Vault
TLS certificates auth method
Note: This engine can use external X.509 certificates as part of TLS or signature validation. Verifying signatures against X.509 certificates that use SHA-1 is deprecated and is no longer usable without a workaround starting in Vault 1.12. See the deprecation FAQ for more information.
The cert
auth method allows authentication using SSL/TLS client certificates
which are either signed by a CA or self-signed. SSL/TLS client certificates
are defined as having an ExtKeyUsage
extension with the usage set to either
ClientAuth
or Any
.
The trusted certificates and CAs are configured directly to the auth method
using the certs/
path. This method cannot read trusted certificates from an
external source.
CA certificates are associated with a role; role names and CRL names are normalized to lower-case.
Please note that to use this auth method, tls_disable
and tls_disable_client_certs
must be false in the Vault
configuration. This is because the certificates are sent through TLS communication itself.
Revocation checking
Since Vault 0.4, the method supports revocation checking.
An authorized user can submit PEM-formatted CRLs identified by a given name; these can be updated or deleted at will. They may also set the URL of a trusted CRL distribution point, and have Vault fetch the CRL as needed.
When there are CRLs present, at the time of client authentication:
If the client presents any chain where no certificate in the chain matches a revoked serial number, authentication is allowed
If there is no chain presented by the client without a revoked serial number, authentication is denied
This method provides good security while also allowing for flexibility. For instance, if an intermediate CA is going to be retired, a client can be configured with two certificate chains: one that contains the initial intermediate CA in the path, and the other that contains the replacement. When the initial intermediate CA is revoked, the chain containing the replacement will still allow the client to successfully authenticate.
N.B.: Matching is performed by serial number only. For most CAs,
including Vault's pki
method, multiple CRLs can successfully be used as
serial numbers are globally unique. However, since RFCs only specify that
serial numbers must be unique per-CA, some CAs issue serial numbers in-order,
which may cause clashes if attempting to use CRLs from two such CAs in the same
mount of the method. The workaround here is to mount multiple copies of the
cert
method, configure each with one CA/CRL, and have clients connect to the
appropriate mount.
In addition, if a CRL distribution point is not set the method will not fetch the CRLs itself, the CRL's designated time to next update is not considered. If a CRL is no longer in use, it is up to the administrator to remove it from the method.
In addition to automatic or manual CRL management, OCSP may be enabled for a configured certificate, in which case Vault will query the OCSP server either specified in the presented certificate or configured in the auth method to check revocation.
Authentication
Via the CLI
The below authenticates against the web
cert role by presenting a certificate
(cert.pem
) and key (key.pem
) signed by the CA associated with the web
cert
role. Note that the name web
ties to the configuration example below writing
to a path of auth/cert/certs/web
. If a certificate role name is not specified,
the auth method will try to authenticate against all trusted certificates.
NOTE The -ca-cert
value used here is for the Vault TLS Listener CA
certificate, not the CA that issued the client authentication certificate. This
can be omitted if the CA used to issue the Vault server certificate is trusted
by the local system executing this command.
$ vault login \
-method=cert \
-ca-cert=vault-ca.pem \
-client-cert=cert.pem \
-client-key=key.pem \
name=web
Via the API
The endpoint for the login is /login
. The client simply connects with their
TLS certificate and when the login endpoint is hit, the auth method will
determine if there is a matching trusted certificate to authenticate the client.
Optionally, you may specify a single certificate role to authenticate against.
NOTE The --cacert
value used here is for the Vault TLS Listener CA
certificate, not the CA that issued the client authentication certificate. This
can be omitted if the CA used to issue the Vault server certificate is trusted
by the local system executing this command.
$ curl \
--request POST \
--cacert vault-ca.pem \
--cert cert.pem \
--key key.pem \
--data '{"name": "web"}' \
https://127.0.0.1:8200/v1/auth/cert/login
Configuration
Auth methods must be configured in advance before users or machines can authenticate. These steps are usually completed by an operator or configuration management tool.
Enable the certificate auth method:
$ vault auth enable cert
Configure it with trusted certificates that are allowed to authenticate:
$ vault write auth/cert/certs/web \ display_name=web \ policies=web,prod \ certificate=@web-cert.pem \ ttl=3600
This creates a new trusted certificate "web" with same display name and the "web" and "prod" policies. The certificate (public key) used to verify clients is given by the "web-cert.pem" file. Lastly, an optional
ttl
value can be provided in seconds to limit the lease duration.
Load Balancing / Proxying Consideration
If the Vault server is fronted by a reverse proxy or load balancer, TLS is terminated before Vault. In that case the proxy must provide the validated client certificate via header, and configured in the Vault configuration's listener stanza.
Configure the listener with the header name that your load balancer provides.
In this mode, the security of authentication depends on the load balancer performing
full TLS verification to the client, and that the connection between the load
balancer and Vault is secured, ideally with Mutual TLS.
API
The TLS Certificate auth method has a full HTTP API. Please see the TLS Certificate API for more details.