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cert-manager allows you to enable HTTPS on your Coder installation, regardless of whether you're using Let's Encrypt or you have your own certificate authority.

This guide will show you how to install cert-manager v1.0.1 and set up your cluster to issue Let's Encrypt certificates for your Coder installation so that you can enable HTTPS on your Coder deployment. It will also show you how to configure your Coder hostname and dev URLs.

We recommend reviewing the official cert-manager documentation if you encounter any issues or if you want info on using a different certificate issuer.

You must have:

Step 1: Add cert-manager to your Kubernetes cluster

To add cert-manager to your cluster (which we assume to be running Kubernetes 1.16+), run:

kubectl apply --validate=false -f \
https://github.com/jetstack/cert-manager/releases/download/v1.0.1/cert-manager.yaml

--validate=false is required to bypass kubectl's resource validation on the client-side that exists in older versions of Kubernetes.

Once you've started the installation process, verify that all the pods are running:

$ kubectl get pods -n cert-manager

NAME                                       READY   STATUS    RESTARTS   AGE
cert-manager-7cd5cdf774-vb2pr              1/1     Running   0          84s
cert-manager-cainjector-6546bf7765-ssxhf   1/1     Running   0          84s
cert-manager-webhook-7f68b65458-zvzn9      1/1     Running   0          84s

Step 2: Get the private key from the service account

You can get the private key from the GCP Service Account using:

gcloud iam service-accounts keys create key.json \
--iam-account <service-account-name>@<project-name>.iam.gserviceaccount.com

The response should look similar to the following:

created key [44...3d] of type [json] as [key.json] for [<service-account-name>@<project-name>.iam.gserviceaccount.com]

Step 3: Configure cluster issuer secret and add it to cert-manager namespace

Next, configure the cluster issuer secret, and add it to cert-manager's namespace:

kubectl -n cert-manager create secret generic \
clouddns-dns01-solver-svc-acct --from-file=./key.json

If successful, you'll see a response similar to:

secret/clouddns-dns01-solver-svc-acct created

Step 4: Create a cluster issuer resource and apply it

  1. Using the text editor of your choice, create a new configuration file called letsencrypt.yaml (you can name it whatever you'd like) that includes your newly created private key:

    apiVersion: cert-manager.io/v1alpha2
    kind: ClusterIssuer
    metadata:
      name: letsencrypt
    spec:
      acme:
        privateKeySecretRef:
          name: gclouddnsissuersecret
        server: https://acme-v02.api.letsencrypt.org/directory
        solvers:
          - dns01:
              clouddns:
                # The ID of the GCP project
                project: <project-id>
                # This is the secret used to access the service account
                serviceAccountSecretRef:
                  name: clouddns-dns01-solver-svc-acct
                  key: key.json
    
  2. Apply your configuration changes:

    kubectl apply -f ./letsencrypt.yaml
    

If successful, you'll see a response similar to:

clusterissuer.cert-manager.io/letsencrypt created

Step 5: Create a certificates.yaml file and apply it

We will now issue certificates for your Coder instance. Below is a sample certificates.yaml file:

apiVersion: cert-manager.io/v1alpha2
kind: Certificate
metadata:
  name: coder-root
  namespace: # Your Coder deployment namespace
spec:
  secretName: coder-root-cert # Your Coder base url secret name. Use hyphens in place of spaces.
  duration: 2160h # 90d
  renewBefore: 360h # 15d
  dnsNames:
    - domain.com # Your base domain for Coder
  issuerRef:
    name: letsencrypt
    kind: ClusterIssuer

---
apiVersion: cert-manager.io/v1alpha2
kind: Certificate
metadata:
  name: coder-devurls
  namespace: # Your Coder deployment namespace
spec:
  secretName: coder-devurls-cert # Your Coder devurls secret name
  duration: 2160h # 90d
  renewBefore: 360h # 15d
  dnsNames:
    - "*.domain.com" # Your dev URLs wildcard subdomain
  issuerRef:
    name: letsencrypt
    kind: ClusterIssuer

At this point, you're ready to install Coder. However, to use all of the functionality you set up in this tutorial, use the following helm install command instead:

helm install coder coder/coder --namespace coder \
  --version=<CODER_VERSION> \
  --set devurls.host="*.exampleCo.com" \
  --set ingress.host="coder.exampleCo.com" \
  --set ingress.tls.enable=true \
  --set ingress.tls.devurlsHostSecretName="coder-devurls-cert" \
  --set ingress.tls.hostSecretName="coder-root-cert" \
  --set ingress.annotations.cert-manager\.io/cluster-issuer="letsencrypt" \
  --wait

There are additional steps to make sure that your hostname and Dev URLs work.

  1. Check the contents of your namespace

    kubectl get all -n <your_namespace> -o wide
    

    Find the service/ingress-nginx line and copy the external IP value shown.

  2. Return to Google Cloud Platform, navigate to the Cloud DNS Console, and select the Zone that your cluster is in.

    Note: You will need to create two A records, one for both the hostname and Dev URLs

  3. Click Add Record Set

  4. Provide your DNS Name

    a. If you're configuring the hostname, this value will be a standard domain

    b. If you're configuring your dev URLs, this will be a wildcard domain (e.g., *.domain.com)

  5. Set the Resource Record Type to A

  6. Copy and paste the IP address from the service/ingress-nginx line in your terminal to the IPv4 Address field

  7. Click Create

At this point, you can return to step 6 of the installation guide to obtain the admin credentials you need to log in.

Troubleshooting

If you are not getting a valid certificate after redeploying, see cert-manager's troubleshooting guide for additional assistance.

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