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SPIRE

content/en/docs/ops/integrations/spire/index.md

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SPIRE is a production-ready implementation of the SPIFFE specification that performs node and workload attestation in order to securely issue cryptographic identities to workloads running in heterogeneous environments. SPIRE can be configured as a source of cryptographic identities for Istio workloads through an integration with Envoy's SDS API. Istio can detect the existence of a UNIX Domain Socket that implements the Envoy SDS API on a defined socket path, allowing Envoy to communicate and fetch identities directly from it.

This integration with SPIRE provides flexible attestation options not available with the default Istio identity management while harnessing Istio's powerful service management. For example, SPIRE's plugin architecture enables diverse workload attestation options beyond the Kubernetes namespace and service account attestation offered by Istio. SPIRE's node attestation extends attestation to the physical or virtual hardware on which workloads run.

For a quick demo of how this SPIRE integration with Istio works, see [Integrating SPIRE as a CA through Envoy's SDS API]({{< github_tree >}}/samples/security/spire).

Install SPIRE

We recommend you follow SPIRE's installation instructions and best practices for installing SPIRE, and for deploying SPIRE in production environments.

For the examples in this guide, the SPIRE Helm charts will be used with upstream defaults, to focus on just the configuration necessary to integrate SPIRE and Istio.

{{< text syntax=bash snip_id=install_spire_crds >}} $ helm upgrade --install -n spire-server spire-crds spire-crds --repo https://spiffe.github.io/helm-charts-hardened/ --create-namespace {{< /text >}}

{{< text syntax=bash snip_id=install_spire_istio_overrides >}} $ helm upgrade --install -n spire-server spire spire --repo https://spiffe.github.io/helm-charts-hardened/ --wait --set global.spire.trustDomain="example.org" {{< /text >}}

{{< tip >}} See the SPIRE Helm chart documentation for other values you can configure for your installation.

It is important that SPIRE and Istio are configured with the exact same trust domain, to prevent authentication and authorization errors, and that the SPIFFE CSI driver is enabled and installed. {{< /tip >}}

By default, the above will also install:

  • The SPIFFE CSI driver, which is used to mount an Envoy-compatible SDS socket into proxies. Using the SPIFFE CSI driver to mount SDS sockets is strongly recommended by both Istio and SPIRE, as hostMounts are a larger security risk and introduce operational hurdles. This guide assumes the use of the SPIFFE CSI driver.

  • The SPIRE Controller Manager, which eases the creation of SPIFFE registrations for workloads.

Register workloads

By design, SPIRE only grants identities to workloads that have been registered with the SPIRE server; this includes user workloads, as well as Istio components. Istio sidecars and gateways, once configured for SPIRE integration, cannot get identities, and therefore cannot reach READY status, unless there is a preexisting, matching SPIRE registration created for them ahead of time.

See the SPIRE docs on registering workloads for more information on using multiple selectors to strengthen attestation criteria, and the selectors available.

This section describes the options available for registering Istio workloads in a SPIRE Server and provides some example workload registrations.

{{< warning >}} Istio currently requires a specific SPIFFE ID format for workloads. All registrations must follow the Istio SPIFFE ID pattern: spiffe://<trust.domain>/ns/<namespace>/sa/<service-account> {{< /warning >}}

Option 1: Auto-registration using the SPIRE Controller Manager

New entries will be automatically registered for each new pod that matches the selector defined in a ClusterSPIFFEID custom resource.

Both Istio sidecars and Istio gateways need to be registered with SPIRE, so that they can request identities.

Istio Gateway ClusterSPIFFEID

The following will create a ClusterSPIFFEID, which will auto-register any Istio Ingress gateway pod with SPIRE if it is scheduled into the istio-system namespace, and has a service account named istio-ingressgateway-service-account. These selectors are used as a simple example; consult the SPIRE Controller Manager documentation for more details.

{{< text syntax=bash snip_id=spire_csid_istio_gateway >}} $ kubectl apply -f - <<EOF apiVersion: spire.spiffe.io/v1alpha1 kind: ClusterSPIFFEID metadata: name: istio-ingressgateway-reg spec: spiffeIDTemplate: "spiffe://{{ .TrustDomain }}/ns/{{ .PodMeta.Namespace }}/sa/{{ .PodSpec.ServiceAccountName }}" workloadSelectorTemplates: - "k8s:ns:istio-system" - "k8s:sa:istio-ingressgateway-service-account" EOF {{< /text >}}

Istio Sidecar ClusterSPIFFEID

The following will create a ClusterSPIFFEID which will auto-register any pod with the spiffe.io/spire-managed-identity: true label that is deployed into the default namespace with SPIRE. These selectors are used as a simple example; consult the SPIRE Controller Manager documentation for more details.

{{< text syntax=bash snip_id=spire_csid_istio_sidecar >}} $ kubectl apply -f - <<EOF apiVersion: spire.spiffe.io/v1alpha1 kind: ClusterSPIFFEID metadata: name: istio-sidecar-reg spec: spiffeIDTemplate: "spiffe://{{ .TrustDomain }}/ns/{{ .PodMeta.Namespace }}/sa/{{ .PodSpec.ServiceAccountName }}" podSelector: matchLabels: spiffe.io/spire-managed-identity: "true" workloadSelectorTemplates: - "k8s:ns:default" EOF {{< /text >}}

Option 2: Manual Registration

If you wish to manually create your SPIRE registrations, rather than use the SPIRE Controller Manager mentioned in the recommended option, refer to the SPIRE documentation on manual registration.

Below are the equivalent manual registrations based off the automatic registrations in Option 1. The following steps assume you have already followed the SPIRE documentation to manually register your SPIRE agent and node attestation and that your SPIRE agent was registered with the SPIFFE identity spiffe://example.org/ns/spire/sa/spire-agent.

  1. Get the spire-server pod:

    {{< text syntax=bash snip_id=set_spire_server_pod_name_var >}} $ SPIRE_SERVER_POD=$(kubectl get pod -l statefulset.kubernetes.io/pod-name=spire-server-0 -n spire-server -o jsonpath="{.items[0].metadata.name}") {{< /text >}}

  2. Register an entry for the Istio Ingress gateway pod:

    {{< text bash >}} $ kubectl exec -n spire "$SPIRE_SERVER_POD" --
    /opt/spire/bin/spire-server entry create
    -spiffeID spiffe://example.org/ns/istio-system/sa/istio-ingressgateway-service-account
    -parentID spiffe://example.org/ns/spire/sa/spire-agent
    -selector k8s:sa:istio-ingressgateway-service-account
    -selector k8s:ns:istio-system
    -socketPath /run/spire/sockets/server.sock

    Entry ID : 6f2fe370-5261-4361-ac36-10aae8d91ff7 SPIFFE ID : spiffe://example.org/ns/istio-system/sa/istio-ingressgateway-service-account Parent ID : spiffe://example.org/ns/spire/sa/spire-agent Revision : 0 TTL : default Selector : k8s:ns:istio-system Selector : k8s:sa:istio-ingressgateway-service-account {{< /text >}}

  3. Register an entry for workloads injected with an Istio sidecar:

    {{< text bash >}} $ kubectl exec -n spire "$SPIRE_SERVER_POD" --
    /opt/spire/bin/spire-server entry create
    -spiffeID spiffe://example.org/ns/default/sa/curl
    -parentID spiffe://example.org/ns/spire/sa/spire-agent
    -selector k8s:ns:default
    -selector k8s:pod-label:spiffe.io/spire-managed-identity:true
    -socketPath /run/spire/sockets/server.sock {{< /text >}}

Install Istio

  1. Download the Istio release.

  2. Create the Istio configuration with custom patches for the Ingress Gateway and istio-proxy. The Ingress Gateway component includes the spiffe.io/spire-managed-identity: "true" label.

    {{< text syntax=bash snip_id=define_istio_operator_for_auto_registration >}} $ cat <<EOF > ./istio.yaml apiVersion: install.istio.io/v1alpha1 kind: IstioOperator metadata: namespace: istio-system spec: profile: default meshConfig: trustDomain: example.org values: # This is used to customize the sidecar template. # It adds both the label to indicate that SPIRE should manage the # identity of this pod, as well as the CSI driver mounts. sidecarInjectorWebhook: templates: spire: | labels: spiffe.io/spire-managed-identity: "true" spec: containers: - name: istio-proxy volumeMounts: - name: workload-socket mountPath: /run/secrets/workload-spiffe-uds readOnly: true volumes: - name: workload-socket csi: driver: "csi.spiffe.io" readOnly: true components: ingressGateways: - name: istio-ingressgateway enabled: true label: istio: ingressgateway k8s: overlays: # This is used to customize the ingress gateway template. # It adds the CSI driver mounts, as well as an init container # to stall gateway startup until the CSI driver mounts the socket. - apiVersion: apps/v1 kind: Deployment name: istio-ingressgateway patches: - path: spec.template.spec.volumes.[name:workload-socket] value: name: workload-socket csi: driver: "csi.spiffe.io" readOnly: true - path: spec.template.spec.containers.[name:istio-proxy].volumeMounts.[name:workload-socket] value: name: workload-socket mountPath: "/run/secrets/workload-spiffe-uds" readOnly: true EOF {{< /text >}}

    {{< warning >}} If you are using Kubernetes 1.33 and have not disabled support for native sidecars in the Istio control plane, you must use initContainers in the injection template for sidecars. This is required because native sidecar support changes how sidecars are injected. NOTE: The SPIRE injection template for gateways should continue to use regular containers as before. {{< /warning >}}

  3. Apply the configuration:

    {{< text syntax=bash snip_id=apply_istio_operator_configuration >}} $ istioctl install --skip-confirmation -f ./istio.yaml {{< /text >}}

  4. Check Ingress Gateway pod state:

    {{< text syntax=bash snip_id=none >}} $ kubectl get pods -n istio-system NAME READY STATUS RESTARTS AGE istio-ingressgateway-5b45864fd4-lgrxs 1/1 Running 0 17s istiod-989f54d9c-sg7sn 1/1 Running 0 23s {{< /text >}}

    The Ingress Gateway pod is Ready since the corresponding registration entry is automatically created for it on the SPIRE Server. Envoy is able to fetch cryptographic identities from SPIRE.

    This configuration also adds an initContainer to the gateway that will wait for SPIRE to create the UNIX Domain Socket before starting the istio-proxy. If the SPIRE agent is not ready, or has not been properly configured with the same socket path, the Ingress Gateway initContainer will wait forever.

  5. Deploy an example workload:

    {{< text syntax=bash snip_id=apply_curl >}} $ istioctl kube-inject --filename @samples/security/spire/curl-spire.yaml@ | kubectl apply -f - {{< /text >}}

    In addition to needing spiffe.io/spire-managed-identity label, the workload will need the SPIFFE CSI Driver volume to access the SPIRE Agent socket. To accomplish this, you can leverage the spire pod annotation template from the Install Istio section or add the CSI volume to the deployment spec of your workload. Both of these alternatives are highlighted on the example snippet below:

    {{< text syntax=yaml snip_id=none >}} apiVersion: apps/v1 kind: Deployment metadata: name: curl spec: replicas: 1 selector: matchLabels: app: curl template: metadata: labels: app: curl # Injects custom sidecar template annotations: inject.istio.io/templates: "sidecar,spire" spec: terminationGracePeriodSeconds: 0 serviceAccountName: curl containers: - name: curl image: curlimages/curl command: ["/bin/sleep", "3650d"] imagePullPolicy: IfNotPresent volumeMounts: - name: tmp mountPath: /tmp securityContext: runAsUser: 1000 volumes: - name: tmp emptyDir: {} # CSI volume - name: workload-socket csi: driver: "csi.spiffe.io" readOnly: true {{< /text >}}

The Istio configuration shares the spiffe-csi-driver with the Ingress Gateway and the sidecars that are going to be injected on workload pods, granting them access to the SPIRE Agent's UNIX Domain Socket.

See Verifying that identities were created for workloads to check issued identities.

Verifying that identities were created for workloads

Use the following command to confirm that identities were created for the workloads:

{{< text syntax=bash snip_id=none >}} $ kubectl exec -t "$SPIRE_SERVER_POD" -n spire-server -c spire-server -- ./bin/spire-server entry show Found 2 entries Entry ID : c8dfccdc-9762-4762-80d3-5434e5388ae7 SPIFFE ID : spiffe://example.org/ns/istio-system/sa/istio-ingressgateway-service-account Parent ID : spiffe://example.org/spire/agent/k8s_psat/demo-cluster/bea19580-ae04-4679-a22e-472e18ca4687 Revision : 0 X509-SVID TTL : default JWT-SVID TTL : default Selector : k8s:pod-uid:88b71387-4641-4d9c-9a89-989c88f7509d

Entry ID : af7b53dc-4cc9-40d3-aaeb-08abbddd8e54 SPIFFE ID : spiffe://example.org/ns/default/sa/curl Parent ID : spiffe://example.org/spire/agent/k8s_psat/demo-cluster/bea19580-ae04-4679-a22e-472e18ca4687 Revision : 0 X509-SVID TTL : default JWT-SVID TTL : default Selector : k8s:pod-uid:ee490447-e502-46bd-8532-5a746b0871d6 {{< /text >}}

Check the Ingress-gateway pod state:

{{< text syntax=bash snip_id=none >}} $ kubectl get pods -n istio-system NAME READY STATUS RESTARTS AGE istio-ingressgateway-5b45864fd4-lgrxs 1/1 Running 0 60s istiod-989f54d9c-sg7sn 1/1 Running 0 45s {{< /text >}}

After registering an entry for the Ingress-gateway pod, Envoy receives the identity issued by SPIRE and uses it for all TLS and mTLS communications.

Check that the workload identity was issued by SPIRE

  1. Get pod information:

    {{< text syntax=bash snip_id=set_curl_pod_var >}} $ CURL_POD=$(kubectl get pod -l app=curl -o jsonpath="{.items[0].metadata.name}") {{< /text >}}

  2. Retrieve curl's SVID identity document using the istioctl proxy-config secret command:

    {{< text syntax=bash snip_id=get_curl_svid >}} $ istioctl proxy-config secret "$CURL_POD" -o json | jq -r
    '.dynamicActiveSecrets[0].secret.tlsCertificate.certificateChain.inlineBytes' | base64 --decode > chain.pem {{< /text >}}

  3. Inspect the certificate and verify that SPIRE was the issuer:

    {{< text syntax=bash snip_id=get_svid_subject >}} $ openssl x509 -in chain.pem -text | grep SPIRE Subject: C = US, O = SPIRE, CN = curl-5f4d47c948-njvpk {{< /text >}}

SPIFFE federation

SPIRE Servers are able to authenticate SPIFFE identities originating from different trust domains. This is known as SPIFFE federation.

SPIRE Agent can be configured to push federated bundles to Envoy through the Envoy SDS API, allowing Envoy to use validation context to verify peer certificates and trust a workload from another trust domain. To enable Istio to federate SPIFFE identities through SPIRE integration, consult SPIRE Agent SDS configuration and set the following SDS configuration values for your SPIRE Agent configuration file.

ConfigurationDescriptionResource Name
default_svid_nameThe TLS Certificate resource name to use for the default X509-SVID with Envoy SDSdefault
default_bundle_nameThe Validation Context resource name to use for the default X.509 bundle with Envoy SDSnull
default_all_bundles_nameThe Validation Context resource name to use for all bundles (including federated) with Envoy SDSROOTCA

This will allow Envoy to get federated bundles directly from SPIRE.

Create federated registration entries

  • If using the SPIRE Controller Manager, create federated entries for workloads by setting the federatesWith field of the ClusterSPIFFEID CR to the trust domains you want the pod to federate with:

    {{< text syntax=yaml snip_id=none >}} apiVersion: spire.spiffe.io/v1alpha1 kind: ClusterSPIFFEID metadata: name: federation spec: spiffeIDTemplate: "spiffe://{{ .TrustDomain }}/ns/{{ .PodMeta.Namespace }}/sa/{{ .PodSpec.ServiceAccountName }}" podSelector: matchLabels: spiffe.io/spire-managed-identity: "true" federatesWith: ["example.io", "example.ai"] {{< /text >}}

  • For manual registration see Create Registration Entries for Federation.

Cleanup SPIRE

Remove SPIRE by uninstalling its Helm charts:

{{< text syntax=bash snip_id=uninstall_spire >}} $ helm delete -n spire-server spire {{< /text >}}

{{< text syntax=bash snip_id=uninstall_spire_crds >}} $ helm delete -n spire-server spire-crds {{< /text >}}