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- /*
- Copyright The Kubernetes Authors.
- Licensed under the Apache License, Version 2.0 (the "License");
- you may not use this file except in compliance with the License.
- You may obtain a copy of the License at
- http://www.apache.org/licenses/LICENSE-2.0
- Unless required by applicable law or agreed to in writing, software
- distributed under the License is distributed on an "AS IS" BASIS,
- WITHOUT WARRANTIES OR CONDITIONS OF ANY KIND, either express or implied.
- See the License for the specific language governing permissions and
- limitations under the License.
- */
- // This file was autogenerated by go-to-protobuf. Do not edit it manually!
- syntax = 'proto2';
- package k8s.io.api.certificates.v1;
- import "k8s.io/api/core/v1/generated.proto";
- import "k8s.io/apimachinery/pkg/apis/meta/v1/generated.proto";
- import "k8s.io/apimachinery/pkg/runtime/generated.proto";
- import "k8s.io/apimachinery/pkg/runtime/schema/generated.proto";
- // Package-wide variables from generator "generated".
- option go_package = "v1";
- // CertificateSigningRequest objects provide a mechanism to obtain x509 certificates
- // by submitting a certificate signing request, and having it asynchronously approved and issued.
- //
- // Kubelets use this API to obtain:
- // 1. client certificates to authenticate to kube-apiserver (with the "kubernetes.io/kube-apiserver-client-kubelet" signerName).
- // 2. serving certificates for TLS endpoints kube-apiserver can connect to securely (with the "kubernetes.io/kubelet-serving" signerName).
- //
- // This API can be used to request client certificates to authenticate to kube-apiserver
- // (with the "kubernetes.io/kube-apiserver-client" signerName),
- // or to obtain certificates from custom non-Kubernetes signers.
- message CertificateSigningRequest {
- // +optional
- optional k8s.io.apimachinery.pkg.apis.meta.v1.ObjectMeta metadata = 1;
- // spec contains the certificate request, and is immutable after creation.
- // Only the request, signerName, and usages fields can be set on creation.
- // Other fields are derived by Kubernetes and cannot be modified by users.
- optional CertificateSigningRequestSpec spec = 2;
- // status contains information about whether the request is approved or denied,
- // and the certificate issued by the signer, or the failure condition indicating signer failure.
- // +optional
- optional CertificateSigningRequestStatus status = 3;
- }
- // CertificateSigningRequestCondition describes a condition of a CertificateSigningRequest object
- message CertificateSigningRequestCondition {
- // type of the condition. Known conditions are "Approved", "Denied", and "Failed".
- //
- // An "Approved" condition is added via the /approval subresource,
- // indicating the request was approved and should be issued by the signer.
- //
- // A "Denied" condition is added via the /approval subresource,
- // indicating the request was denied and should not be issued by the signer.
- //
- // A "Failed" condition is added via the /status subresource,
- // indicating the signer failed to issue the certificate.
- //
- // Approved and Denied conditions are mutually exclusive.
- // Approved, Denied, and Failed conditions cannot be removed once added.
- //
- // Only one condition of a given type is allowed.
- optional string type = 1;
- // status of the condition, one of True, False, Unknown.
- // Approved, Denied, and Failed conditions may not be "False" or "Unknown".
- optional string status = 6;
- // reason indicates a brief reason for the request state
- // +optional
- optional string reason = 2;
- // message contains a human readable message with details about the request state
- // +optional
- optional string message = 3;
- // lastUpdateTime is the time of the last update to this condition
- // +optional
- optional k8s.io.apimachinery.pkg.apis.meta.v1.Time lastUpdateTime = 4;
- // lastTransitionTime is the time the condition last transitioned from one status to another.
- // If unset, when a new condition type is added or an existing condition's status is changed,
- // the server defaults this to the current time.
- // +optional
- optional k8s.io.apimachinery.pkg.apis.meta.v1.Time lastTransitionTime = 5;
- }
- // CertificateSigningRequestList is a collection of CertificateSigningRequest objects
- message CertificateSigningRequestList {
- // +optional
- optional k8s.io.apimachinery.pkg.apis.meta.v1.ListMeta metadata = 1;
- // items is a collection of CertificateSigningRequest objects
- repeated CertificateSigningRequest items = 2;
- }
- // CertificateSigningRequestSpec contains the certificate request.
- message CertificateSigningRequestSpec {
- // request contains an x509 certificate signing request encoded in a "CERTIFICATE REQUEST" PEM block.
- // When serialized as JSON or YAML, the data is additionally base64-encoded.
- // +listType=atomic
- optional bytes request = 1;
- // signerName indicates the requested signer, and is a qualified name.
- //
- // List/watch requests for CertificateSigningRequests can filter on this field using a "spec.signerName=NAME" fieldSelector.
- //
- // Well-known Kubernetes signers are:
- // 1. "kubernetes.io/kube-apiserver-client": issues client certificates that can be used to authenticate to kube-apiserver.
- // Requests for this signer are never auto-approved by kube-controller-manager, can be issued by the "csrsigning" controller in kube-controller-manager.
- // 2. "kubernetes.io/kube-apiserver-client-kubelet": issues client certificates that kubelets use to authenticate to kube-apiserver.
- // Requests for this signer can be auto-approved by the "csrapproving" controller in kube-controller-manager, and can be issued by the "csrsigning" controller in kube-controller-manager.
- // 3. "kubernetes.io/kubelet-serving" issues serving certificates that kubelets use to serve TLS endpoints, which kube-apiserver can connect to securely.
- // Requests for this signer are never auto-approved by kube-controller-manager, and can be issued by the "csrsigning" controller in kube-controller-manager.
- //
- // More details are available at https://k8s.io/docs/reference/access-authn-authz/certificate-signing-requests/#kubernetes-signers
- //
- // Custom signerNames can also be specified. The signer defines:
- // 1. Trust distribution: how trust (CA bundles) are distributed.
- // 2. Permitted subjects: and behavior when a disallowed subject is requested.
- // 3. Required, permitted, or forbidden x509 extensions in the request (including whether subjectAltNames are allowed, which types, restrictions on allowed values) and behavior when a disallowed extension is requested.
- // 4. Required, permitted, or forbidden key usages / extended key usages.
- // 5. Expiration/certificate lifetime: whether it is fixed by the signer, configurable by the admin.
- // 6. Whether or not requests for CA certificates are allowed.
- optional string signerName = 7;
- // usages specifies a set of key usages requested in the issued certificate.
- //
- // Requests for TLS client certificates typically request: "digital signature", "key encipherment", "client auth".
- //
- // Requests for TLS serving certificates typically request: "key encipherment", "digital signature", "server auth".
- //
- // Valid values are:
- // "signing", "digital signature", "content commitment",
- // "key encipherment", "key agreement", "data encipherment",
- // "cert sign", "crl sign", "encipher only", "decipher only", "any",
- // "server auth", "client auth",
- // "code signing", "email protection", "s/mime",
- // "ipsec end system", "ipsec tunnel", "ipsec user",
- // "timestamping", "ocsp signing", "microsoft sgc", "netscape sgc"
- // +listType=atomic
- repeated string usages = 5;
- // username contains the name of the user that created the CertificateSigningRequest.
- // Populated by the API server on creation and immutable.
- // +optional
- optional string username = 2;
- // uid contains the uid of the user that created the CertificateSigningRequest.
- // Populated by the API server on creation and immutable.
- // +optional
- optional string uid = 3;
- // groups contains group membership of the user that created the CertificateSigningRequest.
- // Populated by the API server on creation and immutable.
- // +listType=atomic
- // +optional
- repeated string groups = 4;
- // extra contains extra attributes of the user that created the CertificateSigningRequest.
- // Populated by the API server on creation and immutable.
- // +optional
- map<string, ExtraValue> extra = 6;
- }
- // CertificateSigningRequestStatus contains conditions used to indicate
- // approved/denied/failed status of the request, and the issued certificate.
- message CertificateSigningRequestStatus {
- // conditions applied to the request. Known conditions are "Approved", "Denied", and "Failed".
- // +listType=map
- // +listMapKey=type
- // +optional
- repeated CertificateSigningRequestCondition conditions = 1;
- // certificate is populated with an issued certificate by the signer after an Approved condition is present.
- // This field is set via the /status subresource. Once populated, this field is immutable.
- //
- // If the certificate signing request is denied, a condition of type "Denied" is added and this field remains empty.
- // If the signer cannot issue the certificate, a condition of type "Failed" is added and this field remains empty.
- //
- // Validation requirements:
- // 1. certificate must contain one or more PEM blocks.
- // 2. All PEM blocks must have the "CERTIFICATE" label, contain no headers, and the encoded data
- // must be a BER-encoded ASN.1 Certificate structure as described in section 4 of RFC5280.
- // 3. Non-PEM content may appear before or after the "CERTIFICATE" PEM blocks and is unvalidated,
- // to allow for explanatory text as described in section 5.2 of RFC7468.
- //
- // If more than one PEM block is present, and the definition of the requested spec.signerName
- // does not indicate otherwise, the first block is the issued certificate,
- // and subsequent blocks should be treated as intermediate certificates and presented in TLS handshakes.
- //
- // The certificate is encoded in PEM format.
- //
- // When serialized as JSON or YAML, the data is additionally base64-encoded, so it consists of:
- //
- // base64(
- // -----BEGIN CERTIFICATE-----
- // ...
- // -----END CERTIFICATE-----
- // )
- //
- // +listType=atomic
- // +optional
- optional bytes certificate = 2;
- }
- // ExtraValue masks the value so protobuf can generate
- // +protobuf.nullable=true
- // +protobuf.options.(gogoproto.goproto_stringer)=false
- message ExtraValue {
- // items, if empty, will result in an empty slice
- repeated string items = 1;
- }
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