Pre-2.1.0 adoption polish delivering all four milestones: A) Demo Data Overhaul — seed_demo.sql rewritten with 35 certs across 5 issuers, 8 agents, 8 targets, 50+ jobs spanning 90 days, 55+ audit events, discovery scans, network scan targets, S/MIME cert. B) Examples Directory — 5 turnkey docker-compose configs: acme-nginx, acme-wildcard-dns01, private-ca-traefik, step-ca-haproxy, multi-issuer. C) Migration Guides — migrate-from-certbot.md, migrate-from-acmesh.md, certctl-for-cert-manager-users.md. D) Agent Install Script — install-agent.sh with cross-platform support (Linux systemd + macOS launchd), release.yml updated for 6-target cross-compilation. Triple-audited against codebase: 22 factual corrections applied across docs, examples, and config (env var names, CLI flags, ports, DNS hook interface, scheduler loop counts, license conversion date). Co-Authored-By: Claude Opus 4.6 <noreply@anthropic.com>
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certctl for cert-manager Users
You run cert-manager inside Kubernetes and it works well for in-cluster certificates. But you also have VMs, bare-metal servers, network appliances, and legacy systems outside the cluster. cert-manager can't reach those. This guide shows how certctl complements cert-manager to give you unified certificate visibility and automation across your entire infrastructure.
Not a Replacement
cert-manager is the right tool for in-cluster certs. It's tightly integrated with Kubernetes:
- Native CRDs (Certificate, ClusterIssuer, Issuer)
- Automatic cert injection into Ingress and Service objects
- Controller-driven renewal within the cluster
certctl does not replace this. Instead, it extends your certificate management to everything outside Kubernetes: VMs, bare metal, network appliances, Windows servers, and legacy systems.
The Problem
Your setup:
- cert-manager: handles all certs in Kubernetes (TLS for Ingress, service-to-service, internal services)
- Everything else: NGINX/Apache on VMs, HAProxy load balancers on bare metal, network appliances, Windows servers with IIS — these are managed inconsistently. Maybe Certbot cron jobs, maybe manual renewal, maybe deprecated cert files sitting around.
Result:
- No unified visibility — you don't know when non-Kubernetes certs expire
- Renewal failures go unnoticed until the cert is already expired
- Audit trail fragmented across multiple tools
- Scaling to hundreds of machines becomes impossible
The Solution
Deploy certctl control plane once (Docker Compose, Kubernetes Helm chart, or self-hosted). Deploy agents on your VMs, bare metal, and network appliances. One dashboard shows:
- All cert-manager certs via discovery scanning (agents find cert-manager-issued certs copied to target machines, or scan the cluster directly)
- All certctl-managed certs issued by shared issuers (ACME, step-ca, Vault PKI (coming in v2.1), private CA)
- Unified renewal and deployment across both worlds
- Single pane of glass with expiration timeline, renewal status, deployment verification, audit trail
How to Set Up
1. Install certctl Control Plane
Option A: Docker Compose (quickest for evaluation)
cd /opt/certctl
docker compose up -d
# Dashboard: http://localhost:3000
# API: http://localhost:8080
Option B: Kubernetes (recommended for prod)
helm install certctl deploy/helm/certctl/ \
--set auth.apiKey=YOUR_SECURE_KEY
2. Deploy Agents to Non-Kubernetes Infrastructure
On each VM, bare-metal server, or appliance (via proxy agent):
# Linux amd64
curl -sSL https://github.com/shankar0123/certctl/releases/download/v2.1.0/certctl-agent-linux-amd64 \
-o /usr/local/bin/certctl-agent
chmod +x /usr/local/bin/certctl-agent
# Config
sudo tee /etc/certctl/agent.env > /dev/null <<EOF
CERTCTL_SERVER_URL=https://certctl-control-plane:8080
CERTCTL_API_KEY=your-api-key
CERTCTL_DISCOVERY_DIRS=/etc/nginx/certs,/etc/ssl,/etc/letsencrypt/live
CERTCTL_KEY_DIR=/var/lib/certctl/keys
EOF
sudo chmod 600 /etc/certctl/agent.env
# Start
sudo systemctl start certctl-agent
3. Enable Discovery Scanning
Agents scan configured directories and report back all existing certs. In the dashboard:
- Discovery page: all found certs grouped by agent
- Claim cert-manager certs to link them with Kubernetes metadata
- Dismiss obsolete certs
4. Configure Shared Issuers
Set up the same issuer certctl uses for non-Kubernetes certs:
- ACME (Let's Encrypt, for public certs)
- step-ca (Smallstep, for internal certs)
- Vault PKI (coming in v2.1) (HashiCorp Vault, for enterprise PKI)
- Private CA (your own internal root CA)
No new CA infrastructure needed. If cert-manager already uses your CA, certctl points to the same one.
5. Create Policies for Non-Kubernetes Certs
Go to Policies → New Policy:
- Issuer: shared (ACME, step-ca, Vault (coming in v2.1), private CA)
- Profile: serverAuth for NGINX/Apache/HAProxy, clientAuth for mTLS, emailProtection for S/MIME
- Renewal Threshold: 30 days (default, adjust per SLA)
- Scope: agent groups (VMs, bare metal, appliances)
6. View Unified Inventory
Dashboard shows:
- Certificate status heatmap (all 1000 certs: cert-manager + certctl)
- Renewal job trends (both types)
- Expiration timeline (30/60/90 days)
- Agent fleet status (all infrastructure)
Certificates page filters by issuer (show me all ACME certs, or all step-ca certs):
- cert-manager certs discovered from Kubernetes nodes
- certctl-managed certs on VMs
- Network appliance certs auto-discovered
Shared Infrastructure
If cert-manager and certctl both use the same CA:
- ACME: cert-manager uses ClusterIssuer + certctl uses ACME connector → same Let's Encrypt account, transparent coexistence
- step-ca: cert-manager uses external issuer CRD + certctl uses step-ca connector → same provisioner, shared certificate inventory
- Vault PKI (coming in v2.1): cert-manager uses external issuer CRD + certctl uses Vault connector → same mount, same audit trail
No conflict. They just issue certs through the same CA. certctl's discovery scanning finds cert-manager-issued certs and shows them alongside certctl-managed ones.
Key Differences from cert-manager
| Feature | cert-manager | certctl |
|---|---|---|
| Target | In-cluster (Kubernetes) | Out-of-cluster (VMs, bare metal, appliances) |
| Configuration | CRDs (Certificate, ClusterIssuer, Issuer) | API + Dashboard (JSON REST) |
| Deployment | Injected into Secret objects, mounted by pods | Agent pulls work, deploys via target-specific API (file, service restart, proxy agent) |
| Renewal | Controller watches Certificate CRDs, triggers renewal when needed | Scheduler checks thresholds, agents poll for work |
| Audit | Kubernetes event log | Immutable append-only audit trail |
| Visibility | Per-namespace, per-resource | Fleet-wide, unified inventory |
Future Integration
On the roadmap (V4): cert-manager external issuer — certctl acts as a ClusterIssuer backend for Kubernetes. This would allow cert-manager to request certificates from certctl, which could issue them via any of its connectors (step-ca, Vault, private CA, etc.). Pure integration play; no breaking changes.
For now: cert-manager handles Kubernetes, certctl handles everything else. They coexist seamlessly.
Next Steps
- Review Quick Start for a 5-minute demo
- Explore Agents and Targets for deployment architecture
- Read about Discovery Scanning to auto-find certs
- Check Helm Chart for production Kubernetes deployment