Troubleshoot SSL certificates

The troubleshooting procedures differ, depending whether you're using Google-managed SSL certificates or self-managed SSL certificates.

Troubleshoot Google-managed certificates

For Google-managed certificates, there are two types of status:

  • Managed status
  • Domain status

Managed status

To check the certificate status, run the following command:

gcloud compute ssl-certificates describe CERTIFICATE_NAME \
    --global \
    --format="get(name,managed.status)"

Values for managed status are as follows:

Managed status Explanation
PROVISIONING

The Google-managed certificate has been created and Google Cloud is working with the Certificate Authority to sign it.

Provisioning a Google-managed certificate might take up to 60 minutes from the moment your DNS and load balancer configuration changes have propagated across the internet. If you have updated your DNS configuration recently, it can take a significant amount of time for the changes to fully propagate. Sometimes propagation takes up to 72 hours worldwide, although it typically takes a few hours. For more information on DNS propagation, see Propagation of changes.

If the certificate remains in the PROVISIONING state, make sure that the correct certificate is associated with the target proxy. You can check this by running either the gcloud compute target-https-proxies describe or the gcloud compute target-ssl-proxies describe command.

ACTIVE The Google-managed SSL certificate is obtained from the Certificate Authority. It might take an additional 30 minutes to be available for use by a load balancer.
PROVISIONING_FAILED You might briefly see PROVISIONING_FAILED even when your certificate is actually ACTIVE. Recheck the status.

If the status remains PROVISIONING_FAILED, the Google-managed certificate has been created, but the Certificate Authority can't sign it. Ensure that you completed all steps in Using Google-managed SSL certificates.

Google Cloud retries provisioning until successful or the status changes to PROVISIONING_FAILED_PERMANENTLY.
PROVISIONING_FAILED_PERMANENTLY The Google-managed certificate is created, but the Certificate Authority can't sign it because of a DNS or load balancer configuration issue. In this state, Google Cloud doesn't retry provisioning.

Create a replacement Google-managed SSL certificate, and make sure that the replacement is associated with your load balancer's target proxy. Verify or complete all steps in Using Google-managed SSL certificates. Afterwards, you can delete the certificate that permanently failed provisioning.
RENEWAL_FAILED

The Google-managed certificate renewal failed because of an issue with the load balancer or DNS configuration. If any of the domains or subdomains in a managed certificate aren't pointing to the load balancer's IP address by using an A/AAAA record, the renewal process fails. The existing certificate continues to serve, but expires shortly. Check your configuration.

If the status remains RENEWAL_FAILED, provision a new certificate, switch to using the new certificate, and delete the previous certificate.

For more information about certificate renewal, see Google-managed SSL certificate renewal.

Domain status

To check the domain status, run the following command:

gcloud compute ssl-certificates describe CERTIFICATE_NAME \
    --global \
    --format="get(managed.domainStatus)"

Values for domain status are described in this table.

Domain status Explanation
PROVISIONING The Google-managed certificate is created for the domain. Google Cloud is working with the Certificate Authority to sign the certificate.
ACTIVE The domain has been successfully validated for provisioning the certificate. If the SSL certificate is for multiple domains, the certificate can only be provisioned once all the domains have an ACTIVE status and the managed status of the certificate is ACTIVE as well.
FAILED_NOT_VISIBLE

Certificate provisioning hasn't completed for the domain. Any of the following might be the issue:

  • The domain's DNS record doesn't resolve to the IP address of the Google Cloud load balancer. To resolve this issue, update the DNS A and AAAA records to point to your load balancer's IP address.

    DNS must not resolve to any other IP address than the load balancer's. For example, if an A record resolves to the correct load balancer, but the AAAA resolves to something else, the domain status is FAILED_NOT_VISIBLE.

  • Newly updated DNS A and AAAA records can take a significant amount of time to be fully propagated. Sometimes propagation across the internet takes up to 72 hours worldwide, although it typically takes a few hours. The domain status continues to be FAILED_NOT_VISIBLE until propagation is complete.
  • The SSL certificate isn't attached to the load balancer's target proxy. To resolve this issue, update your load balancer configuration.
  • The frontend ports for the global forwarding rule don't include port 443 for an external proxy Network Load Balancer with an SSL proxy. This can be resolved by adding a new forwarding rule with port 443.
  • A Certificate Manager certificate map is attached to the target proxy. The attached certificate map gets precedence and directly attached certificates are ignored. This can be resolved by detaching the certificate map from the proxy.
  • If the managed status is PROVISIONING, Google Cloud continues to retry provisioning, even if the domain status is FAILED_NOT_VISIBLE.
FAILED_CAA_CHECKING Certificate provisioning failed because of a configuration issue with your domain's CAA record. Ensure that you have followed the correct procedure.
FAILED_CAA_FORBIDDEN Certificate provisioning failed because your domain's CAA record doesn't specify a CA that Google Cloud needs to use. Ensure that you have followed the correct procedure.
FAILED_RATE_LIMITED Certificate provisioning failed because a Certificate Authority has rate-limited certificate signing requests. You can provision a new certificate, switch to using the new certificate, and delete the previous certificate, or you can contact Google Cloud Support.

Managed certificate renewal

If any of the domains or subdomains in a managed certificate aren't pointing to the load balancer's IP address, or are pointing to an IP along with the load balancer's IP, the renewal process fails. To avoid renewal failure, make sure that all your domains and subdomains are pointing to the load balancer's IP address.

Troubleshoot self-managed SSL certificates

This guide describes how to troubleshoot configuration issues for self-managed SSL certificates.

Certificate cannot be parsed

Google Cloud requires certificates in PEM format. If the certificate is PEM formatted, check the following:

You can validate your certificate using the following OpenSSL command, replacing CERTIFICATE_FILE with the path to your certificate file:

openssl x509 -in CERTIFICATE_FILE -text -noout

If OpenSSL is unable to parse your certificate:

Missing common name or subject alternative name

Google Cloud requires that your certificate have either a common name (CN) or subject alternative name (SAN) attribute. See Create a CSR for additional information.

When both attributes are absent, Google Cloud displays an error message like the following when you try to create a self-managed certificate:

ERROR: (gcloud.compute.ssl-certificates.create) Could not fetch resource:
 -   The SSL certificate is missing a Common Name(CN) or Subject Alternative
   Name(SAN).

Private key cannot be parsed

Google Cloud requires PEM-formatted private keys that meet the private key criteria.

You can validate your private key using the following OpenSSL command, replacing PRIVATE_KEY_FILE with the path to your private key:

    openssl rsa -in PRIVATE_KEY_FILE -check

The following responses indicate a problem with your private key:

  • unable to load Private Key
  • Expecting: ANY PRIVATE KEY
  • RSA key error: n does not equal p q
  • RSA key error: d e not congruent to 1
  • RSA key error: dmp1 not congruent to d
  • RSA key error: dmq1 not congruent to d
  • RSA key error: iqmp not inverse of q

To fix the problem, you must create a new private key and certificate.

Private keys with passphrases

If OpenSSL prompts for a passphrase, you'll need to remove the passphrase from your private key before you can use it with Google Cloud. You can use the following OpenSSL command:

openssl rsa -in PRIVATE_KEY_FILE \
    -out REPLACEMENT_PRIVATE_KEY_FILE

Replace the placeholders with valid values:

  • PRIVATE_KEY_FILE: The path to your private key that's protected with a passphrase
  • REPLACEMENT_PRIVATE_KEY_FILE: The path where you'd like to save a copy of your plain text private key

Expiring intermediate certificates

If an intermediate certificate expires before the server (leaf) certificate, this might indicate that your CA isn't following best practices.

When an intermediate certificate expires, your leaf certificate used in Google Cloud might become invalid. This depends on the SSL client, as follows:

  • Some SSL clients only look at the expire time of the leaf certificate and ignore expired intermediate certificates.
  • Some SSL clients treat a chain with any expired intermediate certificate(s) as invalid and display a warning.

To resolve this issue:

  1. Wait for the CA to switch to a new intermediate certificate.
  2. Request a new certificate from them.
  3. Re-upload the new certificate with the new keys.

Your CA might also allow cross-signing for intermediate certificates. Check with your CA to confirm.

RSA public exponent is too large

The following error message appears when the RSA public exponent is larger than 65537. Make sure to use 65537, as specified in RFC 4871.

ERROR: (gcloud.compute.ssl-certificates.create) Could not fetch resource:
 -   The RSA public exponent is too large.

Remove SSL certificate from target-proxy

The following steps demonstrate how to remove a single SSL certificate attached to the target https proxy:

  1. Export the target-https-proxy to a temporary file.

    gcloud compute target-https-proxies export TARGET_PROXY_NAME > /tmp/proxy
    
  2. Edit /tmp/proxy file and remove the following lines:

    sslCertificates:
    -   https://www.googleapis.com/compute/v1/projects/...
    
  3. Import the /tmp/proxy file.

    gcloud compute target-https-proxies import TARGET_PROXY_NAME \
       --source=/tmp/proxy
    
  4. Optional: Delete the SSL certificate.

    gcloud compute ssl-certificates delete SSL_CERT_NAME
    

Replace the following:

  • TARGET_PROXY_NAME: the name of the target https proxy resource.
  • SSL_CERT_NAME: the name of the SSL certificate.