This project maintains the code used by the certificate manager to access the Godaddy DNS provider using a Kubernetes webhook which needs to be deployed on your kubernetes cluster. When called, the webhook will execute an ACME DNS challenge request to the DNS provider to verify if the provider hosts the domain you are requesting a certificate.
This project supports the following versions of the certificate manager:
| Certificate Manager | Godaddy webhook |
|---|---|
| [1.6 - 1.12] | v0.1.0 |
| [> 1.13] | [v0.2.0 .. v0.5.0] |
Remark: The Helm chart AppVersion like the image version are tagged according to the version used to release this project: v0.1.0, v0.2.0, etc. When using the main branch, the Helm chart will install the latest image pushed on quay.io
Before to open a ticket, please review the Cert Manager documentation explaining the different concepts you will have to deal with such: Issuer, Certificate, Challenge, Order, etc
The troubleshooting section of the documentation is also a good place to start to understand how to debug the different issues you could face: https://cert-manager.io/docs/troubleshooting/acme/.
The image built supports as Arch: am64 and arm64 since release >= 0.2.0
Follow the instructions using the cert manager documentation to install it within your cluster. On kubernetes (>= 1.21), the process is pretty straightforward if you use the following commands:
kubectl apply -f https://github.com/jetstack/cert-manager/releases/download/v1.13.0/cert-manager.yamlNOTES: Check the cert-manager releases note to verify which version of certmanager is supported with Kubernetes or OpenShift
When the cert-manager has been installed, deploy the helm chart on your machine using this command:
export DOMAIN=acme.mydomain.com # replace with your domain
helm install -n cert-manager godaddy-webhook ./deploy/charts/godaddy-webhook --set groupName=$DOMAINThe groupName refers to a prior nonexistant Kubernetes API Group, under which custom resources are created.
The name itself has no connection to the domain names for which certificates are issued, and using the default of
acme.mycompany.com is fine.
NOTE: The kubernetes resources used to install the Webhook should be deployed within the same namespace as the cert-manager.
- To change one of the values, create a
my-values.ymlfile or set the value(s) using helm's--setargument:
helm install -n cert-manager godaddy-webhook -f my-values.yml ./deploy/charts/godaddy-webhook
or
helm install -n cert-manager godaddy-webhook --set pod.securePort=8443 ./deploy/charts/godaddy-webhookYou can also use the Helm chart published on gh-pages
export DOMAIN=acme.mydomain.com # replace with your domain
helm repo add godaddy-webhook https://snowdrop.github.io/godaddy-webhook
helm install acme-webhook godaddy-webhook/godaddy-webhook -n cert-manager --set groupName=$DOMAINTo uninstall the webhook:
helm uninstall acme-webhook -n cert-managerAlternatively, you can install the webhook using the kubernetes YAML resources. The namespace
where the resources should be installed is: cert-manager
export DOMAIN=acme.mydomain.com # replace with your domain
sed "s/acme.mycompany.com/$DOMAIN/g" deploy/webhook-all.yml | kubectl apply --validate=false -f -In order to communicate with Godaddy DNS provider, we will create a Kubernetes Secret
to store the Godaddy API and GoDaddy Secret.
Next, we will define a ClusterIssuer containing the information to access the ACME Letsencrypt Server
and the DNS provider to be used
- Create a
Secretcontaining as key parameter the concatenation of the Godaddy Api and Secret separated by ":"
cat <<EOF > secret.yml
apiVersion: v1
kind: Secret
metadata:
name: godaddy-api-key
type: Opaque
stringData:
token: <GODADDY_API_KEY:GODADDY_SECRET_KEY>
EOF- Next, deploy it under the namespace where you would like to get your certificate/key signed by the ACME CA Authority (e.g. cert-manager)
kubectl apply -f secret.yml -n <NAMESPACE>- Create a
ClusterIssuerresource to specify the address of the ACME staging or production server to access. Add the DNS01 Solver Config that this webhook will use to communicate with the API of the Godaddy Server in order to create or delete an ACME Challenge TXT record that the DNS Provider will accept/refuse if the domain name exists.
cat <<EOF > clusterissuer.yml
apiVersion: cert-manager.io/v1
kind: ClusterIssuer
metadata:
name: letsencrypt-prod
spec:
acme:
# ACME Server
# prod : https://acme-v02.api.letsencrypt.org/directory
# staging : https://acme-staging-v02.api.letsencrypt.org/directory
server: <URL_ACME_SERVER>
# ACME Email address
email: <ACME_EMAIL>
privateKeySecretRef:
name: letsencrypt-<ENV> # staging or production
solvers:
- selector:
dnsZones:
- 'example.com'
dns01:
webhook:
config:
apiKeySecretRef:
name: godaddy-api-key
key: token
production: true
ttl: 600
groupName: acme.mycompany.com
solverName: godaddy
EOF- Next, install it on your kubernetes cluster
kubectl apply -f clusterissuer.yml- Next, create for each of your domain where you need a signed certificate from the Letsencrypt authority the following certificate
cat <<EOF > certificate.yml
apiVersion: cert-manager.io/v1
kind: Certificate
metadata:
name: wildcard-example-com
spec:
secretName: wildcard-example-com-tls
renewBefore: 240h
dnsNames:
- '*.example.com'
issuerRef:
name: letsencrypt-prod
kind: ClusterIssuer
EOF- Deploy it
kubectl apply -f certificate.yml -n <NAMESPACE>- If you have deployed a NGinx Ingress Controller on Kubernetes in order to route the trafic to your service and to manage the TLS termination, then deploy the following ingress resource where
apiVersion: extensions/v1beta1
kind: Ingress
metadata:
name: example-ingress
annotations:
kubernetes.io/ingress.class: "nginx"
spec:
tls:
- hosts:
- '*.example.com'
secretName: wildcard-example-com-tls
rules:
- host: demo.example.com
http:
paths:
- path: /
backend:
serviceName: backend-service
servicePort: 80- Deploy it
kubectl apply -f ingress.yml -n <NAMESPACE>NOTE: If you prefer to delegate to the certmanager the responsibility to create the Certificate resource, then add the following annotation as described within the documentation certmanager.k8s.io/cluster-issuer: "letsencrypt-prod"
IMPORTANT: Use the testsuite carefully and do not launch it too much times as the DNS servers could fail and report such a message suite.go:62: error waiting for record to be deleted: unexpected error from DNS server: SERVFAIL
To test one of your registered domains on godaddy, create a secret.yml file using as [example] file(./testdata/godaddy/godaddy.secret.example)
Replace the $GODADDY_TOKEN with your Godaddy API token which corresponds to your <GODADDY_API_KEY>:<GODADDY_SECRET_KEY>:
pushd testdata/godaddy
export GODADDY_TOKEN=$(echo -n "<GODADDY_API_KEY:GODADDY_SECRET_KEY>")
envsubst < godaddy.secret.example > secret.yaml
popdInstall a kube-apiserver, etcd locally using the following bash script
./scripts/fetch-test-binaries.shNow, execute the test suite and pass as parameter the domain name to be tested
TEST_ASSET_ETCD=_out/kubebuilder/bin/etcd \
TEST_ASSET_KUBECTL=_out/kubebuilder/bin/kubectl \
TEST_ASSET_KUBE_APISERVER=_out/kubebuilder/bin/kube-apiserver \
TEST_ZONE_NAME=<YOUR_DOMAIN.NAME>. go test -v .or the following make command
make test TEST_ZONE_NAME=<YOUR_DOMAIN.NAME>- As godaddy server could be very slow to reply, it could be needed to increase the TTL defined within the
config.jsonfile.- If increasing the TTL does not solve the issue, you can also try overriding the DNS server used for testing by setting the
TEST_DNS_SERVERenvironment variable to match one of the name servers used by your domain. ExTEST_DNS_SERVER="pdns01.domaincontrol.com:53"
- If increasing the TTL does not solve the issue, you can also try overriding the DNS server used for testing by setting the
- The test could also fail as the kube api server is currently finalizing the deletion of the namespace
"spec":{"finalizers":["kubernetes"]},"status":{"phase":"Terminating"}}
- Verify first that you have access to a docker server running on your kubernetes or openshift cluster ;-)
- Compile the project locally (to check if no go error are reported)
make compile- Next, build the container image using the Dockerfile included within this project
IMAGE_REPOSITORY="quay.io/snowdrop"
docker build -t ${IMAGE_REPOSITORY}/cert-manager-webhook-godaddy .NOTE: Change the IMAGE_REPOSITORY to point to your container repository where you have access
You can also use the Makefile to build/push the container image and pass as parameters the IMAGE_NAME and IMAGE_TAG. Without IMAGE_TAG defined,
docker will tag/push as latest
IMAGE_REPOSITORY="quay.io/snowdrop"
make build IMAGE_NAME=${IMAGE_REPOSITORY}
make push