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kubectl apply

Learn how to install cert-manager using kubectl and static manifests.

Prerequisites

Steps

1. Install from the cert-manager release manifest

All resources (the CustomResourceDefinitions and the cert-manager, cainjector and webhook components) are included in a single YAML manifest file:

Install all cert-manager components:

kubectl apply -f https://github.com/cert-manager/cert-manager/releases/download/v1.14.4/cert-manager.yaml

By default, cert-manager will be installed into the cert-manager namespace. It is possible to run cert-manager in a different namespace, although you'll need to make modifications to the deployment manifests.

Once you've installed cert-manager, you can verify it is deployed correctly by checking the cert-manager namespace for running pods:

$ kubectl get pods --namespace cert-manager
NAME READY STATUS RESTARTS AGE
cert-manager-5c6866597-zw7kh 1/1 Running 0 2m
cert-manager-cainjector-577f6d9fd7-tr77l 1/1 Running 0 2m
cert-manager-webhook-787858fcdb-nlzsq 1/1 Running 0 2m

You should see the cert-manager, cert-manager-cainjector, and cert-manager-webhook pods in a Running state. The webhook might take a little longer to successfully provision than the others.

If you experience problems, first check the FAQ.

2. (optional) Wait for cert-manager webhook to be ready

The webhook component can take some time to start, and make the Kubernetes API server trust the webhook's certificate.

First, make sure that cmctl is installed.

cmctl performs a dry-run certificate creation check against the Kubernetes cluster. If successful, the message The cert-manager API is ready is displayed.

$ cmctl check api
The cert-manager API is ready

The command can also be used to wait for the check to be successful. Here is an output example of running the command at the same time that cert-manager is being installed:

$ cmctl check api --wait=2m
Not ready: the cert-manager CRDs are not yet installed on the Kubernetes API server
Not ready: the cert-manager CRDs are not yet installed on the Kubernetes API server
Not ready: the cert-manager webhook deployment is not ready yet
Not ready: the cert-manager webhook deployment is not ready yet
Not ready: the cert-manager webhook deployment is not ready yet
Not ready: the cert-manager webhook deployment is not ready yet
The cert-manager API is ready

2. (optional) End-to-end verify the installation

Best way to fully verify the installation is to issue a test certificate. For this, we will create a self-signed issuer and a certificate resource in a test namespace.

$ cat <<EOF > test-resources.yaml
apiVersion: v1
kind: Namespace
metadata:
name: cert-manager-test
---
apiVersion: cert-manager.io/v1
kind: Issuer
metadata:
name: test-selfsigned
namespace: cert-manager-test
spec:
selfSigned: {}
---
apiVersion: cert-manager.io/v1
kind: Certificate
metadata:
name: selfsigned-cert
namespace: cert-manager-test
spec:
dnsNames:
- example.com
secretName: selfsigned-cert-tls
issuerRef:
name: test-selfsigned
EOF

Create the test resources.

$ kubectl apply -f test-resources.yaml

Check the status of the newly created certificate. You may need to wait a few seconds before cert-manager processes the certificate request.

$ kubectl describe certificate -n cert-manager-test
...
Spec:
Common Name: example.com
Issuer Ref:
Name: test-selfsigned
Secret Name: selfsigned-cert-tls
Status:
Conditions:
Last Transition Time: 2019-01-29T17:34:30Z
Message: Certificate is up to date and has not expired
Reason: Ready
Status: True
Type: Ready
Not After: 2019-04-29T17:34:29Z
Events:
Type Reason Age From Message
---- ------ ---- ---- -------
Normal CertIssued 4s cert-manager Certificate issued successfully

Clean up the test resources.

$ kubectl delete -f test-resources.yaml

If all the above steps have completed without error, you're good to go!

Uninstalling

Warning: To uninstall cert-manager you should always use the same process for installing but in reverse. Deviating from the following process whether cert-manager has been installed from static manifests or Helm can cause issues and potentially broken states. Please ensure you follow the below steps when uninstalling to prevent this happening.

Before continuing, ensure that unwanted cert-manager resources that have been created by users have been deleted. You can check for any existing resources with the following command:

kubectl get Issuers,ClusterIssuers,Certificates,CertificateRequests,Orders,Challenges --all-namespaces

It is recommended that you delete all these resources before uninstalling cert-manager. If you plan on reinstalling later and don't want to lose some custom resources, you can keep them. However, this can potentially lead to problems with finalizers. Some resources, like Challenges, should be deleted to avoid getting stuck in a pending state.

Once the unneeded resources have been deleted, you are ready to uninstall cert-manager using the procedure determined by how you installed.

Warning: Uninstalling cert-manager or simply deleting a Certificate resource can result in TLS Secrets being deleted if they have metadata.ownerReferences set by cert-manager. You can control whether owner references are added to Secrets using the --enable-certificate-owner-ref controller flag. By default, this flag is set to false, which means that no owner references are added. However, in cert-manager v1.8 and older, changing the flag's value from true to false did not result in existing owner references being removed. This behavior was fixed in cert-manager v1.8. Do check the owner references to confirm that they actually are removed.

Uninstalling with regular manifests

Uninstalling from an installation with regular manifests is a case of running the installation process, in reverse, using the delete command of kubectl.

Delete the installation manifests using a link to your currently running version vX.Y.Z like so:

Warning: This command will also remove installed cert-manager CRDs. All cert-manager resources (e.g. certificates.cert-manager.io resources) will be removed by Kubernetes' garbage collector. You cannot keep any custom resources if you delete the CustomResourceDefinitions. If you want to keep resources, you should manage CustomResourceDefinitions separately.

kubectl delete -f https://github.com/cert-manager/cert-manager/releases/download/vX.Y.Z/cert-manager.yaml

Namespace Stuck in Terminating State

If the namespace has been marked for deletion without deleting the cert-manager installation first, the namespace may become stuck in a terminating state. This is typically due to the fact that the APIService resource still exists however the webhook is no longer running so is no longer reachable. To resolve this, ensure you have run the above commands correctly, and if you're still experiencing issues then run:

kubectl delete apiservice v1beta1.webhook.cert-manager.io

Deleting pending challenges

Challenges can get stuck in a pending state when the finalizer is unable to complete and Kubernetes is waiting for the cert-manager controller to finish. This happens when the controller is no longer running to remove the flag, and the resources are defined as needing to wait. You can fix this problem by doing what the controller does manually.

First, delete existing cert-manager webhook configurations, if any:

kubectl delete mutatingwebhookconfigurations cert-manager-webhook
kubectl delete validatingwebhookconfigurations cert-manager-webhook

Then change the .metadata.finalizers field to an empty list by editing the challenge resource:

kubectl edit challenge <the-challenge>