- kubeadm certs
- kubeadm certs
- kubeadm certs renew
- Synopsis
- Options
- Options inherited from parent commands
- Synopsis
- Options
- Options inherited from parent commands
- Synopsis
- Options
- Options inherited from parent commands
- Synopsis
- Options
- Options inherited from parent commands
- Synopsis
- Options
- Options inherited from parent commands
- Synopsis
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- Options inherited from parent commands
- Synopsis
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- Options inherited from parent commands
- Synopsis
- Options
- Options inherited from parent commands
- Synopsis
- Options
- Options inherited from parent commands
- Synopsis
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- Options inherited from parent commands
- Synopsis
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- Options inherited from parent commands
- Synopsis
- Options
- Options inherited from parent commands
- kubeadm certs certificate-key
- kubeadm certs check-expiration
- kubeadm certs generate-csr
- What’s next
kubeadm certs
kubeadm certs
provides utilities for managing certificates. For more details on how these commands can be used, see Certificate Management with kubeadm.
kubeadm certs
A collection of operations for operating Kubernetes certificates.
Commands related to handling kubernetes certificates
Synopsis
Commands related to handling kubernetes certificates
Options
-h, —help | |
help for certs |
Options inherited from parent commands
—rootfs string | |
[EXPERIMENTAL] The path to the ‘real’ host root filesystem. |
kubeadm certs renew
You can renew all Kubernetes certificates using the all
subcommand or renew them selectively. For more details see Manual certificate renewal.
- renew
- all
- admin.conf
- apiserver-etcd-client
- apiserver-kubelet-client
- apiserver
- controller-manager.conf
- etcd-healthcheck-client
- etcd-peer
- etcd-server
- front-proxy-client
- scheduler.conf
Renew certificates for a Kubernetes cluster
Synopsis
This command is not meant to be run on its own. See list of available subcommands.
kubeadm certs renew [flags]
Options
-h, —help | |
help for renew |
Options inherited from parent commands
—rootfs string | |
[EXPERIMENTAL] The path to the ‘real’ host root filesystem. |
Renew all available certificates
Synopsis
Renew all known certificates necessary to run the control plane. Renewals are run unconditionally, regardless of expiration date. Renewals can also be run individually for more control.
kubeadm certs renew all [flags]
Options
—cert-dir string Default: “/etc/kubernetes/pki” | |
The path where to save the certificates | |
—config string | |
Path to a kubeadm configuration file. | |
-h, —help | |
help for all | |
—kubeconfig string Default: “/etc/kubernetes/admin.conf” | |
The kubeconfig file to use when talking to the cluster. If the flag is not set, a set of standard locations can be searched for an existing kubeconfig file. |
Options inherited from parent commands
—rootfs string | |
[EXPERIMENTAL] The path to the ‘real’ host root filesystem. |
Renew the certificate embedded in the kubeconfig file for the admin to use and for kubeadm itself
Synopsis
Renew the certificate embedded in the kubeconfig file for the admin to use and for kubeadm itself.
Renewals run unconditionally, regardless of certificate expiration date; extra attributes such as SANs will be based on the existing file/certificates, there is no need to resupply them.
Renewal by default tries to use the certificate authority in the local PKI managed by kubeadm; as alternative it is possible to use K8s certificate API for certificate renewal, or as a last option, to generate a CSR request.
After renewal, in order to make changes effective, is required to restart control-plane components and eventually re-distribute the renewed certificate in case the file is used elsewhere.
kubeadm certs renew admin.conf [flags]
Options
—cert-dir string Default: “/etc/kubernetes/pki” | |
The path where to save the certificates | |
—config string | |
Path to a kubeadm configuration file. | |
-h, —help | |
help for admin.conf | |
—kubeconfig string Default: “/etc/kubernetes/admin.conf” | |
The kubeconfig file to use when talking to the cluster. If the flag is not set, a set of standard locations can be searched for an existing kubeconfig file. |
Options inherited from parent commands
—rootfs string | |
[EXPERIMENTAL] The path to the ‘real’ host root filesystem. |
Renew the certificate the apiserver uses to access etcd
Synopsis
Renew the certificate the apiserver uses to access etcd.
Renewals run unconditionally, regardless of certificate expiration date; extra attributes such as SANs will be based on the existing file/certificates, there is no need to resupply them.
Renewal by default tries to use the certificate authority in the local PKI managed by kubeadm; as alternative it is possible to use K8s certificate API for certificate renewal, or as a last option, to generate a CSR request.
After renewal, in order to make changes effective, is required to restart control-plane components and eventually re-distribute the renewed certificate in case the file is used elsewhere.
kubeadm certs renew apiserver-etcd-client [flags]
Options
—cert-dir string Default: “/etc/kubernetes/pki” | |
The path where to save the certificates | |
—config string | |
Path to a kubeadm configuration file. | |
-h, —help | |
help for apiserver-etcd-client | |
—kubeconfig string Default: “/etc/kubernetes/admin.conf” | |
The kubeconfig file to use when talking to the cluster. If the flag is not set, a set of standard locations can be searched for an existing kubeconfig file. |
Options inherited from parent commands
—rootfs string | |
[EXPERIMENTAL] The path to the ‘real’ host root filesystem. |
Renew the certificate for the API server to connect to kubelet
Synopsis
Renew the certificate for the API server to connect to kubelet.
Renewals run unconditionally, regardless of certificate expiration date; extra attributes such as SANs will be based on the existing file/certificates, there is no need to resupply them.
Renewal by default tries to use the certificate authority in the local PKI managed by kubeadm; as alternative it is possible to use K8s certificate API for certificate renewal, or as a last option, to generate a CSR request.
After renewal, in order to make changes effective, is required to restart control-plane components and eventually re-distribute the renewed certificate in case the file is used elsewhere.
kubeadm certs renew apiserver-kubelet-client [flags]
Options
—cert-dir string Default: “/etc/kubernetes/pki” | |
The path where to save the certificates | |
—config string | |
Path to a kubeadm configuration file. | |
-h, —help | |
help for apiserver-kubelet-client | |
—kubeconfig string Default: “/etc/kubernetes/admin.conf” | |
The kubeconfig file to use when talking to the cluster. If the flag is not set, a set of standard locations can be searched for an existing kubeconfig file. |
Options inherited from parent commands
—rootfs string | |
[EXPERIMENTAL] The path to the ‘real’ host root filesystem. |
Renew the certificate for serving the Kubernetes API
Synopsis
Renew the certificate for serving the Kubernetes API.
Renewals run unconditionally, regardless of certificate expiration date; extra attributes such as SANs will be based on the existing file/certificates, there is no need to resupply them.
Renewal by default tries to use the certificate authority in the local PKI managed by kubeadm; as alternative it is possible to use K8s certificate API for certificate renewal, or as a last option, to generate a CSR request.
After renewal, in order to make changes effective, is required to restart control-plane components and eventually re-distribute the renewed certificate in case the file is used elsewhere.
kubeadm certs renew apiserver [flags]
Options
—cert-dir string Default: “/etc/kubernetes/pki” | |
The path where to save the certificates | |
—config string | |
Path to a kubeadm configuration file. | |
-h, —help | |
help for apiserver | |
—kubeconfig string Default: “/etc/kubernetes/admin.conf” | |
The kubeconfig file to use when talking to the cluster. If the flag is not set, a set of standard locations can be searched for an existing kubeconfig file. |
Options inherited from parent commands
—rootfs string | |
[EXPERIMENTAL] The path to the ‘real’ host root filesystem. |
Renew the certificate embedded in the kubeconfig file for the controller manager to use
Synopsis
Renew the certificate embedded in the kubeconfig file for the controller manager to use.
Renewals run unconditionally, regardless of certificate expiration date; extra attributes such as SANs will be based on the existing file/certificates, there is no need to resupply them.
Renewal by default tries to use the certificate authority in the local PKI managed by kubeadm; as alternative it is possible to use K8s certificate API for certificate renewal, or as a last option, to generate a CSR request.
After renewal, in order to make changes effective, is required to restart control-plane components and eventually re-distribute the renewed certificate in case the file is used elsewhere.
kubeadm certs renew controller-manager.conf [flags]
Options
—cert-dir string Default: “/etc/kubernetes/pki” | |
The path where to save the certificates | |
—config string | |
Path to a kubeadm configuration file. | |
-h, —help | |
help for controller-manager.conf | |
—kubeconfig string Default: “/etc/kubernetes/admin.conf” | |
The kubeconfig file to use when talking to the cluster. If the flag is not set, a set of standard locations can be searched for an existing kubeconfig file. |
Options inherited from parent commands
—rootfs string | |
[EXPERIMENTAL] The path to the ‘real’ host root filesystem. |
Renew the certificate for liveness probes to healthcheck etcd
Synopsis
Renew the certificate for liveness probes to healthcheck etcd.
Renewals run unconditionally, regardless of certificate expiration date; extra attributes such as SANs will be based on the existing file/certificates, there is no need to resupply them.
Renewal by default tries to use the certificate authority in the local PKI managed by kubeadm; as alternative it is possible to use K8s certificate API for certificate renewal, or as a last option, to generate a CSR request.
After renewal, in order to make changes effective, is required to restart control-plane components and eventually re-distribute the renewed certificate in case the file is used elsewhere.
kubeadm certs renew etcd-healthcheck-client [flags]
Options
—cert-dir string Default: “/etc/kubernetes/pki” | |
The path where to save the certificates | |
—config string | |
Path to a kubeadm configuration file. | |
-h, —help | |
help for etcd-healthcheck-client | |
—kubeconfig string Default: “/etc/kubernetes/admin.conf” | |
The kubeconfig file to use when talking to the cluster. If the flag is not set, a set of standard locations can be searched for an existing kubeconfig file. |
Options inherited from parent commands
—rootfs string | |
[EXPERIMENTAL] The path to the ‘real’ host root filesystem. |
Renew the certificate for etcd nodes to communicate with each other
Synopsis
Renew the certificate for etcd nodes to communicate with each other.
Renewals run unconditionally, regardless of certificate expiration date; extra attributes such as SANs will be based on the existing file/certificates, there is no need to resupply them.
Renewal by default tries to use the certificate authority in the local PKI managed by kubeadm; as alternative it is possible to use K8s certificate API for certificate renewal, or as a last option, to generate a CSR request.
After renewal, in order to make changes effective, is required to restart control-plane components and eventually re-distribute the renewed certificate in case the file is used elsewhere.
kubeadm certs renew etcd-peer [flags]
Options
—cert-dir string Default: “/etc/kubernetes/pki” | |
The path where to save the certificates | |
—config string | |
Path to a kubeadm configuration file. | |
-h, —help | |
help for etcd-peer | |
—kubeconfig string Default: “/etc/kubernetes/admin.conf” | |
The kubeconfig file to use when talking to the cluster. If the flag is not set, a set of standard locations can be searched for an existing kubeconfig file. |
Options inherited from parent commands
—rootfs string | |
[EXPERIMENTAL] The path to the ‘real’ host root filesystem. |
Renew the certificate for serving etcd
Synopsis
Renew the certificate for serving etcd.
Renewals run unconditionally, regardless of certificate expiration date; extra attributes such as SANs will be based on the existing file/certificates, there is no need to resupply them.
Renewal by default tries to use the certificate authority in the local PKI managed by kubeadm; as alternative it is possible to use K8s certificate API for certificate renewal, or as a last option, to generate a CSR request.
After renewal, in order to make changes effective, is required to restart control-plane components and eventually re-distribute the renewed certificate in case the file is used elsewhere.
kubeadm certs renew etcd-server [flags]
Options
—cert-dir string Default: “/etc/kubernetes/pki” | |
The path where to save the certificates | |
—config string | |
Path to a kubeadm configuration file. | |
-h, —help | |
help for etcd-server | |
—kubeconfig string Default: “/etc/kubernetes/admin.conf” | |
The kubeconfig file to use when talking to the cluster. If the flag is not set, a set of standard locations can be searched for an existing kubeconfig file. |
Options inherited from parent commands
—rootfs string | |
[EXPERIMENTAL] The path to the ‘real’ host root filesystem. |
Renew the certificate for the front proxy client
Synopsis
Renew the certificate for the front proxy client.
Renewals run unconditionally, regardless of certificate expiration date; extra attributes such as SANs will be based on the existing file/certificates, there is no need to resupply them.
Renewal by default tries to use the certificate authority in the local PKI managed by kubeadm; as alternative it is possible to use K8s certificate API for certificate renewal, or as a last option, to generate a CSR request.
After renewal, in order to make changes effective, is required to restart control-plane components and eventually re-distribute the renewed certificate in case the file is used elsewhere.
kubeadm certs renew front-proxy-client [flags]
Options
—cert-dir string Default: “/etc/kubernetes/pki” | |
The path where to save the certificates | |
—config string | |
Path to a kubeadm configuration file. | |
-h, —help | |
help for front-proxy-client | |
—kubeconfig string Default: “/etc/kubernetes/admin.conf” | |
The kubeconfig file to use when talking to the cluster. If the flag is not set, a set of standard locations can be searched for an existing kubeconfig file. |
Options inherited from parent commands
—rootfs string | |
[EXPERIMENTAL] The path to the ‘real’ host root filesystem. |
Renew the certificate embedded in the kubeconfig file for the scheduler manager to use
Synopsis
Renew the certificate embedded in the kubeconfig file for the scheduler manager to use.
Renewals run unconditionally, regardless of certificate expiration date; extra attributes such as SANs will be based on the existing file/certificates, there is no need to resupply them.
Renewal by default tries to use the certificate authority in the local PKI managed by kubeadm; as alternative it is possible to use K8s certificate API for certificate renewal, or as a last option, to generate a CSR request.
After renewal, in order to make changes effective, is required to restart control-plane components and eventually re-distribute the renewed certificate in case the file is used elsewhere.
kubeadm certs renew scheduler.conf [flags]
Options
—cert-dir string Default: “/etc/kubernetes/pki” | |
The path where to save the certificates | |
—config string | |
Path to a kubeadm configuration file. | |
-h, —help | |
help for scheduler.conf | |
—kubeconfig string Default: “/etc/kubernetes/admin.conf” | |
The kubeconfig file to use when talking to the cluster. If the flag is not set, a set of standard locations can be searched for an existing kubeconfig file. |
Options inherited from parent commands
—rootfs string | |
[EXPERIMENTAL] The path to the ‘real’ host root filesystem. |
kubeadm certs certificate-key
This command can be used to generate a new control-plane certificate key. The key can be passed as --certificate-key
to kubeadm init and kubeadm join to enable the automatic copy of certificates when joining additional control-plane nodes.
Generate certificate keys
Synopsis
This command will print out a secure randomly-generated certificate key that can be used with the “init” command.
You can also use “kubeadm init —upload-certs” without specifying a certificate key and it will generate and print one for you.
kubeadm certs certificate-key [flags]
Options
-h, —help | |
help for certificate-key |
Options inherited from parent commands
—rootfs string | |
[EXPERIMENTAL] The path to the ‘real’ host root filesystem. |
kubeadm certs check-expiration
This command checks expiration for the certificates in the local PKI managed by kubeadm. For more details see Check certificate expiration.
Check certificates expiration for a Kubernetes cluster
Synopsis
Checks expiration for the certificates in the local PKI managed by kubeadm.
kubeadm certs check-expiration [flags]
Options
—cert-dir string Default: “/etc/kubernetes/pki” | |
The path where to save the certificates | |
—config string | |
Path to a kubeadm configuration file. | |
-h, —help | |
help for check-expiration | |
—kubeconfig string Default: “/etc/kubernetes/admin.conf” | |
The kubeconfig file to use when talking to the cluster. If the flag is not set, a set of standard locations can be searched for an existing kubeconfig file. |
Options inherited from parent commands
—rootfs string | |
[EXPERIMENTAL] The path to the ‘real’ host root filesystem. |
kubeadm certs generate-csr
This command can be used to generate keys and CSRs for all control-plane certificates and kubeconfig files. The user can then sign the CSRs with a CA of their choice.
Generate keys and certificate signing requests
Synopsis
Generates keys and certificate signing requests (CSRs) for all the certificates required to run the control plane. This command also generates partial kubeconfig files with private key data in the “users > user > client-key-data” field, and for each kubeconfig file an accompanying “.csr” file is created.
This command is designed for use in Kubeadm External CA Mode. It generates CSRs which you can then submit to your external certificate authority for signing.
The PEM encoded signed certificates should then be saved alongside the key files, using “.crt” as the file extension, or in the case of kubeconfig files, the PEM encoded signed certificate should be base64 encoded and added to the kubeconfig file in the “users > user > client-certificate-data” field.
kubeadm certs generate-csr [flags]
Examples
# The following command will generate keys and CSRs for all control-plane certificates and kubeconfig files:
kubeadm certs generate-csr --kubeconfig-dir /tmp/etc-k8s --cert-dir /tmp/etc-k8s/pki
Options
—cert-dir string | |
The path where to save the certificates | |
—config string | |
Path to a kubeadm configuration file. | |
-h, —help | |
help for generate-csr | |
—kubeconfig-dir string Default: “/etc/kubernetes” | |
The path where to save the kubeconfig file. |
Options inherited from parent commands
—rootfs string | |
[EXPERIMENTAL] The path to the ‘real’ host root filesystem. |
What’s next
- kubeadm init to bootstrap a Kubernetes control-plane node
- kubeadm join to connect a node to the cluster
- kubeadm reset to revert any changes made to this host by
kubeadm init
orkubeadm join