--- layout: docs page_title: Service Mesh Certificate Authority - Vault description: >- You can use a Vault PKI secrets engine as the Consul service mesh's certificate authority to secure your service mesh. Learn how to configure the Vault CA as a root CA or an intermediate CA connected to an existing PKI system, and how to manage PKI paths with either Vault or Consul. --- # Vault as a Service Mesh Certificate Authority You can configure Consul to use [Vault](https://www.vaultproject.io/) as the certificate authority (CA) so that Vault can manage and sign certificates distributed to services in the mesh. The Vault CA provider uses the [Vault PKI secrets engine](https://www.vaultproject.io/docs/secrets/pki) to generate and sign certificates. This page describes how configure the Vault CA provider. > **Tutorial:** Complete the [Vault as Consul Service Mesh Certification Authority](/consul/tutorials/vault-secure/vault-pki-consul-connect-ca) tutorial for hands-on guidance on how to configure Vault as the Consul service mesh certification authority. ## Requirements - Refer to [Service Mesh Certificate Authority Overview](/docs/connect/ca) for important background information about how Consul manages certificates with configurable CA providers. - Vault 0.10.3 to 1.10.x. ~> **Compatibility warning:** Do not use Vault v1.11.0+ as Consul's Connect CA provider — the intermediate CA becomes unable to issue the leaf nodes required by service mesh, and by Consul client agents if using auto-encrypt or auto-config and using TLS for agent communication. If you are already using Vault 1.11+ as a Connect CA, refer to this [Knowledge Base article](https://support.hashicorp.com/hc/en-us/articles/11308460105491) for more information about the underlying cause and recommended workaround. ## Enable Vault as the CA You can enable Vault as the CA by configuring Consul to use `"vault"` as the CA provider and including the required provider configuration options. You can provide the CA configuration in the server agents' configuration file or in the body of a `PUT` request to the [`/connect/ca/configuration`](/api-docs/connect/ca#update-ca-configuration) API endpoint. Refer to the [Configuration Reference](#configuration-reference) for details about configuration options and for example use cases. The following example shows the required configurations for a default implementation: ```hcl # ... connect { enabled = true ca_provider = "vault" ca_config { address = "http://localhost:8200" token = "" root_pki_path = "connect-root" intermediate_pki_path = "connect-dc1-intermediate" } } ``` ```json { "Provider": "vault", "Config": { "Address": "http://localhost:8200", "Token": "", "RootPKIPath": "connect-root", "IntermediatePKIPath": "connect-dc1-intermediate" } } ``` ## Configuration Reference You can specify the following configuration options. Note that a configuration option's name may differ between API calls and the agent configuration file. The first key refers to the option name for use in API calls. The key after the slash refers to the corresponding option name in the agent configuration file. - `Address` / `address` (`string: `) - The address of the Vault server. - `Token` / `token` (`string: ""`) - A token for accessing Vault. This is write-only and will not be exposed when reading the CA configuration. This token must have [proper privileges](#vault-acl-policies) for the PKI paths configured. In Consul 1.8.5 and later, if the token has the [renewable](https://www.vaultproject.io/api-docs/auth/token#renewable) flag set, Consul will attempt to renew its lease periodically after half the duration has expired. !> **Warning:** You must either provide a token or configure an auth method below. - `AuthMethod` / `auth_method` (`map: nil`) - Vault auth method to use for logging in to Vault. Please see [Vault Auth Methods](https://www.vaultproject.io/docs/auth) for more information on how to configure individual auth methods. If auth method is provided, Consul will obtain a new token from Vault when the token can no longer be renewed. - `Type`/ `type` (`string: ""`) - The type of Vault auth method. - `MountPath`/ `mount_path` (`string: `) - The mount path of the auth method. If not provided the auth method type will be used as the mount path. - `Params`/`params` (`map: nil`) - The parameters to configure the auth method. Please see [Vault Auth Methods](https://www.vaultproject.io/docs/auth) for information on how to configure the auth method you wish to use. If using the Kubernetes auth method, Consul will read the service account token from the default mount path `/var/run/secrets/kubernetes.io/serviceaccount/token` if the `jwt` parameter is not provided. - `RootPKIPath` / `root_pki_path` (`string: `) - The path to a PKI secrets engine for the root certificate. If the path does not exist, Consul will mount a new PKI secrets engine at the specified path with the `RootCertTTL` value as the root certificate's TTL. If the `RootCertTTL` is not set, a [`max_lease_ttl`](https://www.vaultproject.io/api-docs/system/mounts) of 87600 hours, or 10 years is applied by default as of Consul 1.11 and later. Prior to Consul 1.11, the root certificate TTL was set to 8760 hour, or 1 year, and was not configurable. The root certificate will expire at the end of the specified period. When WAN Federation is enabled, each secondary datacenter must use the same Vault cluster and share the same `root_pki_path` with the primary datacenter. To use an intermediate certificate as the primary CA in Consul, initialize the `RootPKIPath` in Vault with a PEM bundle. The first certificate in the bundle must be the intermediate certificate that Consul will use as the primary CA. The last certificate in the bundle must be a root certificate. The bundle must contain a valid chain, where each certificate is followed by the certificate that authorized it. - `RootPKINamespace` / `root_pki_namespace` (`string: `) - The absolute namespace that the `RootPKIPath` is in. Setting this parameter overrides the `Namespace` option for the `RootPKIPath`. Introduced in 1.12.3. - `IntermediatePKIPath` / `intermediate_pki_path` (`string: `) - The path to a PKI secrets engine for the generated intermediate certificate. This certificate will be signed by the configured root PKI path. If this path does not exist, Consul will attempt to mount and configure this automatically. When WAN Federation is enabled, every secondary datacenter must specify a unique `intermediate_pki_path`. - `IntermediatePKINamespace` / `intermediate_pki_namespace` (`string: `) - The absolute namespace that the `IntermediatePKIPath` is in. Setting this parameter overrides the `Namespace` option for the `IntermediatePKIPath`. Introduced in 1.12.3. - `CAFile` / `ca_file` (`string: ""`) - Specifies an optional path to the CA certificate used for Vault communication. If unspecified, this will fallback to the default system CA bundle, which varies by OS and version. - `CAPath` / `ca_path` (`string: ""`) - Specifies an optional path to a folder containing CA certificates to be used for Vault communication. If unspecified, this will fallback to the default system CA bundle, which varies by OS and version. - `CertFile` / `cert_file` (`string: ""`) - Specifies the path to the certificate used for Vault communication. If this is set, then you also need to set `key_file`. - `KeyFile` / `key_file` (`string: ""`) - Specifies the path to the private key used for Vault communication. If this is set, then you also need to set `cert_file`. - `TLSServerName` / `tls_server_name` (`string: ""`) - Specifies an optional string used to set the SNI host when connecting to Vault via TLS. - `TLSSkipVerify` / `tls_skip_verify` (`bool: false`) - Specifies if SSL peer validation should be enforced. - `Namespace` / `namespace` (`string: `) - The Vault Namespace that the `Token` and PKI Certificates are a part of. Vault Namespaces are a Vault Enterprise feature. Added in Consul 1.11.0 @include 'http_api_connect_ca_common_options.mdx' ### Root and Intermediate PKI Paths The Vault CA provider uses two separately configured [PKI secrets engines](https://www.vaultproject.io/docs/secrets/pki) for managing Consul service mesh certificates. The `RootPKIPath` is the PKI engine for the root certificate. Consul uses this root certificate to sign the intermediate certificate. Consul does not attempt to write or modify any data within the root PKI path. The `IntermediatePKIPath` is the PKI engine used for storing the intermediate signed with the root certificate. The intermediate signs all leaf certificates, and Consul may periodically generate new intermediates for automatic rotation. Therefore, Consul requires write access to this path. For each path, if the path does not exist, Consul attempts to mount and initialize a PKI secrets engine at that path. For this operation to succeed, the provided [Vault token](#token) must have the [required Vault privileges](#vault-acl-policies). If the path does already exist, Consul uses the PKI secrets engine at that path as configured. ### Configure Vault ACL policies ((#vault-acl-policies)) The Vault CA provider requires a [Vault token](#token) with a specific set of Vault privileges depending on whether you would prefer to control mount configuration from Vault or to delegate that responsibility to Consul. Use [Vault-managed PKI paths](#vault-managed-pki-paths) to obtain the following benefits: - Enables use of a root CA external to Consul by instantiating the PKI secrets engine at [`RootPKIPath`](#rootpkipath) with an intermediate certificate - Retain full control over PKI mount creation, and over `RootPKIPath` mount configuration Otherwise, use [Consul-managed PKI paths](#consul-managed-pki-paths) to let Consul fully automate PKI management. The following sections describe the Vault policy needed for both options. The policy snippets use placeholder values for `RootPKIPath` and `IntermediatePKIPath`. Replace them to match the path values in your CA provider configuration. #### Define a policy for Vault-managed PKI paths ((#vault-managed-pki-paths)) To use Vault-managed PKI paths, you must first instantiate and configure PKI secrets engines at `RootPKIPath` and `IntermediatePKIPath`. Then, attach the following Vault ACL policy to the CA provider's [Vault token](#token) or [auth method](#authmethod): 1. Allow Consul to read both PKI mounts and to manage the intermediate PKI mount configuration: ```hcl path "/sys/mounts/" { capabilities = [ "read" ] } path "/sys/mounts/" { capabilities = [ "read" ] } path "/sys/mounts//tune" { capabilities = [ "update" ] } ``` 1. Allow Consul read-only access to the root PKI engine, to automatically rotate intermediate CAs as needed, and full use of the intermediate PKI engine: ```hcl path "//" { capabilities = [ "read" ] } path "//root/sign-intermediate" { capabilities = [ "update" ] } path "//*" { capabilities = [ "create", "read", "update", "delete", "list" ] } ``` 1. Allow Consul to renew its Vault token if the token is renewable. The rule enables the token to be renewed whether it is provided [directly](#token) in the CA provider configuration or presented in an [auth method](#authmethod). ```hcl path "auth/token/renew-self" { capabilities = [ "update" ] } path "auth/token/lookup-self" { capabilities = [ "read" ] } ``` #### Define a policy for Consul-managed PKI paths ((#consul-managed-pki-paths)) To use Consul-managed PKI paths, ensure no PKI secrets engines are mounted at `RootPKIPath` and `IntermediatePKIPath`. Then, attach the following Vault ACL policy to the CA provider's [Vault token](#token) or [auth method](#authmethod): 1. Allow Consul to create and manage both PKI engines: ```hcl path "/sys/mounts/" { capabilities = [ "create", "read", "update", "delete", "list" ] } path "/sys/mounts/" { capabilities = [ "create", "read", "update", "delete", "list" ] } path "/sys/mounts//tune" { capabilities = [ "update" ] } ``` 1. Allow Consul full use of both PKI engines: ```hcl path "//*" { capabilities = [ "create", "read", "update", "delete", "list" ] } path "//*" { capabilities = [ "create", "read", "update", "delete", "list" ] } ``` 1. Allow Consul to renew its Vault token if the token is renewable. The rule enables the token to be renewed whether it is provided [directly](#token) in the CA provider configuration or presented in an [auth method](#authmethod). ```hcl path "auth/token/renew-self" { capabilities = [ "update" ] } path "auth/token/lookup-self" { capabilities = [ "read" ] } ``` #### Additional Vault ACL policies for sensitive operations Additional Vault permissions are required while you perform the following CA provider configuration changes: - Changing the provider from Vault to a different provider, such as Consul's built-in provider - Changing the `RootPKIPath` Those configuration modifications trigger a root CA change that requires an extremely privileged root cross-sign operation. For that operation to succeed, the CA provider's [Vault token](#token) or [auth method](#authmethod) must contain the following rule: ```hcl path "/root/sign-self-issued" { capabilities = [ "sudo", "update" ] } ``` We recommend using the following process when performing such a CA provider configuration change to minimize the time that a privileged Vault token is in use: 1. Create a new Vault token that includes both the `root/sign-self-issued` permission and the standard permissions for the current Consul or Vault managed PKI paths. 1. Modify the CA provider configuration to use that new Vault token. 1. Perform the CA provider configuration change that triggers the extremely privileged root cross-sign operation. If the configuration change maintains Vault as the provider but modifies `RootPKIPath`, the configuration change must include a Vault token or auth method with standard permissions for the new Consul or Vault managed PKI paths.