Venafi

The Venafi Issuer types allows you to obtain certificates from Venafi Cloud and Venafi Trust Protection Platform instances.

Create your Venafi Cloud account on this page and get an API key from your dashboard.

You can have multiple different Venafi Issuer types installed within the same cluster, including mixtures of Cloud and TPP issuer types. This allows you to be flexible with the types of Venafi account you use.

Automated certificate renewal and management are provided for Certificates using the Venafi Issuer.

Creating an Issuer resource

A single Venafi Issuer represents a single ‘zone’ within the Venafi API, therefore you must create an Issuer resource for each Venafi Zone you want to obtain certificates from.

You can configure your Issuer resource to either issue certificates only within a single namespace, or cluster-wide (using a ClusterIssuer resource). For more information on the distinction between Issuer and ClusterIssuer resources, read the Namespaces section.

Creating a Venafi Cloud Issuer

In order to set up a Venafi Cloud Issuer, you must first create a Kubernetes Secret resource containing your Venafi Cloud API credentials:

$ kubectl create secret generic \
       cloud-secret \
       --namespace='NAMESPACE OF YOUR ISSUER RESOURCE' \
       --from-literal=apikey='YOUR_CLOUD_API_KEY_HERE'

Note: If you are configuring your issuer as a ClusterIssuer resource in order to serve Certificates across your whole cluster, you must set the --namespace parameter to cert-manager, which is the default Cluster Resource Namespace. The Cluster Resource Namespace can be configured through the --cluster-resource-namespace flag on the cert-manager controller component.

This API key will be used by cert-manager to interact with the Venafi Cloud service on your behalf.

Once the API key Secret has been created, you can create your Issuer or ClusterIssuer resource. If you are creating a ClusterIssuer resource, you must change the kind field to ClusterIssuer and remove the metadata.namespace field.

Save the below content after making your amendments to a file named venafi-cloud-issuer.yaml.

apiVersion: cert-manager.io/v1alpha2
kind: Issuer
metadata:
  name: cloud-venafi-issuer
  namespace: <NAMESPACE YOU WANT TO ISSUE CERTIFICATES IN>
spec:
  venafi:
    zone: "DevOps" # Set this to the Venafi policy zone you want to use
    cloud:
      apiTokenSecretRef:
        name: cloud-secret
        key: apikey

You can then create the Issuer using kubectl create.

$ kubectl create -f venafi-cloud-issuer.yaml

Verify the Issuer has been initialized correctly using kubectl describe.

$ kubectl get issuer cloud-venafi-issuer --namespace='NAMESPACE OF YOUR ISSUER RESOURCE' -o wide
NAME           READY   STATUS                 AGE
venafi-issuer  True    Venafi issuer started  2m

You are now ready to issue certificates using the newly provisioned Venafi Issuer.

Read the Issuing Certificates document for more information on how to create Certificate resources.

Creating a Venafi Trust Protection Platform Issuer

The Venafi Trust Protection integration allows you to obtain certificates from a properly configured Venafi TPP instance.

The setup is similar to the Venafi Cloud configuration above, however some of the connection parameters are slightly different.

Note: You must allow “User Provided CSRs” as part of your TPP policy, as this is the only type supported by cert-manager at this time.

In order to set up a Venafi Trust Protection Platform Issuer, you must first create a Kubernetes Secret resource containing your Venafi TPP API credentials:

$ kubectl create secret generic \
       tpp-secret \
       --namespace=<NAMESPACE OF YOUR ISSUER RESOURCE> \
       --from-literal=username='YOUR_TPP_USERNAME_HERE' \
       --from-literal=password='YOUR_TPP_PASSWORD_HERE'

Note: If you are configuring your issuer as a ClusterIssuer resource in order to issue Certificates across your whole cluster, you must set the --namespace parameter to cert-manager, which is the default Cluster Resource Namespace. The Cluster Resource Namespace can be configured through the --cluster-resource-namespace flag on the cert-manager controller component.

These credentials will be used by cert-manager to interact with your Venafi TPP instance. Username attribute must be adhere to the <identity provider>:<username> format. For example: local:admin.

Once the Secret containing credentials has been created, you can create your Issuer or ClusterIssuer resource. If you are creating a ClusterIssuer resource, you must change the kind field to ClusterIssuer and remove the metadata.namespace field.

Save the below content after making your amendments to a file named venafi-tpp-issuer.yaml.

apiVersion: cert-manager.io/v1alpha2
kind: Issuer
metadata:
  name: tpp-venafi-issuer
  namespace: <NAMESPACE YOU WANT TO ISSUE CERTIFICATES IN>
spec:
  venafi:
    zone: devops\cert-manager # Set this to the Venafi policy zone you want to use
    tpp:
      url: https://tpp.venafi.example/vedsdk # Change this to the URL of your TPP instance
      caBundle: <base64 encoded string of caBundle PEM file, or empty to use system root CAs>
      credentialsRef:
        name: tpp-secret

You can then create the Issuer using kubectl create -f.

$ kubectl create -f venafi-tpp-issuer.yaml

Verify the Issuer has been initialized correctly using kubectl describe.

$ kubectl describe issuer tpp-venafi-issuer --namespace='NAMESPACE OF YOUR ISSUER RESOURCE'

You are now ready to issue certificates using the newly provisioned Venafi Issuer.

Read the Issuing Certificates document for more information on how to create Certificate resources.

Issuer specific annotations

Custom Fields

Starting v0.14 you can pass custom fields to Venafi (TPP version v19.2 and higher) using the venafi.cert-manager.io/custom-fields annotation on Certificate resources. The value is a JSON encoded array of custom field objects having a name and value key. For example:

apiVersion: cert-manager.io/v1alpha2
kind: Certificate
metadata:
  name: example-com-certificate
  annotations:
    venafi.cert-manager.io/custom-fields: |-
      [
        {"name": "field-name", "value": "vield value"},
        {"name": "field-name-2", "value": "vield value 2"}
      ]
...
Last modified January 1, 0001