
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	// DNS SANs from the request
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	Hostnames []string `json:"hostnames,omitempty"`
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	// IP SANs from the request
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	IPAddresses []string `json:"ipaddresses,omitempty"`
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	Conditions []CertificateSigningRequestCondition `json:"conditions,omitempty"`
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}
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type RequestConditionType string
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// These are the possible states for a certificate request.
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const (
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	Approved RequestConditionType = "Approved"
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	Denied   RequestConditionType = "Denied"
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)
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type CertificateSigningRequestCondition struct {
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	// request approval state, currently Approved or Denied.
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	Type RequestConditionType `json:"type"`
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	// brief reason for the request state
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	Reason string `json:"reason,omitempty"`
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	// human readable message with details about the request state
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	Message string `json:"message,omitempty"`
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	// If request was approved, the controller will place the issued certificate here.
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	Certificate []byte `json:"certificate,omitempty"`
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}
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type CertificateSigningRequestList struct {
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	unversioned.TypeMeta `json:",inline"`
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	unversioned.ListMeta `json:"metadata,omitempty"`
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	Items []CertificateSigningRequest `json:"items,omitempty"`
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}
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```
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We also introduce CertificateSigningRequestList to allow listing all the CSRs in the cluster:
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```go
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type CertificateSigningRequestList struct {
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        api.TypeMeta
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        api.ListMeta
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        Items []CertificateSigningRequest
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}
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```
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## Certificate Request Process
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### Node intialization
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When the kubelet executes it checks a location on disk for TLS assets
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(currently `/var/run/kubernetes/kubelet.{key,crt}` by default). If it finds
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them, it proceeds. If there are no TLS assets, the kubelet generates a keypair
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and self-signed certificate. We propose the following optional behavior:
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1. Generate a keypair
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2. Generate a CSR for that keypair with CN set to the hostname (or
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   `--hostname-override` value) and DNS/IP SANs supplied with whatever values
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   the host knows for itself.
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3. Post the CSR to the CSR API endpoint.
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4. Set a watch on the CSR object to be notified of approval or rejection.
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### Controller response
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The apiserver persists the CertificateSigningRequests and exposes the List of
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all CSRs for an administrator to approve or reject.
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A new certificate controller watches for certificate requests. It must first
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validate the signature on each CSR and add `Condition=Denied` on
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any requests with invalid signatures (with Reason and Message incidicating
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such). For valid requests, the controller will derive the information in
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`CertificateSigningRequestStatus` and update that object. The controller should
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watch for updates to the approval condition of any CertificateSigningRequest.
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When a request is approved (signified by Conditions containing only Approved)
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the controller should generate and sign a certificate based on that CSR, then
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update the condition with the certificate data using the `/approval`
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subresource.
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### Manual CSR approval
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An administrator using `kubectl` or another API client can query the
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CertificateSigningRequestList and update the approval condition of
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CertificateSigningRequests. The default state is empty, indicating that there
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has been no decision so far. A state of "Approved" indicates that the admin has
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approved the request and the certificate controller should issue the
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certificate. A state of "Denied" indicates that admin has denied the
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request. An admin may also supply Reason and Message fields to explain the
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rejection.
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## kube-apiserver support
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The apiserver will present the new endpoints mentioned above and support the
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relevant object types.
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## kube-controller-manager support
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To handle certificate issuance, the controller-manager will need access to CA
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signing assets. This could be as simple as a private key and a config file or
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as complex as a PKCS#11 client and supplementary policy system. For now, we
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will add flags for a signing key, a certificate, and a basic policy file.
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## kubectl support
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To support manual CSR inspection and approval, we will add support for listing,
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inspecting, and approving or denying CertificateSigningRequests to kubectl. The
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interaction will be similar to
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[salt-key](https://docs.saltstack.com/en/latest/ref/cli/salt-key.html).
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Specifically, the admin will have the ability to retrieve the full list of
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pending CSRs, inspect their contents, and set their approval conditions to one
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of:
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1. **Approved** if the controller should issue the cert
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2. **Denied** if the controller should not issue the cert
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The suggested command for listing is `kubectl get csrs`. The approve/deny
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interactions can be accomplished with normal updates, but would be more
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conveniently accessed by direct subresource updates. We leave this for future
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updates to kubectl.
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## Security Considerations
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### Endpoint Access Control
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The ability to post CSRs to the signing endpoint should be controlled. As a
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simple solution we propose that each node be provisioned with an auth token
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(possibly static across the cluster) that is scoped via ABAC to only allow
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access to the CSR endpoint.
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### Expiration & Revocation
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The node is responsible for monitoring its own certificate expiration date.
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When the certificate is close to expiration, the kubelet should begin repeating
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this flow until it successfully obtains a new certificate. If the expiring
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certificate has not been revoked and the previous certificate request is still
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approved, then it may do so using the same keypair unless the cluster policy
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(see "Future Work") requires fresh keys.
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Revocation is for the most part an unhandled problem in Go, requiring each
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application to produce its own logic around a variety of parsing functions. For
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now, our suggested best practice is to issue only short-lived certificates. In
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the future it may make sense to add CRL support to the apiserver's client cert
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auth.
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## Future Work
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- revocation UI in kubectl and CRL support at the apiserver
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- supplemental policy (e.g. cluster CA only issues 30-day certs for hostnames *.k8s.example.com, each new cert must have fresh keys, ...)
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- fully automated provisioning (using a handshake protocol or external list of authorized machines)
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[]()
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