Easyrsa charm
This charm delivers the EasyRSA application to act as a Certificate Authority (CA) and create certificates for related charms.
Deployment
To deploy EasyRSA:
juju deploy cs:~containers/easyrsa
Using the EasyRSA charm
The EasyRSA charm will become a Certificate Authority (CA) and generate a CA
certificate. Other charms need only to relate to EasyRSA with a requires
using the tls-certificates
interface.
To get a server certificate from EasyRSA, a charm must include the
interface:tls-certificates
interface in its layer.yaml
file. The charm must
also require the tls
interface, in its metadata.yaml
. The relation name may
be named what ever you wish. Assume the relation is named "certificates" for
these examples.
CA
The interface will generate a CA certificate immediately. If another charm
requires a CA certificate the code must react to the flag
certificates.ca.available
. The relationship object has a method named
get_ca
which returns the CA certificate.
@when('certificates.ca.available')
def store_ca(tls):
'''Read the certificate authority from the relation object and install it
on this system.'''
# Get the CA from the relationship object.
ca_cert = tls.get_ca()
write_file('/usr/local/share/ca-certificates/easyrsa.crt', ca_cert)
Client certificate and key
The EasyRSA charm generates a client certificate after the CA certificate is
created. If another charm needs the CA the code must react to the flag
certificates.client.cert.available
. The relationship object has a method
that returns the client cert and client key called get_client_cert
.
@when('certificates.client.cert.available')
def store_client(tls):
'''Read the client certificate from the relation object and install it on
this system.'''
client_cert, client_key = tls.get_client_cert()
write_file('/home/ubuntu/client.crt', client_cert)
write_file('/home/ubuntu/client.key', client_key)
Request a server certificate
The interface will set certificates.available
flag on a relation. The
reactive code should send three values on the relation to request a
certificate. Call the request_server_cert
method on the relationship object.
The three values are: Common Name (CN), a list of Subject Alt Names (SANs), and
the file name of the certificate (the unit name with the '/' replaced with an
underscore). For example a client charm would send:
@when('certificates.available')
def send_data(tls):
# Use the public ip of this unit as the Common Name for the certificate.
common_name = hookenv.unit_public_ip()
# Get a list of Subject Alt Names for the certificate.
sans = []
sans.append(hookenv.unit_public_ip())
sans.append(hookenv.unit_private_ip())
sans.append(socket.gethostname())
# Create a path safe name by removing path characters from the unit name.
certificate_name = hookenv.local_unit().replace('/', '_')
# Send the information on the relation object.
tls.request_server_cert(common_name, sans, certificate_name)
Server certificate and key
The Easy-RSA charm generates the server certificate and key after the request
have been made. If another charm needs the server certificate the code must
react to the flag {relation_name}.server.cert.available
. The relationship
object has a method that returns the server cert and server key called
get_server_cert
.
@when('certificates.server.cert.available')
def store_server(tls):
'''Read the server certificate from the relation object and install it on
this system.'''
server_cert, server_key = tls.get_server_cert()
write_file('/home/ubuntu/server.cert', server_cert)
write_file('/home/ubuntu/server.key', server_key)
Backup/Restore the PKI
This charm includes actions which support creating and managing snapshots of the Easy-RSA PKI. Their usage is explained in the following sections:
Create backups
Use the charm's backup
action to capture current snapshot of the Easy-RSA PKI.
This will generate a file in the directory /home/ubuntu/easyrsa_backup
on the
relevant unit. The backup file follows the naming convention:
easyrsa-YYYY-MM-DD_HH-MM-SS.tar.gz
.
For example:
juju run-action --wait easyrsa/0 backup
For convenience, the output of the backup
action will output the exact
juju scp
command to download the created file to your local machine.
List backups
To list all the available backup files stored on the unit, run the following:
juju run-action --wait easyrsa/0 list-backups
This will output a list of filenames. These filenames are relative to the
unit's /home/ubuntu/easyrsa_backup/
directory.
The names can be used either directly as a parameters for the
restore
and delete-backup
actions or as part of a juju scp
command to
download the backup files. For example, to download a backup named
easyrsa-2020-12-10_16-37-54.tar.gz
, the corresponding juju scp
command
would be:
juju scp easyrsa/0:/home/ubuntu/easyrsa_backup/easyrsa-2020-12-10_16-37-54.tar.gz .
Delete backups
To delete a backup file stored on the unit, simply run action delete-backup
with parameter name=<backup_name>
. List of all available backups can be
obtained by running action list-backups
. To remove all the backups from the
unit, you can specify parameter all=true
.
Removing a single backup:
juju run-action --wait easyrsa/0 delete-backup name=easyrsa-2020-12-10_16-37-54.tar.gz
Removing all backups:
juju run-action --wait easyrsa/0 delete-backup all=true
Restore backups
To restore a backup, run the restore
action. This action takes one
parameter, name
, which specifies the backup file to be restored. This file
must exist on the easyrsa unit for the action to succeed. A list of the
available backups can be obtained by running the list-backups
action.
For example:
juju run-action --wait easyrsa/0 restore name=easyrsa-2020-06-10_16-37-54.tar.gz
In the case where the backup file is available locally, it can be copied to
the relevant unit before running the restore action by using the juju scp
command. For example:
juju scp easyrsa-2020-12-10_16-37-54.tar.gz easyrsa/0:/home/ubuntu/easyrsa_backup/
In the case where units have been added to the Juju model since the backup was created, Easy-RSA will issue new certificates to these units.
Actions
This section covers Juju actions supported by the charm.
Actions allow specific operations to be performed on a per-unit basis. To
display action descriptions you can run juju actions easyrsa
, inspect
the charm's actions.yaml
file or consult the table below: