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ACMEDNS

apiVersion: cert-manager.io/v1
kind: Issuer
metadata:
name: example-issuer
spec:
acme:
solvers:
- dns01:
acmeDNS:
host: https://acme.example.com
accountSecretRef:
name: acme-dns
key: acmedns.json

In general, clients to ACMEDNS perform registration on the users behalf and inform them of the CNAME entries they must create. This is not possible in cert-manager, it is a non-interactive system. Registration must be carried out beforehand and the resulting credentials JSON uploaded to the cluster as a Secret. In this example, we use curl and the API endpoints directly. Information about setting up and configuring ACMEDNS is available on the ACMEDNS project page.

  1. First, register with the ACMEDNS server, in this example, there is one running at auth.example.com. The command:

    curl -X POST http://auth.example.com/register

    will return a JSON with credentials for your registration:

    {
    "username": "eabcdb41-d89f-4580-826f-3e62e9755ef2",
    "password": "pbAXVjlIOE01xbut7YnAbkhMQIkcwoHO0ek2j4Q0",
    "fulldomain": "d420c923-bbd7-4056-ab64-c3ca54c9b3cf.auth.example.com",
    "subdomain": "d420c923-bbd7-4056-ab64-c3ca54c9b3cf",
    "allowfrom": []
    }

    It is strongly recommended to restrict the update endpoint to the IP range of your pods. This is done at registration time as follows:

    curl -X POST http://auth.example.com/register \
    -H "Content-Type: application/json" \
    --data '{"allowfrom": ["10.244.0.0/16"]}'

    Make sure to update the allowfrom field to match your cluster configuration. The JSON will now look like:

    {
    "username": "eabcdb41-d89f-4580-826f-3e62e9755ef2",
    "password": "pbAXVjlIOE01xbut7YnAbkhMQIkcwoHO0ek2j4Q0",
    "fulldomain": "d420c923-bbd7-4056-ab64-c3ca54c9b3cf.auth.example.com",
    "subdomain": "d420c923-bbd7-4056-ab64-c3ca54c9b3cf",
    "allowfrom": ["10.244.0.0/16"]
    }
  2. Save this JSON to a file with the key as your domain. You can specify multiple domains with the same credentials if you like. In our example, the returned credentials can be used to verify ownership of example.com and and example.org.

    {
    "example.com": {
    "username": "eabcdb41-d89f-4580-826f-3e62e9755ef2",
    "password": "pbAXVjlIOE01xbut7YnAbkhMQIkcwoHO0ek2j4Q0",
    "fulldomain": "d420c923-bbd7-4056-ab64-c3ca54c9b3cf.auth.example.com",
    "subdomain": "d420c923-bbd7-4056-ab64-c3ca54c9b3cf",
    "allowfrom": ["10.244.0.0/16"]
    },
    "example.org": {
    "username": "eabcdb41-d89f-4580-826f-3e62e9755ef2",
    "password": "pbAXVjlIOE01xbut7YnAbkhMQIkcwoHO0ek2j4Q0",
    "fulldomain": "d420c923-bbd7-4056-ab64-c3ca54c9b3cf.auth.example.com",
    "subdomain": "d420c923-bbd7-4056-ab64-c3ca54c9b3cf",
    "allowfrom": ["10.244.0.0/16"]
    }
    }
  3. Next, update your primary DNS server with the CNAME record that will tell the verifier how to locate the challenge TXT record. This is obtained from the fulldomain field in the registration:

    _acme-challenge.example.com CNAME d420c923-bbd7-4056-ab64-c3ca54c9b3cf.auth.example.com
    _acme-challenge.example.org CNAME d420c923-bbd7-4056-ab64-c3ca54c9b3cf.auth.example.com

    The "name" of the record always has the _acme-challenge subdomain, and the "value" of the record matches exactly the fulldomain field from registration.

    At verification time, the domain name d420c923-bbd7-4056-ab64-c3ca54c9b3cf.auth.example.com will be a TXT record that is set to your validation token. When the verifier queries _acme-challenge.example.com, it will be directed to the correct location by this CNAME record. This proves that you control example.com

  4. Create a secret from the credentials JSON that was saved in step 2, this secret is referenced in the accountSecretRef field of your DNS01 issuer settings. When creating an Issuer both this Issuer and Secret must be in the same namespace. However for a ClusterIssuer (which does not have a namespace) the Secret must be placed in the same namespace as where the cert-manager pod is running in (in the default setup cert-manager).

    kubectl create secret generic acme-dns --from-file acmedns.json

Limitation of the acme-dns server

The acme-dns server has a known limitation: when a set of credentials is used with more than 2 domains, cert-manager will fail solving the DNS01 challenges.

Imagining that you have configured the ACMEDNS issuer with a single set of credentials, and that the "subdomain" of this set of credentials is d420c923-bbd7-4056-ab64-c3ca54c9b3cf:

kind: Secret
metadata:
name: auth-example-com
stringData:
acmedns.json: |
{
"example.com": {
"username": "eabcdb41-d89f-4580-826f-3e62e9755ef2",
"password": "pbAXVjlIOE01xbut7YnAbkhMQIkcwoHO0ek2j4Q0",
"fulldomain": "d420c923-bbd7-4056-ab64-c3ca54c9b3cf.auth.example.com",
"subdomain": "d420c923-bbd7-4056-ab64-c3ca54c9b3cf",
"allowfrom": ["10.244.0.0/16"]
},
}
---
apiVersion: cert-manager.io/v1
kind: Issuer
metadata:
name: my-acme-dns
spec:
acme:
solvers:
- dns01:
acmeDNS:
accountSecretRef:
name: auth-example-com
key: acmedns.json
host: auth.example.com

and imagine that you want to create a Certificate with three subdomains:

kind: Certificate
spec:
issuerRef:
name: issuer-1
dnsNames:
- "example.com"
- "*.example.com"
- "foo.example.com"

cert-manager will only be able to solve 2 challenges out of 3 in a non deterministic way. This limitation comes from a "feature" mentioned this acme-dns issue.

One workaround is to issue one set of acme-dns credentials for each domain that we want to be challenged, keeping in mind that each acme-dns "subdomain" can only accept at most 2 challenged domains. For example, the above secret would become:

kind: Secret
metadata:
name: auth-example-com
stringData:
acmedns.json: |
{
"example.com": {
"username": "eabcdb41-d89f-4580-826f-3e62e9755ef2",
"password": "pbAXVjlIOE01xbut7YnAbkhMQIkcwoHO0ek2j4Q0",
"fulldomain": "d420c923-bbd7-4056-ab64-c3ca54c9b3cf.auth.example.com",
"subdomain": "d420c923-bbd7-4056-ab64-c3ca54c9b3cf",
"allowfrom": ["10.244.0.0/16"]
},
"foo.example.com": {
"username": "eabcdb41-d89f-4580-826f-3e62e9755ef2",
"password": "pbAXVjlIOE01xbut7YnAbkhMQIkcwoHO0ek2j4Q0",
"fulldomain": "d420c923-bbd7-4056-ab64-c3ca54c9b3cf.auth.example.com",
"subdomain": "d420c923-bbd7-4056-ab64-c3ca54c9b3cf",
"allowfrom": ["10.244.0.0/16"]
}

With this setup, we have:

  • example.com and *.example.com are registered in the acme-dns "subdomain" d420c923-bbd7-4056-ab64-c3ca54c9b3cf.
  • foo.example.com is registered in the acme-dns "subdomain" d420c923-bbd7-4056-ab64-c3ca54c9b3cf.

Another workaround is to use --max-concurrent-challenges 2 when running the cert-manager-controller. With this setting, acme-dns will only have 2 TXT records in its database at any time, which mitigates the issue.