Manage Puppet certificates as resources using the puppet_certificate
type.
Example:
puppet_certificate { 'puppetmaster07.example.com':
ensure => present,
dns_alt_names => [
'puppet',
'puppet.example.com',
],
}
puppet_certificate { 'oldcert.example.com':
ensure => absent,
}
When refreshed (notify, subscribe) a puppet_certificate resource will destroy and re-create the managed certificate. This enables changes to related resources to trigger a certificate to be regenerated.
To enable this functionality, you must set the onrefresh parameter to
regenerate
. Otherwise, the resource will not respond to refresh events.
Note that for this to work as expected, it will need to be combined with automatic certificate cleaning (described in a following section).
file { '/etc/puppetlabs/puppet/csr_attributes.yaml':
ensure => file,
owner => 'root',
group => 'root',
mode => '0440',
content => epp('example/csr_attributes.yaml.epp'),
}
~> puppet_certificate { $certname:
ensure => present,
waitforcert => 60,
onrefresh => regenerate,
}
Besides ensure=present
, a puppet_certificate may be set to ensure=valid
.
When configured this way, if the Puppet certificate has expired, it will be
destroyed and a new certificate created. Note that this does not automatically
handle signing of the new certificate, or cleanup of the old (expired)
certificate.
The renewal_grace_period parameter may be combined with ensure=valid
to
perform certificate regeneration a configurable number of days before a
certificate is due to expire.
puppet_certificate { $certname:
ensure => valid,
renewal_grace_period => 20,
}
The clean
parameter tells a puppet_certificate to try and clean a
certificate from the CA upon destroying it.
This is useful to keep the CA clean, and as a prerequisite action for generating a new certificate of the same name. To use this option effectively, it is required that a rule be added to auth.conf on the CA to allow this. For example, to allow nodes to revoke and clean their own certificates.
Example auth.conf rule:
{
name: "Allow nodes to delete their own certificates",
match-request: {
path: "^/puppet-ca/v1/certificate(_status|_request)?/([^/]+)$",
type: regex,
method: [delete]
},
allow: "$2",
sort-order: 500
}
Puppet Enterprise already has a rule for this API. You cannot have multiple
blocks in auth.conf for the same path. Therefore you need to patch
/opt/puppetlabs/puppet/modules/puppet_enterprise/manifests/profile/certificate_authority.pp
# git diff --no-index /tmp/certificate_authority.pp
/opt/puppetlabs/puppet/modules/puppet_enterprise/manifests/profile/certificate_authority.pp
diff --git a/tmp/certificate_authority.pp
b/opt/puppetlabs/puppet/modules/puppet_enterprise/manifests/profile/certificate_authority.pp
index ba4de6b..4c71dd5 100644
--- a/tmp/certificate_authority.pp
+++ b/opt/puppetlabs/puppet/modules/puppet_enterprise/manifests/profile/certificate_authority.pp
@@ -99,10 +99,10 @@ class puppet_enterprise::profile::certificate_authority (
pe_puppet_authorization::rule { 'puppetlabs certificate status':
ensure => present,
- match_request_path => '/puppet-ca/v1/certificate_status/',
- match_request_type => 'path',
+ match_request_path => '^/puppet-ca/v1/certificate_status/([^/]+)?$',
+ match_request_type => 'regex',
match_request_method => ['get','put','delete'],
- allow => $_client_allowlist << $ca_cli_extension,
+ allow => ['$1', $_client_allowlist].flatten << $ca_cli_extension,
sort_order => 500,
path => '/etc/puppetlabs/puppetserver/conf.d/auth.conf',
notify => Service['pe-puppetserver'],
puppet_certificate { $certname:
ensure => valid,
waitforcert => 60,
renewal_grace_period => 20,
clean => true,
}
- Reid Vandewiele
- Branan Riley
- Raphaël Pinson
This module was originally authored by Reid Vandewiele. The maintainer preferred that Vox Pupuli take ownership of the module for future improvement and maintenance.
Existing pull requests and issues were transferred over. Please fork and continue to contribute here instead of the module's original home.