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#### Common CA Config Options
The following configuration options are supported by all CA providers:
- `CSRMaxConcurrent` / `csr_max_concurrent` (`int: 0`) - Sets a limit on the
number of Certificate Signing Requests that can be processed concurrently. Defaults
to 0 (disabled). This is useful when you want to limit the number of CPU cores
available to the server for certificate signing operations. For example, on an
8 core server, setting this to 1 will ensure that no more than one CPU core
will be consumed when generating or rotating certificates. Setting this is
recommended **instead** of `csr_max_per_second` when you want to limit the
number of cores consumed since it is simpler to reason about limiting CSR
resources this way without artificially slowing down rotations. Added in 1.4.1.
- `CSRMaxPerSecond` / `csr_max_per_second` (`float: 50`) - Sets a rate limit
on the maximum number of Certificate Signing Requests (CSRs) the servers will
accept. This is used to prevent CA rotation from causing unbounded CPU usage
on servers. It defaults to 50 which is conservative a 2017 MacBook can process
about 100 per second using only ~40% of one CPU core but sufficient for deployments
up to ~1500 service instances before the time it takes to rotate is impacted.
For larger deployments we recommend increasing this based on the expected number
of server instances and server resources, or use `csr_max_concurrent` instead
if servers have more than one CPU core. Setting this to zero disables rate limiting.
Added in 1.4.1.
- `LeafCertTTL` / `leaf_cert_ttl` (`duration: "72h"`) - The upper bound on the lease
duration of a leaf certificate issued for a service. In most cases a new leaf
certificate will be requested by a proxy before this limit is reached. This
is also the effective limit on how long a server outage can last (with no leader)
before network connections will start being rejected. Defaults to `72h`. This
value cannot be lower than 1 hour or higher than 1 year.
This value is also used when rotating out old root certificates from
the cluster. When a root certificate has been inactive (rotated out)
for more than twice the _current_ `leaf_cert_ttl`, it will be removed
from the trusted list.
- `PrivateKeyType` / `private_key_type` (`string: "ec"`) - The type of key to generate
for this CA. This is only used when the provider is generating a new key. If
`private_key` is set for the Consul provider, or existing root or intermediate
PKI paths given for Vault then this will be ignored. Currently supported options
are `ec` or `rsa`. Default is `ec`.
It is required that all servers in a datacenter have
the same config for the CA. It is recommended that servers in
different datacenters use the same key type and size, although the built-in CA
and Vault provider will both allow mixed CA key types.
Some CA providers (currently Vault) will not allow cross-signing a
new CA certificate with a different key type. This means that if you
migrate from an RSA-keyed Vault CA to an EC-keyed CA from any
provider, you may have to proceed without cross-signing which risks
temporary connection issues for workloads during the new certificate
rollout. We highly recommend testing this outside of production to
understand the impact, and suggest sticking to same key type where
possible.
-> **Note**: This only affects _CA_ keys generated by the provider.
Leaf certificate keys are always EC 256 regardless of the CA
configuration.
- `PrivateKeyBits` / `private_key_bits` (`string: ""`) - The length of key to
generate for this CA. This is only used when the provider is generating a new
key. If `private_key` is set for the Consul provider, or existing root or intermediate
PKI paths given for Vault then this will be ignored.
Currently supported values are:
- `private_key_type = ec` (default): `224, 256, 384, 521`
corresponding to the NIST P-\* curves of the same name.
- `private_key_type = rsa`: `2048, 4096`