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Issue Let’s Encrypt certificate using Google Cloud DNS

This tutorial shows how to issue free SSL certificate from Let’s Encrypt via DNS challenge for domains using Google Cloud DNS service.

This article has been tested with a GKE cluster.

$ kubectl version --short
Client Version: v1.8.8
Server Version: v1.8.8-gke.0

1. Setup Issuer/ClusterIssuer

Now create a service account from your Google Cloud Console

svcac1 svcac2 svcac3

Then create a Kubernetes Secret with this Service Account:

kubectl create secret generic clouddns-service-account --from-file=service-account.json=<path-to-json-file>

Now create this issuer by applying issuer.yaml

apiVersion: certmanager.k8s.io/v1alpha1
kind: Issuer
metadata:
  name: letsencrypt-staging-dns
  namespace: default
spec:
  acme:
    server: https://acme-staging-v02.api.letsencrypt.org/directory
    email: [email protected]
    # Name of a secret used to store the ACME account private key
    privateKeySecretRef:
      name: example-issuer-account-key
    solvers:
      - dns01:
          clouddns:
            # A secretKeyRef to a google cloud json service account
            serviceAccountSecretRef:
              name: clouddns-service-account
              key: service-account.json
            # The project in which to update the DNS zone
            project: test-cert

2. Create Ingress

We are going to use a nginx server as the backend. To deploy nginx server, run the following commands:

kubectl run nginx --image=nginx
kubectl expose deployment nginx --name=web --port=80 --target-port=80

Now, Create ingress.yaml

apiVersion: extensions/v1beta1
kind: Ingress
metadata:
  name: test-ingress-deploy-k8s-dns
  namespace: default
  annotations:
    kubernetes.io/ingress.class: voyager
    certmanager.k8s.io/issuer: "letsencrypt-staging-dns"
    certmanager.k8s.io/acme-challenge-type: dns01
spec:
  tls:
    - hosts:
        - kiteci-dns.appscode.ninja
      secretName: kiteci-dns-tls
  rules:
    - host: kiteci-dns.appscode.ninja
      http:
        paths:
          - backend:
              serviceName: web
              servicePort: 80
            path: /

Then take the EXTERNAL-IP from the corresponding service:

kubectl get svc
NAME                                          TYPE           CLUSTER-IP     EXTERNAL-IP       PORT(S)                      AGE
voyager-test-ingress-deploy-k8s-route53-dns   LoadBalancer   10.7.248.189   35.225.111.106    443:30713/TCP,80:31137/TCP   21m

Create an A-record for kiteci-dns.appscode.ninja mapped to 35.225.111.106 with Google DNS.

Wait until you can see it resolved:

dig +short kiteci-dns.appscode.ninja

3. Create Certificate

Then create this certificate.yaml

apiVersion: certmanager.k8s.io/v1alpha1
kind: Certificate
metadata:
  name: kiteci-dns
  namespace: default
spec:
  secretName: kiteci-dns-tls
  issuerRef:
    name: letsencrypt-staging-dns
  dnsNames:
    - kiteci-dns.appscode.ninja

Now, List the certificates and describe that certificate and wait until you see Certificate issued successfully when you describe the certificate.

kubectl get certificates.certmanager.k8s.io --all-namespaces

Then visit kiteci-dns.appscode.ninja from browser and check the certificate that it was issued from let’s encrypt. (For let’s encrypt staging environment, you will see that the certificate was issued by Fake LE Intermediate X1.)