Before Puppet agent nodes can retrieve their configuration catalogs, they require a signed certificate from the local Puppet certificate authority (CA). When using Puppet’s built-in CA instead of an external CA, agents submit a certificate signing request (CSR) to the CA to retrieve a signed certificate after it's available.
By default, these CSRs must be manually signed by an admin user, using either the puppetserver ca command or the Node requests page in the Puppet Enterprise console.
Alternatively, to speed up the process of bringing new agent nodes into the deployment, you can configure the CA to automatically sign certain CSRs.
Disabling autosigning
By default, the autosign setting in the [master] section of the CA’s puppet.conf file is set to $confdir/autosign.conf. The basic autosigning functionality is enabled upon installation.
Depending on your installation method, there might not be a whitelist at that location after the Puppet Server is running:
Open source Puppet:
autosign.confdoesn’t exist by default.Monolithic Puppet Enterprise (PE) installations: All required services run on one server, and
autosign.confexists on the master, but by default it's empty because the master doesn’t need to whitelist other servers.Split PE installations: Services like PuppetDB can run on different servers, the
autosign.confexists on the CA master and contains a whitelist of other required hosts.
If the autosign.conf file is empty or doesn’t exist, the whitelist is effectively empty. The CA Puppet master doesn’t autosign any certificates until the the autosign setting’s path is configured, or until the default autosign.conf file is a non-executable whitelist file. This file must contain correctly formatted content or a custom policy executable that the Puppet user has permission to run.
To explicitly disable autosigning, set autosign = false in the [master] section of the CA Puppet master’s puppet.conf. This disables CA autosigning even if the autosign.conf file or a custom policy executable exists.
For more information about the autosign setting in puppet.conf, see the configuration reference.
Naïve autosigning
Naïve autosigning causes the CA to autosign all CSRs.
To enable naïve autosigning, set autosign = true in the [master] section of the CA Puppet master’s puppet.conf.
Basic autosigning (autosign.conf)
In basic autosigning, the CA uses a config file containing a whitelist of certificate names and domain name globs. When a CSR arrives, the requested certificate name is checked against the whitelist file. If the name is present, or covered by one of the domain name globs, the certificate is autosigned. If not, it's left for a manual review.
Enabling basic autosigning
The autosign.conf whitelist file’s location and contents are described in its documentation.
Puppet looks for autosign.conf at the path configured in the [autosign setting] within the [master] section of puppet.conf. The default path is $confdir/autosign.conf, and the default confdir path depends on your operating system. For more information, see the confdir documentation.
If the autosign.conf file pointed to by the autosign setting is a file that the Puppet user can execute, Puppet instead attempts to run it as a custom policy executable, even if it contains a valid autosign.conf whitelist.
autosign.conf file exists by default. In Puppet Enterprise, the file exists by default but might be empty. In both cases, the basic autosigning feature is technically enabled by default but doesn’t autosign any certificates because the whitelist is effectively empty. The CA Puppet master therefore doesn’t autosign any certificates until the autosign.conf file contains a properly formatted whitelist or is a custom policy executable that the Puppet user has permission to run, or until the autosign setting is pointed at a whitelist file with properly formatted content or a custom policy executable that the Puppet user has permission to run.
Security implications of basic autosigning
Basic autosigning is insecure because any host can provide any certname when requesting a certificate. Use it only when you fully trust any computer capable of connecting to the Puppet master.
With basic autosigning enabled, an attacker who guesses an unused certname allowed by autosign.conf can obtain a signed agent certificate from the Puppet master. The attacker could then obtain a configuration catalog, which can contain sensitive information depending on your deployment’s Puppet code and node classification.
Policy-based autosigning
In policy-based autosigning, the CA runs an external policy executable every time it receives a CSR. This executable examines the CSR and tells the CA whether the certificate is approved for autosigning. If the executable approves, the certificate is autosigned; if not, it's left for manual review.
Enabling policy-based autosigning
To enable policy-based autosigning, set autosign = <policy executable file> in the [master] section of the CA Puppet master’s puppet.conf.
The policy executable file must be executable by the same user as the Puppet master. If not, it is treated as a certname whitelist file.
Custom policy executables
A custom policy executable can be written in any programming language; it just has to be executable in a *nix-like environment. The Puppet master passes it the certname of the request (as a command line argument) and the PEM-encoded CSR (on stdin), and expects a 0 (approved) or non-zero (rejected) exit code.
After it has the CSR, a policy executable can extract information from it and decide whether to approve the certificate for autosigning. This is useful when you are provisioning your nodes and are embedding additional information in the CSR.
If you aren’t embedding additional data, the CSR contains only the node’s certname and public key. This can still provide more flexibility and security than autosign.conf, as the executable can do things like query your provisioning system, CMDB, or cloud provider to make sure a node with that name was recently added.
Security implications of policy-based autosigning
Depending on how you manage the information the policy executable is using, policy-based autosigning can be fast and extremely secure.
If you embed a unique pre-shared key on each node you provision, and provide your policy executable with a database of these keys, your autosigning security is as good as your handling of the keys. As long as it’s impractical for an attacker to acquire a PSK, it's impractical for them to acquire a signed certificate.
If nodes running on a cloud service embed their instance UUIDs in their CSRs, and your executable queries the cloud provider’s API to check that a node's UUID exists in your account, your autosigning security is as good as the security of the cloud provider’s API. If an attacker can impersonate a legit user to the API and get a list of node UUIDs, or if they can create a rogue node in your account, they can acquire a signed certificate.
When designing your CSR data and signing policy, you must think things through carefully. If you can arrange reasonable end-to-end security for secret data on your nodes, you can configure a secure autosigning system.
Policy executable API
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