Manage X509 Certificates
New in version 2015.8.0.
M2Crypto
Deprecated since version 3006.0.
Warning
This module has been deprecated and will be removed in Salt 3009 (Potassium). Please migrate to the replacement modules. For breaking changes between both versions, you can refer to the x509_v2 execution module docs.
They have become the default x509
modules in Salt 3008.0 (Argon).
Until they are removed, you can still revert to the deprecated modules
by setting features: {x509_v2: false}
in your minion configuration.
This module can enable managing a complete PKI infrastructure including creating private keys, CAs, certificates and CRLs. It includes the ability to generate a private key on a server, and have the corresponding public key sent to a remote CA to create a CA signed certificate. This can be done in a secure manner, where private keys are always generated locally and never moved across the network.
Here is a simple example scenario. In this example ca
is the ca server,
and www
is a web server that needs a certificate signed by ca
.
For remote signing, peers must be permitted to remotely call the
sign_remote_certificate
function.
/etc/salt/master.d/peer.conf
peer:
.*:
- x509.sign_remote_certificate
/srv/salt/top.sls
base:
'*':
- cert
'ca':
- ca
'www':
- www
This state creates the CA key, certificate and signing policy. It also publishes the certificate to the mine where it can be easily retrieved by other minions.
/srv/salt/ca.sls
/etc/salt/minion.d/x509.conf:
file.managed:
- source: salt://x509.conf
restart-salt-minion:
cmd.run:
- name: 'salt-call service.restart salt-minion'
- bg: True
- onchanges:
- file: /etc/salt/minion.d/x509.conf
/etc/pki:
file.directory
/etc/pki/issued_certs:
file.directory
/etc/pki/ca.key:
x509.private_key_managed:
- bits: 4096
- backup: True
/etc/pki/ca.crt:
x509.certificate_managed:
- signing_private_key: /etc/pki/ca.key
- CN: ca.example.com
- C: US
- ST: Utah
- L: Salt Lake City
- basicConstraints: "critical CA:true"
- keyUsage: "critical cRLSign, keyCertSign"
- subjectKeyIdentifier: hash
- authorityKeyIdentifier: keyid,issuer:always
- days_valid: 3650
- days_remaining: 0
- backup: True
- require:
- file: /etc/pki
The signing policy defines properties that override any property requested or included in a CRL. It also can define a restricted list of minions which are allowed to remotely invoke this signing policy.
/srv/salt/x509.conf
mine_functions:
x509.get_pem_entries: [/etc/pki/ca.crt]
x509_signing_policies:
www:
- minions: 'www'
- signing_private_key: /etc/pki/ca.key
- signing_cert: /etc/pki/ca.crt
- C: US
- ST: Utah
- L: Salt Lake City
- basicConstraints: "critical CA:false"
- keyUsage: "critical keyEncipherment"
- subjectKeyIdentifier: hash
- authorityKeyIdentifier: keyid,issuer:always
- days_valid: 90
- copypath: /etc/pki/issued_certs/
This state will instruct all minions to trust certificates signed by our new CA.
Using Jinja to strip newlines from the text avoids dealing with newlines in the rendered YAML,
and the sign_remote_certificate
state will
handle properly formatting the text before writing the output.
/srv/salt/cert.sls
/usr/local/share/ca-certificates:
file.directory
/usr/local/share/ca-certificates/intca.crt:
x509.pem_managed:
- text: {{ salt['mine.get']('ca', 'x509.get_pem_entries')['ca']['/etc/pki/ca.crt']|replace('\n', '') }}
This state creates a private key then requests a certificate signed by ca according to the www policy.
/srv/salt/www.sls
/etc/pki/www.crt:
x509.private_key_managed:
- name: /etc/pki/www.key
- bits: 4096
- backup: True
/etc/pki/www.crt:
x509.certificate_managed:
- ca_server: ca
- signing_policy: www
- public_key: /etc/pki/www.key
- CN: www.example.com
- days_remaining: 30
- backup: True
This other state creates a private key then requests a certificate signed by ca according to the www policy but adds a strict date range for the certificate to be considered valid.
/srv/salt/www-time-limited.sls
/etc/pki/www-time-limited.crt:
x509.certificate_managed:
- ca_server: ca
- signing_policy: www
- public_key: /etc/pki/www-time-limited.key
- CN: www.example.com
- not_before: 2019-05-05 00:00:00
- not_after: 2020-05-05 14:30:00
- backup: True
Manage a Certificate
Path to the certificate
Recreate the certificate if the number of days remaining on it
are less than this number. The value should be less than
days_valid
, otherwise the certificate will be recreated
every time the state is run. A value of 0 disables automatic
renewal.
A list of certificates to be appended to the managed file. They must be valid PEM files, otherwise an error will be thrown.
Any arguments supported by x509.create_certificate
or file.managed
are supported.
Initial validity date for the certificate. This date must be specified in the format '%Y-%m-%d %H:%M:%S'.
New in version 3001.
Final validity date for the certificate. This date must be specified in the format '%Y-%m-%d %H:%M:%S'.
New in version 3001.
Examples:
/etc/pki/ca.crt:
x509.certificate_managed:
- signing_private_key: /etc/pki/ca.key
- CN: ca.example.com
- C: US
- ST: Utah
- L: Salt Lake City
- basicConstraints: "critical CA:true"
- keyUsage: "critical cRLSign, keyCertSign"
- subjectKeyIdentifier: hash
- authorityKeyIdentifier: keyid,issuer:always
- days_valid: 3650
- days_remaining: 0
- backup: True
/etc/ssl/www.crt:
x509.certificate_managed:
- ca_server: pki
- signing_policy: www
- public_key: /etc/ssl/www.key
- CN: www.example.com
- days_valid: 90
- days_remaining: 30
- backup: True
Manage a Certificate Revocation List
Path to the certificate
The private key that will be used to sign the CRL. This is usually your CA's private key.
Passphrase to decrypt the private key.
The certificate of the authority that will be used to sign the CRL. This is usually your CA's certificate.
A list of certificates to revoke. Must include either a serial number or a the certificate itself. Can optionally include the revocation date and notAfter date from the certificate. See example below for details.
The number of days the certificate should be valid for.
The digest to use for signing the CRL. This has no effect on versions of pyOpenSSL less than 0.14.
The CRL should be automatically recreated if there are less than
days_remaining
days until the CRL expires. Set to 0 to disable
automatic renewal.
If True
, include expired certificates in the CRL.
Any arguments supported by file.managed
are supported.
Example:
/etc/pki/ca.crl:
x509.crl_managed:
- signing_private_key: /etc/pki/myca.key
- signing_cert: /etc/pki/myca.crt
- revoked:
- compromized_Web_key:
- certificate: /etc/pki/certs/badweb.crt
- revocation_date: 2015-03-01 00:00:00
- reason: keyCompromise
- terminated_vpn_user:
- serial_number: D6:D2:DC:D8:4D:5C:C0:F4
- not_after: 2016-01-01 00:00:00
- revocation_date: 2015-02-25 00:00:00
- reason: cessationOfOperation
Manage a Certificate Signing Request
Path to the CSR
The properties to be added to the certificate request, including items like subject, extensions and public key. See above for valid properties.
Any arguments supported by file.managed
are supported.
Example:
/etc/pki/mycert.csr:
x509.csr_managed:
- private_key: /etc/pki/mycert.key
- CN: www.example.com
- C: US
- ST: Utah
- L: Salt Lake City
- keyUsage: 'critical dataEncipherment'
Manage the contents of a PEM file directly with the content in text, ensuring correct formatting.
The path to the file to manage
The PEM formatted text to write.
Any arguments supported by file.managed
are supported.
Manage a private key's existence.
Path to the private key
Key length in bits. Default 2048.
Passphrase for encrypting the private key.
Cipher for encrypting the private key.
Always create a new key. Defaults to False
.
Combining new with prereq
can allow key rotation whenever a new certificate is generated.
Overwrite an existing private key if the provided passphrase cannot decrypt it.
Provide visual feedback on stdout, dots while key is generated. Default is True.
New in version 2016.11.0.
Any kwargs supported by file.managed are supported.
Example:
The JINJA templating in this example ensures a private key is generated if the file doesn't exist and that a new private key is generated whenever the certificate that uses it is to be renewed.
/etc/pki/www.key:
x509.private_key_managed:
- bits: 4096
- new: True
{% if salt['file.file_exists']('/etc/pki/www.key') -%}
- prereq:
- x509: /etc/pki/www.crt
{%- endif %}