Migrate third-party certificates to Certificate Manager


This tutorial shows you how to migrate third-party certificates to a Google Cloud load balancer using Certificate Manager.

To migrate third-party certificates with no downtime, create the same number of Google-managed certificates as your third-party certificates. Next, consolidate the certificates into a single certificate map, and deploy the certificate map to a load balancer using DNS. Finally, update the DNS A and AAAA records to point to the load balancer's IP address.

To find the list of supported load balancers, see Certificate Manager overview.

Objectives

This tutorial shows you how to complete the following tasks:

  • Create Google-managed certificates with DNS authorization.
  • Create one certificate map for all certificates.
  • Deploy certificates to your load balancer using DNS.
  • Update the DNS A and AAAA records to point to the load balancer's IP address.

Before you begin

  1. Sign in to your Google Cloud account. If you're new to Google Cloud, create an account to evaluate how our products perform in real-world scenarios. New customers also get $300 in free credits to run, test, and deploy workloads.
  2. In the Google Cloud console, on the project selector page, select or create a Google Cloud project.

    Go to project selector

  3. Make sure that billing is enabled for your Google Cloud project.

  4. Enable the Compute Engine, Certificate Manager APIs.

    Enable the APIs

  5. Install the Google Cloud CLI.
  6. To initialize the gcloud CLI, run the following command:

    gcloud init
  7. In the Google Cloud console, on the project selector page, select or create a Google Cloud project.

    Go to project selector

  8. Make sure that billing is enabled for your Google Cloud project.

  9. Enable the Compute Engine, Certificate Manager APIs.

    Enable the APIs

  10. Install the Google Cloud CLI.
  11. To initialize the gcloud CLI, run the following command:

    gcloud init

Required roles

Make sure that you have the following roles to complete the tasks in this tutorial:

  • Certificate Manager Owner (roles/certificatemanager.owner): Required to create and manage Certificate Manager resources.
  • Compute Load Balancer Admin (roles/compute.loadBalancerAdmin) or Compute Network Admin (roles/compute.networkAdmin): Required to create and manage HTTPS target proxy.
  • DNS Administrator (roles/dns.admin): Required if you want to use Cloud DNS as your DNS solution.

For more information, see the following:

Create Google-managed certificates

Create the same number of Google-managed certificates with DNS authorization (recommended) or self-managed certificates as third-party certificates. Before you create the certificates, create a DNS authorization and add the CNAME record to the authoritative DNS zone for your domain.

This section lists steps and commands to create global Google-managed certificates. To create regional or cross-region Google-managed certificates, see Create a Google-managed certificate.

Create a DNS authorization

A DNS authorization only covers a single domain name. You must create a separate DNS authorization for each domain name that you want to use with the target certificate.

If you're creating a DNS authorization for a wildcard certificate, such as *.myorg.example.com, configure the DNS authorization for the parent domain—for example, myorg.example.com.

Console

You can create a DNS authorization or attach an existing DNS authorization when creating a certificate. For more information, see Create a Google-managed certificate referencing the DNS authorization.

gcloud

To create a DNS authorization, use the certificate-manager dns-authorizations create command:

gcloud certificate-manager dns-authorizations create AUTHORIZATION_NAME \
    --domain="DOMAIN_NAME"

Replace the following:

  • AUTHORIZATION_NAME: the name of the DNS authorization.
  • DOMAIN_NAME: the name of the target domain for which you are creating this DNS authorization. The domain name must be a fully qualified domain name, such as myorg.example.com.

Global Google-managed certificates use FIXED_RECORD as the default DNS authorization type. To use the PER_PROJECT_RECORD DNS authorization, run the following command:

gcloud certificate-manager dns-authorizations create AUTHORIZATION_NAME \
    --domain="DOMAIN_NAME" \
    --type="PER_PROJECT_RECORD"

After creating the DNS authorization, verify it with the certificate-manager dns-authorizations describe command:

gcloud certificate-manager dns-authorizations describe AUTHORIZATION_NAME \

The output is similar to the following. In the output, find the dnsResourceRecord line and get the CNAME record (data, name, and type) to add to your DNS configuration.

createTime: '2022-01-14T13:35:00.258409106Z'
dnsResourceRecord:
  data: 0e40fc77-a37d-4eb8-8fe1-eea2e18d12d9.4.authorize.certificatemanager.goog.
  name: _acme-challenge.myorg.example.com.
  type: CNAME
domain: myorg.example.com
name: projects/myProject/locations/global/dnsAuthorizations/myAuthorization
updateTime: '2022-01-14T13:35:01.571086137Z'

Terraform

To create a DNS authorization, you can use a google_certificate_manager_dns_authorization resource.

resource "google_certificate_manager_dns_authorization" "default" {
  name        = "${local.name}-dnsauth-${random_id.tf_prefix.hex}"
  description = "The default dns auth"
  domain      = local.domain
  labels = {
    "terraform" : true
  }
}

To learn how to apply or remove a Terraform configuration, see Basic Terraform commands.

API

To create a DNS authorization, make a POST request to the dnsAuthorizations.create method:

POST /v1/projects/PROJECT_ID/locations/global/dnsAuthorizations?dns_authorization_id=AUTHORIZATION_NAME"
{
  "domain": "DOMAIN_NAME",
  "type": "PER_PROJECT_RECORD" //optional
}

Replace the following:

  • PROJECT_ID: the ID of the Google Cloud project.
  • AUTHORIZATION_NAME: the name of the DNS authorization.
  • DOMAIN_NAME: the name of the target domain for which you are creating this DNS authorization. The domain name must be a fully qualified domain name, such as myorg.example.com.

Create a Google-managed certificate referencing the DNS authorization

To create a global Google-managed certificate that references the DNS authorization you created in the previous steps, do the following:

Console

  1. In the Google Cloud console, go to the Certificate Manager page.

    Go to Certificate Manager

  2. On the Certificates tab, click Add Certificate.

  3. In the Certificate name field, enter a unique name for the certificate.

  4. Optional: In the Description field, enter a description for the certificate. The description lets you identify the certificate.

  5. For Location, select Global.

  6. For Scope, select Default.

  7. For Certificate type, select Create Google-managed certificate.

  8. For Certificate Authority type, select Public.

  9. In the Domain Names field, specify a comma-delimited list of domain names of the certificate. Each domain name must be a fully qualified domain name, such as myorg.example.com. The domain name can also be a wildcard domain name, such as *.example.com.

  10. For Authorization type, select DNS authorization.

    The page lists DNS authorizations of the domain names. If a domain name doesn't have an associated DNS authorization, follow these steps to create one:

    1. Click Create missing DNS authorization.
    2. In the DNS authorization name field, specify the name of the DNS authorization. The default DNS authorization type is FIXED_RECORD. To use per-project DNS authorization, select the Per project authorization checkbox.
    3. Click Create DNS authorization.
  11. In the Labels field, specify labels to associate to the certificate. To add a label, click Add label, and specify a key and a value for your label.

  12. Click Create.

    The new certificate appears in the list of certificates.

gcloud

To create a global Google-managed certificate with DNS authorization, run the certificate-manager certificates create command with the dns-authorizations flag:

gcloud certificate-manager certificates create CERTIFICATE_NAME \
    --domains="DOMAIN_NAME, *.DOMAIN_NAME" \
    --dns-authorizations="AUTHORIZATION_NAMES"

Replace the following:

  • CERTIFICATE_NAME: the name of the certificate.
  • DOMAIN_NAME: the name of the target domain. The domain name must be a fully qualified domain name, such as myorg.example.com, or a wildcard domain, such as *.myorg.example.com. The asterisk dot prefix (*.) signifies a wildcard certificate.
  • AUTHORIZATION_NAMES: a comma-delimited list of names of the DNS authorizations you created for the certificate.

Terraform

Use a google_certificate_manager_certificate resource.

resource "google_certificate_manager_certificate" "root_cert" {
  name        = "${local.name}-rootcert-${random_id.tf_prefix.hex}"
  description = "The wildcard cert"
  managed {
    domains = [local.domain, "*.${local.domain}"]
    dns_authorizations = [
      google_certificate_manager_dns_authorization.default.id
    ]
  }
  labels = {
    "terraform" : true
  }
}

API

Create the certificate by making a POST request to the certificates.create method as follows:

POST /v1/projects/PROJECT_ID/locations/global/certificates?certificate_id=CERTIFICATE_NAME
{
 "managed": {
  "domains": ["DOMAIN_NAME"],
  "dnsAuthorizations": [
   "projects/PROJECT_ID/locations/global/dnsAuthorizations/AUTHORIZATION_NAME",
  ],
 }
}

Replace the following:

  • PROJECT_ID: the ID of the Google Cloud project.
  • CERTIFICATE_NAME: the name of the certificate.
  • DOMAIN_NAME: the name of the target domain. The domain name must be a fully qualified domain name, such as myorg.example.com, or a wildcard domain, such as *.myorg.example.com. The asterisk dot prefix (*.) signifies a wildcard certificate.
  • AUTHORIZATION_NAMES: a comma-delimited list of names of the DNS authorizations.

Add the CNAME record to your DNS configuration

If you're using a third-party DNS solution to manage your DNS, refer to its documentation to add the CNAME record to the DNS configuration. If you're using Google Cloud to manage your DNS, complete the steps in this section.

Console

To create a record set, follow these steps:

  1. In the Google Cloud console, go to the DNS zones page.

    Go to Cloud DNS zones

  2. Click the name of the DNS zone where you want to add the record.

  3. On the Zone details page, click Add standard.

  4. On the Create record set page, in the DNS name field, enter the subdomain of the DNS zone.

    When entering the subdomain name, make sure that the subdomain name, including the greyed-out text displayed in the DNS name field, matches the full value of the dnsResourceRecord.name field as displayed in the output of the gcloud certificate-manager dns-authorizations describe command.

    See the following examples:

    • If the dnsResourceRecord.name field value is _acme-challenge.myorg.example.com., and the greyed-out text in the DNS name field is .example.com., then enter _acme-challenge.myorg.

    • If the dnsResourceRecord.name field value is _acme-challenge.myorg.example.com. , and the greyed-out text in the DNS name field is .myorg.example.com., then enter _acme-challenge.

    • If the value of the dnsResourceRecord.name field is _acme-challenge_ujmmovf2vn55tgye.myorg.example.com., and the greyed-out text in the DNS name field is .myorg.example.com., then enter _acme-challenge_ujmmovf2vn55tgye.

  5. In the Resource record type field, select CNAME.

  6. In the TTL field, enter a positive numeric value for the resource record's time to live, which is the amount of time that it can be cached.

  7. From the TTL unit list, select the unit of time—for example, 30 minutes.

  8. In the Canonical name field, enter the full value of the dnsResourceRecord.data field as displayed in the output of the gcloud certificate-manager dns-authorizations describe command.

  9. To enter additional information, click Add item.

  10. Click Create.

gcloud

When you create a DNS authorization, the gcloud CLI command returns the corresponding CNAME record. To add the CNAME record to your DNS configuration in the DNS zone of the target domain, follow these steps:

  1. Initiate the DNS record transaction:

    gcloud dns record-sets transaction start --zone="DNS_ZONE_NAME"
    

    Replace DNS_ZONE_NAME with the name of the target DNS zone.

  2. Add the CNAME record to the target DNS zone:

    gcloud dns record-sets transaction add CNAME_RECORD \
        --name="VALIDATION_SUBDOMAIN_NAME.DOMAIN_NAME." \
        --ttl="30" \
        --type="CNAME" \
        --zone="DNS_ZONE_NAME"
    

    Replace the following:

    • CNAME_RECORD: the full data value of the CNAME record returned by the Google Cloud CLI command that created the corresponding DNS authorization.
    • VALIDATION_SUBDOMAIN_NAME: the prefix subdomain of the DNS zone, such as _acme-challenge. You can copy the name from the gcloud certificate-manager dns-authorizations describe command log, as described in Create a DNS authorization.
    • DOMAIN_NAME: the name of the target domain.The domain name must be a fully qualified domain name, such as myorg.example.com. You must also include the trailing period after the target domain name.
    • DNS_ZONE_NAME: the name of the target DNS zone.

    See the following example:

    gcloud dns record-sets transaction add 0e40fc77-a37d-4eb8-8fe1-eea2e18d12d9.4.authorize.certificatemanager.goog. \
        --name="_acme-challenge.myorg.example.com." \
        --ttl="30" \
        --type="CNAME" \
        --zone="myorg-example-com"
    
  3. Run the DNS record transaction to save your changes:

    gcloud dns record-sets transaction execute --zone="DNS_ZONE_NAME"
    

    Replace DNS_ZONE_NAME with the name of the target DNS zone.

Terraform

To add the CNAME record to your DNS configuration, you can use a google_dns_record_set resource.

resource "google_dns_record_set" "cname" {
  name         = google_certificate_manager_dns_authorization.default.dns_resource_record[0].name
  managed_zone = google_dns_managed_zone.default.name
  type         = google_certificate_manager_dns_authorization.default.dns_resource_record[0].type
  ttl          = 300
  rrdatas      = [google_certificate_manager_dns_authorization.default.dns_resource_record[0].data]
}

Verify the status of the certificate

Before deploying a certificate to a load balancer, verify that it's active. It can take several minutes for the certificate state to change to ACTIVE.

Console

  1. In the Google Cloud console, go to the Certificate Manager page.

    Go to Certificate Manager

  2. On the Certificates tab, check the Status column for the certificate.

gcloud

To verify the status of the certificate, run the following command:

gcloud certificate-manager certificates describe CERTIFICATE_NAME

Replace CERTIFICATE_NAME with the name of the target Google-managed certificate.

The output is similar to the following:

createTime: '2021-10-20T12:19:53.370778666Z'
expireTime: '2022-05-07T05:03:49Z'
managed:
  authorizationAttemptInfo:
  - domain: myorg.example.com
    state: AUTHORIZED
  dnsAuthorizations:
    - projects/myProject/locations/global/dnsAuthorizations/myCert
  domains:
  - myorg.example.com
  state: ACTIVE
name: projects/myProject/locations/global/certificates/myCert
pemCertificate: |
  -----BEGIN CERTIFICATE-----
  [...]
  -----END CERTIFICATE-----
sanDnsnames:
  -   myorg.example.com
updateTime: '2021-10-20T12:19:55.083385630Z'

If the certificate state is not ACTIVE after several hours, check that you correctly added the CNAME record to your DNS configuration.

For more troubleshooting steps, see Troubleshoot Certificate Manager.

Deploy the certificate to a load balancer

To deploy a global Google-managed certificate, follow the steps in this section and deploy the certificate by using a certificate map.

To deploy the Google-managed certificate to a regional external Application Load Balancer or regional internal Application Load Balancer, or to a cross-region internal Application Load Balancer, attach it directly to the target proxy.

Create a certificate map

Create a certificate map that references the certificate map entry associated with your certificate:

gcloud

To create a certificate map, use the gcloud certificate-manager maps create command:

gcloud certificate-manager maps create CERTIFICATE_MAP_NAME

Replace CERTIFICATE_MAP_NAME with the name of the target certificate map.

Terraform

To create a certificate map, you can use a google_certificate_manager_certificate_map resource.

resource "google_certificate_manager_certificate_map" "certificate_map" {
  name        = "${local.name}-certmap-${random_id.tf_prefix.hex}"
  description = "${local.domain} certificate map"
  labels = {
    "terraform" : true
  }
}

Create a certificate map entry

Create a certificate map entry and associate it with your certificate and certificate map:

gcloud

To create a certificate map entry, use the gcloud certificate-manager maps entries create command:

gcloud certificate-manager maps entries create CERTIFICATE_MAP_ENTRY_NAME \
    --map="CERTIFICATE_MAP_NAME" \
    --certificates="CERTIFICATE_NAME" \
    --hostname="HOSTNAME"

Replace the following:

  • CERTIFICATE_MAP_ENTRY_NAME: the name of the certificate map entry.
  • CERTIFICATE_MAP_NAME: the name of the certificate map to which the certificate map entry is attached.
  • CERTIFICATE_NAME: the name of the certificate you want to associate with the certificate map entry.
  • HOSTNAME: the hostname that you want to associate with the certificate map entry.

    If you are creating certificates with a wildcard domain, specify the hostname with a wildcard too, such as *.example.com.

Terraform

To create a certificate map entry, you can use a google_certificate_manager_certificate_map_entry resource.

resource "google_certificate_manager_certificate_map_entry" "first_entry" {
  name        = "${local.name}-first-entry-${random_id.tf_prefix.hex}"
  description = "example certificate map entry"
  map         = google_certificate_manager_certificate_map.certificate_map.name
  labels = {
    "terraform" : true
  }
  certificates = [google_certificate_manager_certificate.root_cert.id]
  hostname     = local.domain
}

Verify that the certificate map entry is active

Verify that the certificate map entry is active before attaching its corresponding certificate map to the target proxy.

To verify the certificate map entry, use the gcloud certificate-manager maps entries describe command:

gcloud certificate-manager maps entries describe CERTIFICATE_MAP_ENTRY_NAME \
    --map="CERTIFICATE_MAP_NAME"

Replace the following:

  • CERTIFICATE_MAP_ENTRY_NAME: the name of the certificate map entry.
  • CERTIFICATE_NAME: the name of the certificate you want to associate with the certificate map entry.

The output is similar to the following:

certificates:
createTime: '2021-09-06T10:01:56.229472109Z'
hostname: example.com
name: projects/my-project/locations/global/certificateMaps/myCertMap/certificateMapEntries/myCertMapEntry
state: ACTIVE
updateTime: '2021-09-06T10:01:58.277031787Z'

Attach the certificate map to the target proxy

You can attach the certificate map to a new target proxy or an existing target proxy.

gcloud

To attach the certificate map to a new target proxy, use the gcloud compute target-https-proxies create command:

gcloud compute target-https-proxies create PROXY_NAME \
    --certificate-map="CERTIFICATE_MAP_NAME" \
    --url-map="URL_MAP" \
    --global

Replace the following:

  • PROXY_NAME: the name of the target proxy.
  • CERTIFICATE_MAP_NAME: the name of the certificate map referencing the certificate map entry and the associated certificate.
  • URL_MAP: the name of the URL map

To attach the certificate map to an existing target HTTPS proxy, use the gcloud compute target-https-proxies update command. If you don't know the name of the existing target proxy, go to the Target proxies page and note the name of the target proxy.

gcloud compute target-https-proxies update PROXY_NAME \
    --certificate-map="CERTIFICATE_MAP_NAME" \
    --global

After creating or updating the target proxy, run the following command to verify it:

gcloud compute target-https-proxies list

Terraform

To attach the certificate map to the target proxy, you can use a google_compute_target_https_proxy resource.

When configuring a target proxy, if you attach TLS (SSL) certificates directly and also through a certificate map, the proxy uses the certificates referenced by the certificate map and ignores the directly attached TLS (SSL) certificates.

Test the deployed certificates

For each certificate you have deployed, test the connectivity to each domain covered by the certificate on your load balancer's IP address using the following command:

openssl s_client -showcerts -servername DOMAIN_NAME -connect IP_ADDRESS:443

Replace the following:

  • DOMAIN_NAME: the name of the target domain
  • IP_ADDRESS: the IP address of your load balancer

For more information about testing connectivity, see Test with OpenSSL

Update DNS records

Switch over the traffic from your third-party service to Cloud Load Balancing. See Update the DNS A and AAAA records to point to the load balancer's IP address.

What's next