The java_ks module uses a combination of keytool and openssl to manage entries in a Java keystore.
The java_ks module contains a type called java_ks
and a single provider named keytool
. Their purpose is to enable importation of arbitrary, already generated and signed certificates into a Java keystore for use by various applications.
To get started with java_ks, declare each java_ks
resource you need.
java_ks { 'puppetca:truststore':
ensure => latest,
certificate => '/etc/puppet/ssl/certs/ca.pem',
target => '/etc/activemq/broker.ts',
password => 'puppet',
trustcacerts => true,
}
You must specify a target in some way. You can specify target
after the colon in the title or by using the target attribute in the resource. If you declare both, it will prefer the attribute.
java_ks { 'puppetca:keystore':
ensure => latest,
certificate => '/etc/puppet/ssl/certs/ca.pem',
target => '/etc/activemq/broker.ks',
password => 'puppet',
trustcacerts => true,
}
java_ks { 'broker.example.com:/etc/activemq/broker.ks':
ensure => latest,
certificate => '/etc/puppet/ssl/certs/broker.example.com.pe-internal-broker.pem',
private_key => '/etc/puppet/ssl/private_keys/broker.example.com.pe-internal-broker.pem',
password => 'albatros',
password_fail_reset => true,
}
For use cases where you want to fetch the certificate data from a secure store, like vault, you can use the _content
attributes. Here is an example:
java_ks { 'broker.example.com:/etc/activemq/broker.ks':
ensure => latest,
certificate_content => $certificate_data_fetched_from_secure_store,
private_key_content => $private_key_data_fetched_from_secure_store,
password => 'albatros',
password_fail_reset => true,
}
NOTE: Sensitive fields like password
, certificate_content
and private_key_content
can be deferred using the Deferred function. This will ensure sensitive values are not present in the Catalog.
You can see an example of its use below.
java_ks { 'broker.example.com:/etc/activemq/broker.ks':
ensure => latest,
certificate_content => Deferred('sprintf', [$certificate_data_fetched_from_secure_store],
private_key_content => Deferred('sprintf', [$private_key_data_fetched_from_secure_store],
password => Deferred('sprint', ['albatros']),
password_fail_reset => true,
}
We recommend using the data type Senstive
for the attributes certificate_content
and private_key_content
. But These attributes also support a regular String
data type. The _content
attributes are mutual exclusive with their file-based variants.
You can also use Hiera by passing params to the java_ks::config class:
java_ks::config::params:
'broker.example.com:/etc/activemq/broker.ks':
ensure: latest
certificate: '/etc/puppet/ssl/certs/broker.example.com.pe-internal-broker.pem'
private_key: '/etc/puppet/ssl/private_keys/broker.example.com.pe-internal-broker.pem'
password: true
To have a Java application server use a specific certificate for incoming connections, use the certificate parameter. You will need to simultaneously import the private key accompanying the signed certificate you want to use. As long as you provide the path to the key and the certificate, the provider will do the conversion for you.
The java_ks module supports multiple certificates with different keystores but the same alias by implementing Puppet's composite namevar functionality. Titles map to namevars via $alias:$target
(alias of certificate, colon, on-disk path to the keystore). If you create dependencies on these resources you need to remember to use the same title syntax outlined for generating the composite namevars.
Note about composite namevars:
The way composite namevars currently work, you must have the colon in the title. This is true even if you define name and target parameters. The title can be foo:bar
, but the name and target parameters must be broker.example.com
and /etc/activemq/broker.ks
. If you follow convention, it will do as you expect and correctly create an entry in the
broker.ks keystore with the alias of broker.example.com.
For information on the classes and types, see the REFERENCE.md.
The java_ks module uses the keytool
and openssl
commands. It should work on all systems with these commands.
Java 7 is supported as of 1.0.0.
Developed against IBM Java 6 on AIX. Other versions may be unsupported.
For an extensive list of supported operating systems, see metadata.json
This codebase is licensed under the Apache2.0 licensing, however due to the nature of the codebase the open source dependencies may also use a combination of AGPL, BSD-2, BSD-3, GPL2.0, LGPL, MIT and MPL Licensing.
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We want to keep it as easy as possible to contribute changes so that our modules work in your environment. There are a few guidelines that we need contributors to follow so that we can have a chance of keeping on top of things. For more information, see our module contribution guide.