Black lives matter.
We stand in solidarity with the Black community.
Racism is unacceptable.
It conflicts with the core values of the Kubernetes project and our community does not tolerate it.
We stand in solidarity with the Black community.
Racism is unacceptable.
It conflicts with the core values of the Kubernetes project and our community does not tolerate it.
This page shows how to enable and configure certificate rotation for the kubelet.
Kubernetes v1.8 [beta]
The kubelet uses certificates for authenticating to the Kubernetes API. By default, these certificates are issued with one year expiration so that they do not need to be renewed too frequently.
Kubernetes 1.8 contains kubelet certificate rotation, a beta feature that will automatically generate a new key and request a new certificate from the Kubernetes API as the current certificate approaches expiration. Once the new certificate is available, it will be used for authenticating connections to the Kubernetes API.
The kubelet
process accepts an argument --rotate-certificates
that controls
if the kubelet will automatically request a new certificate as the expiration of
the certificate currently in use approaches. Since certificate rotation is a
beta feature, the feature flag must also be enabled with
--feature-gates=RotateKubeletClientCertificate=true
.
The kube-controller-manager
process accepts an argument
--experimental-cluster-signing-duration
that controls how long certificates
will be issued for.
When a kubelet starts up, if it is configured to bootstrap (using the
--bootstrap-kubeconfig
flag), it will use its initial certificate to connect
to the Kubernetes API and issue a certificate signing request. You can view the
status of certificate signing requests using:
kubectl get csr
Initially a certificate signing request from the kubelet on a node will have a
status of Pending
. If the certificate signing requests meets specific
criteria, it will be auto approved by the controller manager, then it will have
a status of Approved
. Next, the controller manager will sign a certificate,
issued for the duration specified by the
--experimental-cluster-signing-duration
parameter, and the signed certificate
will be attached to the certificate signing requests.
The kubelet will retrieve the signed certificate from the Kubernetes API and
write that to disk, in the location specified by --cert-dir
. Then the kubelet
will use the new certificate to connect to the Kubernetes API.
As the expiration of the signed certificate approaches, the kubelet will automatically issue a new certificate signing request, using the Kubernetes API. Again, the controller manager will automatically approve the certificate request and attach a signed certificate to the certificate signing request. The kubelet will retrieve the new signed certificate from the Kubernetes API and write that to disk. Then it will update the connections it has to the Kubernetes API to reconnect using the new certificate.