Securing online communication is vital for protecting sensitive data. One effective way to establish secure connections is by using SSL/TLS certificates, which enable HTTPS for your websites and applications. AWS Certificate Manager (ACM) simplifies the process of provisioning, managing, and deploying these certificates. ACM takes care of the complexities of certificate renewal and supports both public and private certificates.
To further enhance security, DNS validation can be used as a method to confirm domain ownership when issuing certificates. DNS validation involves adding a specific DNS record to your domain's configuration, which ACM then verifies. This approach is particularly useful for automating the validation process, as it avoids the need for manual intervention.
In this blog post, we'll explore how to leverage Terraform to automate the creation of an SSL/TLS certificate with ACM and implement DNS validation for secure and streamlined certificate management.
Architecture Overview
Before diving into the implementation, letβs outline the architecture:
Step 1: Request an ACM Certificate
Use the aws_acm_certificate resource to request an SSL/TLS certificate. Specify the domain name for which you want the certificate.
resource "aws_acm_certificate" "mycert_acm" {
domain_name = "ec2.${var.domain_name}"
subject_alternative_names = ["*.ec2.${var.domain_name}"]
validation_method = "DNS"
lifecycle {
create_before_destroy = true
}
}
Step 2: Create Route 53 DNS Record for Validation
First, ensure you have a Route 53 hosted zone for your domain. To validate the certificate via DNS, use the aws_route53_record resource. This creates the necessary DNS record that AWS will check to verify domain ownership.
data "aws_route53_zone" "selected_zone" {
name = var.domain_name
private_zone = false
}
resource "aws_route53_record" "cert_validation_record" {
for_each = {
for dvo in aws_acm_certificate.mycert_acm.domain_validation_options : dvo.domain_name => {
name = dvo.resource_record_name
record = dvo.resource_record_value
type = dvo.resource_record_type
}
}
allow_overwrite = true
name = each.value.name
records = [each.value.record]
ttl = 60
type = each.value.type
zone_id = data.aws_route53_zone.selected_zone.zone_id
}
Step 3: Handle Certificate Validation
Once the DNS records are in place, ACM will automatically check the DNS entries. You can use Terraform to wait for the validation to complete.
resource "aws_acm_certificate_validation" "cert_validation" {
timeouts {
create = "5m"
}
certificate_arn = aws_acm_certificate.mycert_acm.arn
validation_record_fqdns = [for record in aws_route53_record.cert_validation_record : record.fqdn]
}
Steps to Run Terraform
Follow these steps to execute the Terraform configuration:
terraform
terraform init
terraform plan
terraform apply -auto-approve
Upon successful completion, Terraform will provide relevant outputs.
Apply complete! Resources: 4 added, 0 changed, 0 destroyed.
Testing
ACM Certificate with status = issued
Route53 CNAME record for domain in consideration
Cleanup
Remember to stop AWS components to avoid large bills.
terraform destroy -auto-approve
Conclusion
By leveraging Terraform and AWS Certificate Manager (ACM), you can streamline the process of provisioning and managing SSL/TLS certificates with DNS validation. This approach not only automates the creation and validation of certificates but also simplifies ongoing maintenance by handling renewals through ACM.
Resources
Terraform Documentation: https://registry.terraform.io/providers/hashicorp/aws/latest/docs/resources/acm_certificate_validation
GitHub Repo: https://github.com/chinmayto/terraform-aws-acm-ssl-cert-dns-validation
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