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AWS Certificate Manager is a service that lets you easily provision, manage, and deploy public and private Secure Sockets Layer/Transport Layer Security (SSL/TLS) certificates for use with AWS services and your internal connected resources. SSL/TLS certificates are used to secure network communications and establish the identity of websites over…

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AWS Certificate Manager (ACM) Orchestrator

The AWS ACM Orchestrator supports Inventory and Management of certificates in the AWS Certificate Manager. It supports three methods of authentication: Environmental Credentials loaded via the AWS SDK e.g. inside an EC2 instance; IAM User Credentials for assuming a Role as a specific user; OAuth-based Credentials to authenticate with an OAuth provider to assume a Role.

Integration status: Production - Ready for use in production environments.

About the Keyfactor Universal Orchestrator Extension

This repository contains a Universal Orchestrator Extension which is a plugin to the Keyfactor Universal Orchestrator. Within the Keyfactor Platform, Orchestrators are used to manage “certificate stores” — collections of certificates and roots of trust that are found within and used by various applications.

The Universal Orchestrator is part of the Keyfactor software distribution and is available via the Keyfactor customer portal. For general instructions on installing Extensions, see the “Keyfactor Command Orchestrator Installation and Configuration Guide” section of the Keyfactor documentation. For configuration details of this specific Extension see below in this readme.

The Universal Orchestrator is the successor to the Windows Orchestrator. This Orchestrator Extension plugin only works with the Universal Orchestrator and does not work with the Windows Orchestrator.

Support for AWS Certificate Manager (ACM) Orchestrator

AWS Certificate Manager (ACM) Orchestrator is supported by Keyfactor for Keyfactor customers. If you have a support issue, please open a support ticket via the Keyfactor Support Portal at https://support.keyfactor.com

To report a problem or suggest a new feature, use the Issues tab. If you want to contribute actual bug fixes or proposed enhancements, use the Pull requests tab.


Keyfactor Version Supported

The minimum version of the Keyfactor Universal Orchestrator Framework needed to run this version of the extension is 10.1

Platform Specific Notes

The Keyfactor Universal Orchestrator may be installed on either Windows or Linux based platforms. The certificate operations supported by a capability may vary based what platform the capability is installed on. The table below indicates what capabilities are supported based on which platform the encompassing Universal Orchestrator is running.

Operation Win Linux
Supports Management Add
Supports Management Remove
Supports Create Store
Supports Discovery
Supports Reenrollment
Supports Inventory

PAM Integration

This orchestrator extension has the ability to connect to a variety of supported PAM providers to allow for the retrieval of various client hosted secrets right from the orchestrator server itself. This eliminates the need to set up the PAM integration on Keyfactor Command which may be in an environment that the client does not want to have access to their PAM provider.

The secrets that this orchestrator extension supports for use with a PAM Provider are:

Name Description
ServerUsername The AWS Access Key for an IAM User or Client ID for OAuth. Depends on Auth method in use.
ServerPassword The AWS Access Secret for an IAM User or Client Secret for OAuth. Depends on Auth method in use.

It is not necessary to use a PAM Provider for all of the secrets available above. If a PAM Provider should not be used, simply enter in the actual value to be used, as normal.

If a PAM Provider will be used for one of the fields above, start by referencing the Keyfactor Integration Catalog. The GitHub repo for the PAM Provider to be used contains important information such as the format of the json needed. What follows is an example but does not reflect the json values for all PAM Providers as they have different "instance" and "initialization" parameter names and values.

General PAM Provider Configuration

Example PAM Provider Setup

To use a PAM Provider to resolve a field, in this example the Server Password will be resolved by the Hashicorp-Vault provider, first install the PAM Provider extension from the Keyfactor Integration Catalog on the Universal Orchestrator.

Next, complete configuration of the PAM Provider on the UO by editing the manifest.json of the PAM Provider (e.g. located at extensions/Hashicorp-Vault/manifest.json). The "initialization" parameters need to be entered here:

  "Keyfactor:PAMProviders:Hashicorp-Vault:InitializationInfo": {
    "Host": "http://127.0.0.1:8200",
    "Path": "v1/secret/data",
    "Token": "xxxxxx"
  }

After these values are entered, the Orchestrator needs to be restarted to pick up the configuration. Now the PAM Provider can be used on other Orchestrator Extensions.

Use the PAM Provider

With the PAM Provider configured as an extenion on the UO, a json object can be passed instead of an actual value to resolve the field with a PAM Provider. Consult the Keyfactor Integration Catalog for the specific format of the json object.

To have the Server Password field resolved by the Hashicorp-Vault provider, the corresponding json object from the Hashicorp-Vault extension needs to be copied and filed in with the correct information:

{"Secret":"my-kv-secret","Key":"myServerPassword"}

This text would be entered in as the value for the Server Password, instead of entering in the actual password. The Orchestrator will attempt to use the PAM Provider to retrieve the Server Password. If PAM should not be used, just directly enter in the value for the field.


Configuration

Overview

AWS Certificate Manager is a service that lets you easily provision, manage, and deploy public and private Secure Sockets Layer/Transport Layer Security (SSL/TLS) certificates for use with AWS services and your internal connected resources. SSL/TLS certificates are used to secure network communications and establish the identity of websites over the Internet as well as resources on private networks. AWS Certificate Manager removes the time-consuming manual process of purchasing, uploading, and renewing SSL/TLS certificates. The orchestrator supports Okta OAth authentication, as well as AWS IAM accounts. The Okta Support allows authentication against a 3rd party identity provider in AWS. From there you can get temporary credentials for a role that you setup in each AWS Account.

Documentation

Supported Functionality

  • Add/Delete/Replace Root Certificates
  • Add/Delete/Replace Certificates with Public and Private Keys
  • Inventory Root Certificates
  • Inventory Certificates with Public and Private Keys

Assumptions:

  • In order for the Certificates and Keys to renew or reenroll correctly, they need to derive of the which is passed into the any agent. The drives the files and object creation and is essentially how we are able to relate them to each other.

Not Implemented/Supported

  • Reenrollment, Management, Discovery

Installation

Depending on your choice of authentication providers, choose the appropriate configuration section

AWS Certificate Manager AWS-ACM

AWS Setup

Options for authenticating:

  1. Okta or other OAuth configuration (refer to AwsCerManO below)
  2. IAM User Auth configuration (refer to AwsCerManA below)
  3. EC2 Role Auth or other default method supported by the AWS SDK

As one option for #3, to set up Role Auth for an EC2 instance, follow the steps below. Note, this applies specifically when the orchestrator is running ACM-AWS inside of an EC2 instance. Additionally, the EC2 credentials do not use the AWS Account ID specified in the certificate store and only use the single account/role indicated by the EC2 settings.

  1. Assign or note the existing IAM Role assigned to the EC2 instance running
  2. Make sure that role has access to ACM
  3. When configuring the AWS-ACM store, do not select either IAM or OAuth methods in the store's settings. This will make it use the AWS SDK to lookup EC2 credentials.
AWS-ACM Cert Store Type and Cert Store Setup

Cert Store Type Settings

Basic Settings:

CONFIG ELEMENT VALUE DESCRIPTION
Name AWS Certificate Manager Display name for the store type (may be customized)
Short Name AWS-ACM Short display name for the store type
Custom Capability N/A Store type name orchestrator will register with. Check the box to allow entry of value
Supported Job Types Inventory, Add, Remove Job types the extension supports
Needs Server Checked Determines if a target server name is required when creating store
Blueprint Allowed Checked Determines if store type may be included in an Orchestrator blueprint
Uses PowerShell Unchecked Determines if underlying implementation is PowerShell
Requires Store Password Unchecked Determines if a store password is required when configuring an individual store.
Supports Entry Password Unchecked Determines if an individual entry within a store can have a password.

Advanced Settings:

CONFIG ELEMENT VALUE DESCRIPTION
Store Path Type Freeform Determines what restrictions are applied to the store path field when configuring a new store.
Store Path Value N/A This is reserved for the AWS Account Id when setting up the store.
Supports Custom Alias Optional Determines if an individual entry within a store can have a custom Alias.
Private Keys Required This determines if Keyfactor can send the private key associated with a certificate to the store.
PFX Password Style Default or Custom "Default" - PFX password is randomly generated, "Custom" - PFX password may be specified when the enrollment job is created (Requires the Allow Custom Password application setting to be enabled.)

Custom Fields:

Custom fields operate at the certificate store level and are used to control how the orchestrator connects to the remote target server containing the certificate store to be managed

Name Display Name Type Default Value Depends On Required Description
UseOAuth Use OAuth 2.0 Provider boolean False N/A Yes A switch to enable the store to use an OAuth provider workflow to authenticate with AWS ACM
UseIAM Use IAM User Auth boolean False N/A Yes A switch to enable the store to use IAM User auth to assume a role when authenticating with AWS ACM
OAuthScope OAuth Scope string N/A Use OAuth 2.0 Provider No This is the OAuth Scope needed for Okta OAuth, defined in Okta
OAuthGrantType OAuth Grant Type string client_credentials Use OAuth 2.0 Provider No In OAuth 2.0, the term “grant type” refers to the way an application gets an access token. In Okta this is client_credentials
OAuthUrl OAuth URL string https://***/oauth2/default/v1/token Use OAuth 2.0 Provider No The URL to request a token from your OAuth Provider. Fill this out with the correct URL.
OAuthAssumeRole AWS Role to Assume (OAuth) string N/A Use OAuth 2.0 Provider No The AWS Role to assume after getting an OAuth token.
IAMAssumeRole AWS Role to Assume (IAM) string N/A Use IAM User Auth No The AWS Role to assume as the IAM User.

Entry Parameters:

Entry parameters are inventoried and maintained for each entry within a certificate store. They are typically used to support binding of a certificate to a resource.

While AWS Region can be set to multiple choice as noted below, you will need to list all regions you want available for adding certificates. You can instead make this a String type in order to allow the region to be specified later without knowing all valid regions now.

Name Display Name Type Default Value Required When Description
AWS Region AWS Region Multiple Choice us-east-1 Adding When adding, this is the Region that the Certificate will be added to.

Cert Store Settings

Name Value Description
Client Machine AWS Account ID This is the AWS Account ID that will be used for access. This will dictate what certificates are usable by the orchestrator. Note: this does not have any effect on EC2 inferred credentials, which are limited to a specific role/account.
User Name See Below See Below
Password See Below See Below
Store Path us-east-1,us-east-2,...,etc. The AWS Region, or a comma-separated list of multiple regions, the store will operate in.
Use OAuth 2.0 Provider Use an OAuth provider to authenticate with AWS Set to true to enable OAuth usage and display additional OAuth fields
Use IAM User Auth Use an IAM user's credentials to assume a role Set to true to enable IAM user auth and the IAM Account ID field.
OAuth Scope Look in OAuth provider for Scope Displayed and required when using OAuth 2.0 Provider. OAuth scope setup in the Okta Application or other OAuth provider
OAuth Grant Type client_credentials Displayed and required when using OAuth 2.0 Provider. This may vary depending on Okta setup but will most likely be this value.
OAuth URL https://***/oauth2/default/v1/token Displayed and required when using OAuth 2.0 Provider. URL to request token from OAuth provider. Example given is for an Okta token.
AWS Role to Assume (OAuth) AWS Role Displayed and required when using OAuth 2.0 Provider. This Role is assumed after getting an OAuth token.
AWS Role to Assume (IAM) AWS Role Displayed and required when using IAM User Auth. This Role is assumed with the IAM credentials.

The User Name and Password fields are used differently based on the auth method you intend to use. The three options for auth are IAM User, OAuth, or default auth.

Auth Method Field Value
IAM User User Name Set to the IAM User's AWS Access Key
IAM User Password Set to the IAM User's AWS Access Secret
OAuth 2.0 User Name Set to the OAuth Client ID
OAuth 2.0 Password Set to the OAuth Client Secret
Default (SDK) User Name No Value
Default (SDK) Password No Value
[Deprecated] AWS Certificate Manager with Okta Auth Configuration AwsCerManO

AWS Setup

  1. A 3rd party identity provider similar to this needs to be setup in AWS for each account.
  2. An Aws Role similar to this needs Added for each AWS account.
  3. Ensure the trust relationship is setup for that role. Should look like this.

OKTA Setup

  1. Ensure your Authorization Server Is Setup in OKTA. Here is a sample.
  2. Ensure the appropriate scopes are setup in Okta. Here is a sample.
  3. Setup an Okta App with similar settings to this and this.
AwsCerManO Cert Store Type and Cert Store Setup

Cert Store Type Settings

Basic Settings:

CONFIG ELEMENT VALUE DESCRIPTION
Name Any Custom Name Display name for the store type (may be customized)
Short Name AWSCerManO Short display name for the store type
Custom Capability N/A Store type name orchestrator will register with. Check the box to allow entry of value
Supported Job Types Inventory, Add, Remove Job types the extension supports
Needs Server Checked Determines if a target server name is required when creating store
Blueprint Allowed Checked Determines if store type may be included in an Orchestrator blueprint
Uses PowerShell Unchecked Determines if underlying implementation is PowerShell
Requires Store Password Unchecked Determines if a store password is required when configuring an individual store.
Supports Entry Password Unchecked Determines if an individual entry within a store can have a password.

Advanced Settings:

CONFIG ELEMENT VALUE DESCRIPTION
Store Path Type Freeform Determines what restrictions are applied to the store path field when configuring a new store.
Store Path Value N/A This is reserved for the AWS Account Id when setting up the store.
Supports Custom Alias Optional Determines if an individual entry within a store can have a custom Alias.
Private Keys Optional This determines if Keyfactor can send the private key associated with a certificate to the store.
PFX Password Style Default or Custom "Default" - PFX password is randomly generated, "Custom" - PFX password may be specified when the enrollment job is created (Requires the Allow Custom Password application setting to be enabled.)

Custom Fields:

Custom fields operate at the certificate store level and are used to control how the orchestrator connects to the remote target server containing the certificate store to be managed

Name Display Name Type Default Value / Options Required Description
scope Okta OAuth Scope string N/A Yes This is the OAuth Scope needed for Okta OAuth, defined in Okta
grant_type Okta OAuth Grant Type string N/A Yes In OAuth 2.0, the term “grant type” refers to the way an application gets an access token. In Okta this is client_credentials
oauthpath OKTA OAuth Path string /oauth2/default/v1/token Yes In path to the OAuth Server. It will Default to the Default Server. If you use something outside of the Default, change this.
awsrole AWS Assume Identity Role string N/A Yes This role has to be created in AWS IAM so you can assume an identity and get temp credentials
awsregions AWS Regions string N/A Yes This will be the list of regions for the account the store iterates through when doing inventory.

Entry Parameters:

Entry parameters are inventoried and maintained for each entry within a certificate store. They are typically used to support binding of a certificate to a resource.

Name Display Name Type Default Value Required When Description
AWS Region AWS Region Multiple Choice us-east-1 Adding When enrolling, this is the Region that the Certificate will be enrolled to.

Cert Store Settings

Number Name Value Description
0 Client Machine URL for Okta Application This is the application setup in Okta with Key and Secret
0 User Name Okta Key Obtained from the Okta application
0 Password Okta Secret Obtained from the Okta application
1 Store Path AWS Account Number Unique account number obtained from AWS
2 Okta OAuth Scope Look in Okta Setup for Scope OAuth scope setup in the Okta Application
3 Okta OAuth Grant Type client_credentials This may vary depending on Okta setup but will most likely be this value.
4 OKTA OAuth Path oauthpath In path to the OAuth Server. It will Default to the Default Server. If you use something outside of the Default, change this.
5 AWS Assume Identity Role Whatever Role is setup in AWS Role must allow a third identity provider in AWS with AWS Cert Manager full access.
6 AWS Regions us-east-1,us-east-2... List of AWS Regions you want to inventory for the account above.
7 Store Password No Password Needed for this Set to no password needed.
[Deprecated] AWS Certificate Manager with IAM Auth Configuration AwsCerManA

AWS Setup

  1. An Aws Role Needs Added for the permissions you want to grant, see sample.
  2. A Trust Relationship is setup for that role. Should look like something like this.
  3. AWS does not support programmatic access for AWS SSO accounts. The account used here must be a standard AWS IAM User with an Access Key credential type.
AwsCerManA Cert Store Type and Cert Store Setup

Cert Store Type Settings

Basic Settings:

CONFIG ELEMENT VALUE DESCRIPTION
Name Any Custom Name Display name for the store type (may be customized)
Short Name AWSCerManA Short display name for the store type
Custom Capability N/A Store type name orchestrator will register with. Check the box to allow entry of value
Supported Job Types Inventory, Add, Remove Job types the extension supports
Needs Server Checked Determines if a target server name is required when creating store
Blueprint Allowed Checked Determines if store type may be included in an Orchestrator blueprint
Uses PowerShell Unchecked Determines if underlying implementation is PowerShell
Requires Store Password Unchecked Determines if a store password is required when configuring an individual store.
Supports Entry Password Unchecked Determines if an individual entry within a store can have a password.

Advanced Settings:

CONFIG ELEMENT VALUE DESCRIPTION
Store Path Type Freeform Determines what restrictions are applied to the store path field when configuring a new store.
Store Path Value N/A This is reserved for the AWS Account Id when setting up the store.
Supports Custom Alias Optional Determines if an individual entry within a store can have a custom Alias.
Private Keys Optional This determines if Keyfactor can send the private key associated with a certificate to the store.
PFX Password Style Default or Custom "Default" - PFX password is randomly generated, "Custom" - PFX password may be specified when the enrollment job is created (Requires the Allow Custom Password application setting to be enabled.)

Custom Fields:

Custom fields operate at the certificate store level and are used to control how the orchestrator connects to the remote target server containing the certificate store to be managed

Name Display Name Type Default Value / Options Required Description
awsrole AWS Assume Identity Role string N/A Yes This role has to be created in AWS IAM so you can assume an identity and get temp credentials
awsregions AWS Regions string N/A Yes This will be the list of regions for the account the store iterates through when doing inventory.

Entry Parameters:

Entry parameters are inventoried and maintained for each entry within a certificate store. They are typically used to support binding of a certificate to a resource.

Name Display Name Type Default Value Required When Description
AWS Region AWS Region Multiple Choice us-east-1 Adding When enrolling, this is the Region that the Certificate will be enrolled to.

Cert Store Settings

Number Name Value Description
0 Client Machine Custom Value is not used, choose any identifier
1 Store Path AWS Account Number Unique account number obtained from AWS
2 AWS Assume Identity Role Whatever Role is setup in AWS Role must allow a third identity provider in AWS with AWS Cert Manager full access.
3 AWS Regions us-east-1,us-east-2... List of AWS Regions you want to inventory for the account above.
4 User Name IAM Access Key Obtained from AWS
5 Password IAM Access Secret Obtained from the AWS

When creating cert store type manually, that store property names and entry parameter names are case sensitive

About

AWS Certificate Manager is a service that lets you easily provision, manage, and deploy public and private Secure Sockets Layer/Transport Layer Security (SSL/TLS) certificates for use with AWS services and your internal connected resources. SSL/TLS certificates are used to secure network communications and establish the identity of websites over…

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