Chapter 10. Configuring Custom Certificates
10.1. Overview
Administrators can configure custom serving certificates for the public host names of the OpenShift Container Platform API and web console. This can be done during an advanced installation or configured after installation.
10.2. Configuring Custom Certificates with Ansible
During advanced installations, custom certificates can be configured using the openshift_master_named_certificates
and openshift_master_overwrite_named_certificates
parameters, which are configurable in the inventory file. More details are available about configuring custom certificates with Ansible.
Example Custom Certificate Configuration with Ansible
# Configure custom named certificates # NOTE: openshift_master_named_certificates is cached on masters and is an # additive fact, meaning that each run with a different set of certificates # will add the newly provided certificates to the cached set of certificates. # # An optional CA may be specified for each named certificate. CAs will # be added to the OpenShift CA bundle which allows for the named # certificate to be served for internal cluster communication. # # If you would like openshift_master_named_certificates to be overwritten with # the provided value, specify openshift_master_overwrite_named_certificates. openshift_master_overwrite_named_certificates=true # # Provide local certificate paths which will be deployed to masters openshift_master_named_certificates=[{"certfile": "/path/on/host/to/custom1.crt", "keyfile": "/path/on/host/to/custom1.key", "cafile": "/path/on/host/to/custom-ca1.crt"}] # # Detected names may be overridden by specifying the "names" key #openshift_master_named_certificates=[{"certfile": "/path/on/host/to/custom1.crt", "keyfile": "/path/on/host/to/custom1.key", "names": ["public-master-host.com"], "cafile": "/path/on/host/to/custom-ca1.crt"}]
10.3. Configuring Custom Certificates
In the master configuration file you can list the namedCertificates
section in the assetConfig.servingInfo
section so the custom certificate serves up for the web console, and in the servingInfo
section so the custom certificate serves up for the CLI and other API calls. Multiple certificates can be configured this way and each certificate may be associated with multiple host names or wildcards.
A default certificate must be configured in the servingInfo.certFile
and servingInfo.keyFile
configuration sections in addition to namedCertificates
.
The namedCertificates
section should only be configured for the host name associated with the masterPublicURL
, assetConfig.publicURL
, and oauthConfig.assetPublicURL
settings. Using a custom serving certificate for the host name associated with the masterURL
will result in TLS errors as infrastructure components will attempt to contact the master API using the internal masterURL
host.
Custom Certificates Configuration
servingInfo: logoutURL: "" masterPublicURL: https://openshift.example.com:8443 publicURL: https://openshift.example.com:8443/console/ bindAddress: 0.0.0.0:8443 bindNetwork: tcp4 certFile: master.server.crt 1 clientCA: "" keyFile: master.server.key 2 maxRequestsInFlight: 0 requestTimeoutSeconds: 0 namedCertificates: - certFile: wildcard.example.com.crt 3 keyFile: wildcard.example.com.key 4 names: - "openshift.example.com" metricsPublicURL: "https://metrics.os.example.com/hawkular/metrics"
Relative paths are resolved relative to the master configuration file. Restart the server to pick up the configuration changes.
For the master API or web console, wildcard names are accepted.
10.4. Configuring a Custom Certificate for a Load Balancer
If your OpenShift Container Platform cluster uses the default load balancer or an enterprise-level load balancer, you can use custom certificates to make the web console and API available externally using a publicly-signed custom certificate. leaving the existing internal certificates for the internal endpoints.
To configure OpenShift Container Platform to use custom certificates in this way:
Edit the
servingInfo
section of the master configuration file:servingInfo: logoutURL: "" masterPublicURL: https://openshift.example.com:8443 publicURL: https://openshift.example.com:8443/console/ bindAddress: 0.0.0.0:8443 bindNetwork: tcp4 certFile: master.server.crt clientCA: "" keyFile: master.server.key maxRequestsInFlight: 0 requestTimeoutSeconds: 0 namedCertificates: - certFile: wildcard.example.com.crt 1 keyFile: wildcard.example.com.key 2 names: - "openshift.example.com" metricsPublicURL: "https://metrics.os.example.com/hawkular/metrics"
NoteConfigure the
namedCertificates
section for only the host name associated with themasterPublicURL
andoauthConfig.assetPublicURL
settings. Using a custom serving certificate for the host name associated with themasterURL
causes in TLS errors as infrastructure components attempt to contact the master API using the internal masterURL host.Specify the
openshift_master_cluster_public_hostname
andopenshift_master_cluster_hostname
paramaters in the Ansible inventory file, by default /etc/ansible/hosts. These values must be different. If they are the same, the named certificates will fail.# Native HA with External LB VIPs openshift_master_cluster_hostname=paas.example.com 1 openshift_master_cluster_public_hostname=public.paas.example.com 2
For information specific to your load balancer environment, refer to the OpenShift Container Platform Reference Architecture for your provider and Custom Certificate SSL Termination (Production).