Updated docker-tcp.md
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@ -65,7 +65,7 @@ In the above snippet, replace `<HOST>` with the hostname (output of the
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`hostname` command) of the machine who's API you want to expose. Now we've
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`hostname` command) of the machine who's API you want to expose. Now we've
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created `server-key.pem` and `server.csr`.
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created `server-key.pem` and `server.csr`.
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As a final step, we need to create a file named `extfile.cnf` with the
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After this, we need to create a file named `extfile.cnf` with the
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following content:
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following content:
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```
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```
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@ -75,3 +75,87 @@ extendedKeyUsage = serverAuth
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Here, we once again replace `<HOST>` with the machine's hostname, and `<IP>`
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Here, we once again replace `<HOST>` with the machine's hostname, and `<IP>`
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with the machine's public IP.
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with the machine's public IP.
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This file can now be used to generate the actual signed certificate:
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```shell
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openssl x509 -req -days 365 -sha256 -in server.csr -CA ca.pem -CAkey \
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ca-key.pem -CAcreateserial -out server-cert.pem -extfile extfile.cnf
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```
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Here, we can once again change the days argument to the value we want. After
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all these steps, we're left with a signed server-side certificate.
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## Client-side
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Now we'll generate the client-side certificates. We start by creating a `csr`
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file:
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```shell
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openssl genrsa -out key.pem 4096
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openssl req -subj '/CN=client' -new -key key.pem -out client.csr
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```
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After this, we create another `.cnf`, this time to configure the client-side
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keys. Add this to a file named `extfile-client.cnf`:
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```
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extendedKeyUsage = clientAuth
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```
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And then, we generate the client-side key:
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```
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openssl x509 -req -days 365 -sha256 -in client.csr -CA ca.pem -CAkey \
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ca-key.pem -CAcreateserial -out cert.pem -extfile extfile-client.cnf
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```
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Once again change the days value to whatever you want. Now we're left with all
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the files we need to securely expose the API.
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## Exposing the API
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**Note**: the following steps will restart the Docker engine and all
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running containers, so make sure this won't break anything.
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Start by creating a directory on the host that you're not going to delete. In
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the following steps, replace `<DIR>` with the absolute path to this directory.
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After this, copy `ca.pem`, `server-cert.pem` and `server-key.pem` to this
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directory.
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We're gonna be creating a system config file for the Docker service (this guide
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assumes the use of `systemd`). In
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`/etc/systemd/docker.service.d/startup_options.conf`, put the following:
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```shell
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[Service]
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ExecStart=
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ExecStart=/usr/bin/dockerd --tlsverify --tlscacert='<DIR>/ca.pem' --tlscert='<DIR>/server-cert.pem' --tlskey='<DIR>/server-key.pem' -H fd:// -H tcp://0.0.0.0:2376
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```
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Don't forget the replace `<PATH>` with the path to your actual directory.
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The final step is restarting the Docker engine:
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```shell
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systemctl daemon-reload
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systemctl restart docker.service
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```
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**Note**: these commands require root.
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After all this, you should have a Docker API that's accessible using an
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encrypted connection. Let's test it by adding it to Portainer!
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## Adding engine to Portainer
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Thankfully this is the easy part. In Portainer, add a new endpoint and choose
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the "Docker" type. Pick a name for your endpoint, fill in the endpoint URL
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including the port number (Docker's default port number is `2375`) and enable
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the "TLS" switch. We choose "TLS with server and client verification", as this
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is the safest. The files to upload are `ca.pem` for the TLS CA certificate,
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`cert.pem` for the TLS certificate and `key.pem` for the TLS key. If all goes
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well, you should now connect to the host!
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Now, I know these steps can be quite tedious to repeat, so I've written
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[a script](/scripts/docker-tcp.sh) that can automate this process for you.
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Reference in New Issue