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Run Kafka ConnectCluster with TLS/SSL (Transport Encryption)
KubeDB supports providing TLS/SSL encryption for Kafka ConnectCluster. This tutorial will show you how to use KubeDB to run a Kafka ConnectCluster with TLS/SSL encryption.
Before You Begin
At first, you need to have a Kubernetes cluster, and the kubectl command-line tool must be configured to communicate with your cluster. If you do not already have a cluster, you can create one by using kind.
Install
cert-manger
v1.0.0 or later to your cluster to manage your SSL/TLS certificates.Now, install KubeDB cli on your workstation and KubeDB operator in your cluster following the steps here.
To keep things isolated, this tutorial uses a separate namespace called
demo
throughout this tutorial.$ kubectl create ns demo namespace/demo created
Note: YAML files used in this tutorial are stored in docs/examples/kafka folder in GitHub repository kubedb/docs.
Overview
KubeDB uses following crd fields to enable SSL/TLS encryption in Kafka.
spec:
enableSSL
tls:
issuerRef
certificate
Read about the fields in details in kafka concept,
tls
is applicable for all types of Kafka (i.e., combined
and topology
).
Users must specify the tls.issuerRef
field. KubeDB uses the issuer
or clusterIssuer
referenced in the tls.issuerRef
field, and the certificate specs provided in tls.certificate
to generate certificate secrets. These certificate secrets are then used to generate required certificates including ca.crt
, tls.crt
, tls.key
, keystore.jks
and truststore.jks
.
Create Issuer/ ClusterIssuer
We are going to create an example Issuer
that will be used throughout the duration of this tutorial to enable SSL/TLS in Kafka. Alternatively, you can follow this cert-manager tutorial to create your own Issuer
.
- Start off by generating you ca certificates using openssl.
openssl req -x509 -nodes -days 365 -newkey rsa:2048 -keyout ./ca.key -out ./ca.crt -subj "/CN=connectcluster/O=kubedb"
- Now create a ca-secret using the certificate files you have just generated.
kubectl create secret tls connectcluster-ca \
--cert=ca.crt \
--key=ca.key \
--namespace=demo
Now, create an Issuer
using the ca-secret
you have just created. The YAML
file looks like this:
apiVersion: cert-manager.io/v1
kind: Issuer
metadata:
name: connectcluster-ca-issuer
namespace: demo
spec:
ca:
secretName: connectcluster-ca
Apply the YAML
file:
$ kubectl create -f https://github.com/kubedb/docs/raw/v2024.11.8-rc.0/docs/examples/kafka/tls/connectcluster-issuer.yaml
issuer.cert-manager.io/connectcluster-ca-issuer created
TLS/SSL encryption in Kafka Topology Cluster
Note: Before creating Kafka ConnectCluster, make sure you have a Kafka cluster with/without TLS/SSL enabled. If you don’t have a Kafka cluster, you can follow the steps here.
apiVersion: kafka.kubedb.com/v1alpha1
kind: ConnectCluster
metadata:
name: connectcluster-distributed
namespace: demo
spec:
version: 3.6.1
enableSSL: true
tls:
issuerRef:
apiGroup: cert-manager.io
kind: Issuer
name: connectcluster-ca-issuer
replicas: 3
connectorPlugins:
- postgres-2.4.2.final
- jdbc-2.6.1.final
kafkaRef:
name: kafka-prod-tls
namespace: demo
deletionPolicy: WipeOut
Here,
spec.enableSSL
is set totrue
to enable TLS/SSL encryption.spec.tls.issuerRef
refers to theIssuer
that we have created in the previous step.spec.kafkaRef
refers to the Kafka cluster that we have created from here.
Deploy Kafka ConnectCluster with TLS/SSL
$ kubectl create -f https://github.com/kubedb/docs/raw/v2024.11.8-rc.0/docs/examples/kafka/tls/connectcluster-tls.yaml
connectcluster.kafka.kubedb.com/connectcluster-tls created
Now, wait until connectcluster-tls created
has status Ready
. i.e,
$ watch kubectl get connectcluster -n demo
Every 2.0s: kubectl get connectcluster -n demo aadee: Fri Sep 6 14:59:32 2024
NAME TYPE VERSION STATUS AGE
connectcluster-tls kafka.kubedb.com/v1alpha1 3.6.1 Provisioning 0s
connectcluster-tls kafka.kubedb.com/v1alpha1 3.6.1 Provisioning 34s
.
.
connectcluster-tls kafka.kubedb.com/v1alpha1 3.6.1 Ready 2m
Verify TLS/SSL in Kafka ConnectCluster
$ kubectl describe secret -n demo connectcluster-tls-client-connect-cert
Name: connectcluster-tls-client-connect-cert
Namespace: demo
Labels: app.kubernetes.io/component=kafka
app.kubernetes.io/instance=connectcluster-tls
app.kubernetes.io/managed-by=kafka.kubedb.com
app.kubernetes.io/name=connectclusters.kafka.kubedb.com
controller.cert-manager.io/fao=true
Annotations: cert-manager.io/alt-names:
*.connectcluster-tls-pods.demo.svc,*.connectcluster-tls-pods.demo.svc.cluster.local,connectcluster-tls,connectcluster-tls-pods.demo.svc,co...
cert-manager.io/certificate-name: connectcluster-tls-client-connect-cert
cert-manager.io/common-name: connectcluster-tls-pods.demo.svc
cert-manager.io/ip-sans: 127.0.0.1
cert-manager.io/issuer-group: cert-manager.io
cert-manager.io/issuer-kind: Issuer
cert-manager.io/issuer-name: connectcluster-ca-issuer
cert-manager.io/uri-sans:
Type: kubernetes.io/tls
Data
====
ca.crt: 1184 bytes
tls.crt: 1566 bytes
tls.key: 1704 bytes
Now, Let’s exec into a ConnectCluster pod and verify the configuration that the TLS is enabled.
$ kubectl exec -it connectcluster-tls-0 -n demo -- bash
kafka@connectcluster-tls-0:~$ curl -u "$CONNECT_CLUSTER_USER:$CONNECT_CLUSTER_PASSWORD" http://localhost:8083
curl: (1) Received HTTP/0.9 when not allowed
From the above output, we can see that we are unable to connect to the Kafka cluster using the HTTP protocol.
kafka@connectcluster-tls-0:~$ curl -u "$CONNECT_CLUSTER_USER:$CONNECT_CLUSTER_PASSWORD" https://localhost:8083
curl: (60) SSL certificate problem: unable to get local issuer certificate
More details here: https://curl.se/docs/sslcerts.html
curl failed to verify the legitimacy of the server and therefore could not
establish a secure connection to it. To learn more about this situation and
how to fix it, please visit the web page mentioned above.
Here, we can see that we are unable to connect to the Kafka cluster using the HTTPS protocol. This is because the client does not have the CA certificate to verify the server certificate.
kafka@connectcluster-tls-0:~$ curl --cacert /var/private/ssl/ca.crt -u "$CONNECT_CLUSTER_USER:$CONNECT_CLUSTER_PASSWORD" https://localhost:8083
{"version":"3.6.1","commit":"5e3c2b738d253ff5","kafka_cluster_id":"11ef-8f52-c284f2efe29w"}
From the above output, we can see that we are able to connect to the Kafka ConnectCluster using the TLS configuration.
Cleaning up
To cleanup the Kubernetes resources created by this tutorial, run:
kubectl delete kafka -n demo kafka-prod-tls
kubectl delete connectcluster -n demo connectcluster-tls
kubectl delete issuer -n demo connectcluster-ca-issuer
kubectl delete ns demo
Next Steps
- Detail concepts of Kafka object.
- Monitor your Kafka cluster with KubeDB using out-of-the-box Prometheus operator.
- Monitor your Kafka cluster with KubeDB using out-of-the-box builtin-Prometheus.
- Use kubedb cli to manage databases like kubectl for Kubernetes.
- Detail concepts of Kafka object.
- Want to hack on KubeDB? Check our contribution guidelines.