Create Certificates Locally using cert-manager on the Controller

You can use cert-manager to locally create certificates suitable for use in a lab environment.

Procedure

  1. Create a Root CA Certificate and Key.

    1. Create a self-signing issuer.

      $ echo "
      apiVersion: cert-manager.io/v1
      kind: Issuer
      metadata:
        name: my-selfsigning-issuer
      spec:
        selfSigned: {}
      " | kubectl apply -f -
      
    2. Create a Root CA certificate and key.

      $ echo "
      apiVersion: cert-manager.io/v1
      kind: Certificate
      metadata:
        name: my-rootca-certificate
      spec:
        secretName: my-rootca-certificate
        commonName: "my-rootca"
        isCA: true
        issuerRef:
          name: my-selfsigning-issuer
          kind: Issuer
      " | kubectl apply -f -
      
    3. Create a Root CA Issuer.

      $ echo "
      apiVersion: cert-manager.io/v1
      kind: Issuer
      metadata:
        name: my-rootca-issuer
      spec:
        ca:
          secretName: my-rootca-certificate
      " | kubectl apply -f -
      
    4. Create files for the Root CA certificate and key.

      $ kubectl get secret my-rootca-certificate -o yaml | egrep "^  tls.crt:" | awk '{print $2}' | base64 --decode > my-rootca-cert.pem
      $ kubectl get secret my-rootca-certificate -o yaml | egrep "^  tls.key:" | awk '{print $2}' | base64 --decode > my-rootca-key.pem
      
  2. Create and sign a Server Certificate and Key.

    1. Create the Server certificate and key.

      $ echo "
      apiVersion: cert-manager.io/v1
      kind: Certificate
      metadata:
        name: my-server-certificate
      spec:
        secretName: my-server-certificate
        duration: 2160h # 90d
        renewBefore: 360h # 15d
        commonName: 1.1.1.1
        dnsNames:
        - myserver.wrs.com
        ipAddresses:
        - 1.1.1.1
        issuerRef:
          name: my-rootca-issuer
          kind: Issuer
      " | kubectl apply -f -
      
    2. Create the PEM files for Server certificate and key.

      $ kubectl get secret my-server-certificate -o yaml | egrep "^  tls.crt:" | awk '{print $2}' | base64 --decode > my-server-cert.pem
      $ kubectl get secret my-server-certificate -o yaml | egrep "^  tls.key:" | awk '{print $2}' | base64 --decode > my-server-key.pem
      
    3. Combine the server certificate and key into a single file.

      $ cat my-server-cert.pem my-server-key.pem > my-server.pem