Istio DNS Certificate Management
This task shows how to provision and manage DNS certificates using Chiron, a lightweight component linked with Istiod that signs certificates using the Kubernetes CA APIs without maintaining its own private key. Using this feature has the following advantages:
Unlike Istiod, this feature doesn’t require maintaining a private signing key, which enhances security.
Simplified root certificate distribution to TLS clients. Clients no longer need to wait for Istiod to generate and distribute its CA certificate.
Before you begin
- Install Istio through
istioctl
with DNS certificates configured. The configuration is read when Istiod starts.
$ cat <<EOF > ./istio.yaml
apiVersion: install.istio.io/v1alpha1
kind: IstioOperator
spec:
meshConfig:
certificates:
- secretName: dns.example1-service-account
dnsNames: [example1.istio-system.svc, example1.istio-system]
- secretName: dns.example2-service-account
dnsNames: [example2.istio-system.svc, example2.istio-system]
EOF
$ istioctl install -f ./istio.yaml
DNS certificate provisioning and management
Istio provisions the DNS names and secret names for the DNS certificates based on configuration you provide. The DNS certificates provisioned are signed by the Kubernetes CA and stored in the secrets following your configuration. Istio also manages the lifecycle of the DNS certificates, including their rotations and regenerations.
Configure DNS certificates
The IstioOperator
custom resource used to configure Istio in the istioctl install
command, above,
contains an example DNS certificate configuration. Within, the dnsNames
field specifies the DNS
names in a certificate and the secretName
field specifies the name of the Kubernetes secret used to
store the certificate and the key.
Check the provisioning of DNS certificates
After configuring Istio to generate DNS certificates and storing them in secrets of your choosing, you can verify that the certificates were provisioned and work properly.
To check that Istio generated the dns.example1-service-account
DNS certificate as configured in the example,
and that the certificate contains the configured DNS names, you need to get the secret from Kubernetes, parse it,
decode it, and view its text output with the following command:
$ kubectl get secret dns.example1-service-account -n istio-system -o jsonpath="{.data['cert-chain\.pem']}" | base64 --decode | openssl x509 -in /dev/stdin -text -noout
The text output should include:
X509v3 Subject Alternative Name:
DNS:example1.istio-system.svc, DNS:example1.istio-system
Regenerating a DNS certificate
Istio can also regenerate DNS certificates that were mistakenly deleted. Next, we show how you can delete a recently configured certificate and verify Istio regenerates it automatically.
Delete the secret storing the DNS certificate configured earlier:
$ kubectl delete secret dns.example1-service-account -n istio-system
To check that Istio regenerated the deleted DNS certificate, and that the certificate contains the configured DNS names, you need to get the secret from Kubernetes, parse it, decode it, and view its text output with the following command:
$ sleep 10; kubectl get secret dns.example1-service-account -n istio-system -o jsonpath="{.data['cert-chain\.pem']}" | base64 --decode | openssl x509 -in /dev/stdin -text -noout
The output should include:
X509v3 Subject Alternative Name:
DNS:example1.istio-system.svc, DNS:example1.istio-system
Cleanup
To remove the
istio-system
namespace:$ kubectl delete ns istio-system