Files
certctl/docs/reference/connectors/jks.md
T
shankar0123 969853ee53 docs: Phase 4 follow-on batch 4 — 5 final target per-pages
Extracts the remaining target connectors:

- ssh.md (194 lines) — agentless SSH/SFTP deploy with full
  host-key-acceptance threat model (what's accepted, what's not,
  mitigations including known_hosts enforcement and SSH cert auth);
  V3-Pro forward path
- wincertstore.md (118 lines) — non-IIS Windows services via local
  PowerShell or WinRM proxy mode; store selection (My / Root /
  WebHosting); private-key permissions guidance
- jks.md (189 lines) — JKS / PKCS#12 via keytool with full atomic
  snapshot+rollback contract (Bundle 8 'snapshot → delete → import →
  reload'), keytool argv password exposure threat model + mitigations
- aws-acm.md (208 lines) — ACM target with full IAM policy, IRSA /
  instance-profile / SSO auth recipes, atomic-rollback contract,
  ALB attachment Terraform recipe, procurement-checklist crib
- azure-kv.md (195 lines) — Key Vault target with managed-identity /
  workload-identity / service-principal auth recipes, version-
  semantics rollback caveat (no in-place restore without soft-delete),
  App Gateway / Front Door attachment recipe

Index forward-list expanded to enumerate all 15 target connectors
(5 from Phase 4 structural + 5 from batch 3 + 5 from this batch) in
alphabetical order.

This is part 4 of 4 for the Phase 4 follow-on (per-connector page
extraction) tracked in cowork/docs-overhaul-phase-2-restructure-2026-05-04/log.md.

Net add: 5 files, 904 lines. No content removed from index.md.

End-state of Phase 4 follow-on:
- 13 issuer per-pages (5 batch 1 + 8 batch 2)
- 15 target per-pages (5 Phase 4 structural + 5 batch 3 + 5 batch 4)
- index.md keeps its inline reference content; per-pages add
  operator depth on top, matching the pattern set by
  apache/f5/iis/k8s/nginx in Phase 4 structural
2026-05-05 04:07:21 +00:00

8.1 KiB

Java Keystore (JKS / PKCS#12) Connector — Operator Deep-Dive

Last reviewed: 2026-05-05

Operator-grade documentation for the Java Keystore target connector. For the connector-development context (interface contract, registry, atomic deploy primitive shared across all targets), see the connector index.

Overview

The Java Keystore connector deploys certificates to JKS or PKCS#12 keystores via the keytool CLI. This enables TLS cert deployment for Tomcat, Jetty, Kafka, Elasticsearch, and any JVM-based service.

Flow: PEM → temp PKCS#12 → keytool -importkeystore into the target keystore. The flow is engineered for atomicity and rollback, not just convenience.

Implementation lives at internal/connector/target/javakeystore/.

When to use this connector

Use the Java Keystore connector when:

  • The target is a JVM-based service (Tomcat, Jetty, Kafka, Elasticsearch, ZooKeeper) that reads TLS material from a keystore file.
  • You need PKCS#12 or JKS format support; the connector handles both.

Look elsewhere when:

  • The JVM service has been re-fronted with a non-Java reverse proxy (NGINX, HAProxy) that handles TLS termination — deploy to the proxy instead.
  • The service uses PKCS#11 or a hardware token rather than a keystore file — that's outside this connector's scope.

Configuration

{
  "keystore_path": "/opt/tomcat/conf/keystore.p12",
  "keystore_password": "changeit",
  "keystore_type": "PKCS12",
  "alias": "server",
  "reload_command": "systemctl restart tomcat"
}
Field Default Description
keystore_path (required) Absolute path to the keystore file
keystore_password (required) Keystore password
keystore_type "PKCS12" "PKCS12" or "JKS"
alias "server" Key entry alias in the keystore
reload_command Optional command to run after keystore update
create_keystore true Create keystore if it doesn't exist
keytool_path "keytool" Override keytool binary path
backup_retention 3 Number of .certctl-bak.<unix-nanos>.p12 snapshot files to keep after a successful deploy. 0 means use the default of 3; -1 opts out of pruning entirely.
backup_dir dirname(keystore_path) Override directory where rollback snapshots are written and pruned from. Defaults to the keystore's own directory so snapshots land on the same filesystem.

Atomic-rollback contract (Bundle 8)

The deploy flow is snapshot → delete → import → reload.

Before the irreversible keytool -delete step (which removes the existing alias from the keystore), the connector runs keytool -exportkeystore to write a sibling .certctl-bak.<unix-nanos>.p12 file containing the prior alias.

If the subsequent keytool -importkeystore fails for any reason, the rollback path runs keytool -delete (best-effort cleanup of any partial alias the failed import created) followed by keytool -importkeystore from the snapshot PFX, restoring the keystore to its pre-deploy state.

If both the import AND the rollback fail, the connector returns an operator-actionable wrapped error containing both error strings AND the snapshot path so the operator can manually keytool -importkeystore from the .p12 file to recover.

Successful deploys prune older .certctl-bak.*.p12 files beyond the configured backup_retention count; pruning sorts by file ModTime and removes the oldest entries first. Operators that wire their own archival/rotation logic can opt out via backup_retention: -1.

First-time deploys (no keystore file exists at the configured path) skip the snapshot phase entirely — there's nothing to roll back to. The same is true for "alias-not-present-in-existing- keystore" deploys: keytool -exportkeystore returns "alias does not exist" which the connector recognises as a normal first- time-on-existing-keystore signal, not an outage.

Operator playbook: keytool argv password exposure

Java's keytool accepts the keystore password via the -storepass argv flag — there is no stdin or file-based password mode in OpenJDK keytool. While the keytool subprocess is running, the password is visible in ps(1) output to any user on the same host who can read /proc/<pid>/cmdline. This is a standard keytool limitation, not a certctl-specific issue, but operators in regulated environments should know about it.

What this means in practice

  • The password is visible for the duration of each keytool invocation (typically <1s on modern hardware; the connector runs 2-4 keytool calls per deploy: snapshot, optional pre-import delete, import, optional rollback).
  • A local user with shell access on the agent host who polls ps -ef aggressively can capture the password.
  • The exposure is local to the agent host; remote attackers without shell access cannot see it.
  • The same applies to the snapshot's transient -deststorepass (which mirrors the operator's keystore password by design — see "Why the snapshot reuses the keystore password" below).

Mitigations

Layer one or more depending on threat model:

  • Restrict shell access to the agent host. Only the certctl agent's service account should have a login shell. Other admins SSH to a bastion that doesn't host the agent.
  • Use Linux user namespaces or AppArmor to deny ps- visibility into the keytool subprocess for non-root users. systemd's ProtectKernelTunables=yes + ProtectProc=invisible (kernel 5.8+) hides /proc/<pid> from non-owner users.
  • Run the certctl agent in a single-purpose container so only the agent's processes are visible to anyone who execs into the container. The host's ps doesn't see container internals if proper PID-namespace isolation is configured.
  • Rotate the keystore password post-deployment. For high-security environments where the brief exposure is unacceptable, the rotation can itself be automated via a post-deploy hook running keytool -storepasswd. The certctl reload_command is the natural place for this; just be aware the new password must be propagated to whatever service reads the keystore (Tomcat's server.xml, Kafka's kafka.properties, etc.).
  • For FIPS environments, use the BCFKS (BouncyCastle FIPS) keystore type which supports stronger password-derivation. Same argv-exposure caveat applies; the keystore-format change doesn't affect how keytool receives the password.

For a fundamentally different password-handling model, switch to a non-Java target (e.g. PEM-on-disk via the SSH connector + a JCA-shim like tomcat-native reading PEMs directly) or a PKCS#11 keystore (where the password is supplied to the cryptoki library, not via argv).

Why the snapshot reuses the keystore password

The snapshot's keytool -exportkeystore writes a PKCS#12 file under a -deststorepass. The connector reuses the operator's keystore_password for this rather than generating a separate transient password. Two reasons:

  1. The operator already trusts the connector with this secret, so the surface area doesn't grow.
  2. The rollback's matching keytool -importkeystore needs to know the password too, and threading a second random password through the in-memory state machine adds complexity (and another argv-exposure window) for no security gain.

If you rotate the keystore password between deploys, the rollback may fail to read the snapshot — keep stale .certctl-bak.*.p12 files on disk until the rotation completes, and clean them up manually if rotation invalidates them.

Security baseline

  • Reload commands validated against shell injection via validation.ValidateShellCommand().
  • Alias validated against injection (alphanumeric, hyphens, underscores only).
  • Path traversal prevention on keystore path.
  • Transient PKCS#12 temp file cleaned up after import (even on error).
  • Connector index — interface contract, registry, deploy primitive
  • Windows Certificate Store — comparable cert-store deploy on Windows
  • SSH agentless — alternative when the JVM target is reachable via SSH and you'd rather drop PEM files than maintain a keystore