Install ACM for Nitro Enclaves
Use the following procedure to install and configure ACM for Nitro Enclaves.
Prerequisites
The user performing this configuration must have permission to use the
ec2:AssociateEnclaveCertificateIamRole
,
ec2:GetAssociatedEnclaveCertificateIamRoles
, and
ec2:DisassociateEnclaveCertificateIamRole
actions. To grant the
user the required permissions, use the following IAM policy.
{
"Version": "2012-10-17",
"Statement": [
{
"Action": [
"ec2:AssociateEnclaveCertificateIamRole",
"ec2:GetAssociatedEnclaveCertificateIamRoles",
"ec2:DisassociateEnclaveCertificateIamRole"
],
"Resource": [
"arn:aws:acm:region
:account_id
:certificate/*",
"arn:aws:iam::account_id
:role/*"
],
"Effect": "Allow"
}
]
}
Step 1: Create the ACM certificate
Create the AWS Certificate Manager (ACM) certificate that you want use with your NGINX or Apache HTTP server. ACM for Nitro Enclaves
supports both private and public certificates. For more information about creating a certificate, see the following
resources in the AWS Certificate Manager User Guide.
When you use DNS validation to request an ACM certificate, ACM provides a CNAME record
that you must then add to your DNS configuration. ACM uses the CNAME record to validate
ownership of domains.
Step 2: Prepare the enclaves-enabled parent instance
Launch the enclave enabled instance that you will use as
the parent instance. You can use either the ACM for Nitro Enclaves AMI from AWS Marketplace, or
you can install ACM for Nitro Enclaves and the web server using RPM packages.
After you launch the instance, make a note of the instance ID, as you'll need it later.
- Option 1: Using ACM for Nitro Enclaves AMI
-
To launch an instance using the ACM for Nitro Enclaves AMI from AWS Marketplace
-
Open the ACM for Nitro Enclaves
page in the AWS Marketplace.
-
Find the ACM for Nitro Enclaves AMI for your Region, and note the AMI ID. You need the
AMI ID for the next step.
-
Launch the instance using the AMI from the AWS Marketplace and enable it for Nitro Enclaves using the following command.
$
aws ec2 run-instances --image-id ami_id
--count 1 --instance-type supported_instance_type
--key-name your_key_pair
--enclave-options 'Enabled=true'
- Option 2: Using RPM packages
-
To install ACM for Nitro Enclaves from the Amazon Linux Extras repository
-
Connect to the instance.
-
Enable the aws-nitro-enclaves-cli
topic in the Amazon Linux Extras library.
$
sudo amazon-linux-extras enable aws-nitro-enclaves-cli
-
Install your preferred web server. Do one of the following:
-
NGINX
Enable the nginx1
topic in the Amazon Linux Extras library and install NGINX
from the Amazon Linux Extras library.
$
sudo amazon-linux-extras enable nginx1
$
sudo amazon-linux-extras install nginx1 -y
-
Apache
Install and configure the Apache HTTP server with SSL/TLS support.
$
sudo yum -y install httpd mod_ssl
-
Install ACM for Nitro Enclaves from the Amazon Linux Extras library.
$
sudo yum install aws-nitro-enclaves-acm -y
Step 3: Prepare the IAM role
To grant the instance permission to use the ACM certificate, you must create an IAM role
with the required permissions. The IAM role is later attached to the instance and the ACM certificate.
Create a JSON file named acm-role
and add the following policy statement.
{
"Version":"2012-10-17",
"Statement":[
{
"Effect":"Allow",
"Principal":{
"Service":"ec2.amazonaws.com"
},
"Action":"sts:AssumeRole"
}
]
}
Use the create-role
command to create a role named acm-role
, and specify the path to the JSON policy file.
$
aws iam create-role --role-name acm-role --assume-role-policy-document file://acm-role.json
After you have created the role, make a note of the role ARN, as you'll need it in the next
step.
Step 4: Associate the role with the ACM certificate
Attach the IAM role that you created in the previous step to the ACM certificate. To do this, use the
associate-enclave-certificate-iam-role command, and specify the ARN of the role to
attach, and the ARN of the certificate to attach it to.
$
aws ec2 --region region
associate-enclave-certificate-iam-role --certificate-arn certificate_ARN
--role-arn role_ARN
For example
$
aws ec2 --region us-east-1 associate-enclave-certificate-iam-role --certificate-arn arn:aws:acm:us-east-1:123456789012:certificate/d4c3b2a1-e5d0-4d51-95d9-1927fEXAMPLE --role-arn arn:aws:iam::123456789012:role/acm-role
Example output
{
"CertificateS3BucketName": "aws-ec2-enclave-certificate-us-east-1",
"CertificateS3ObjectKey": "arn:aws:iam::123456789012:role/acm-role/arn:aws:acm:us-east-1:123456789012:certificate/d4c3b2a1-e5d0-4d51-95d9-1927fEXAMPLE",
"EncryptionKmsKeyId": "a1b2c3d4-354d-4e51-9190-b12ebEXAMPLE"
}
After running the command, make a note of CertificateS3BucketName
and EncryptionKmsKeyId
,
as you'll need them for the next step.
Step 5: Grant the role permission to access the certificate and encryption key
You must now grant the IAM role (acm-role
) permission to do the following:
-
Retrieve the ACM certificate from the Amazon S3 bucket returned in the previous step
-
Perform kms:Decrypt
using the AWS KMS key returned in the previous step
-
Retrieve information about itself, including its path, GUID, and ARN.
Create a JSON file named acm-role-policies.json
, add the following policy statement, and specify
the values of CertificateS3BucketName
and EncryptionKmsKeyId
from the previous step.
{
"Version": "2012-10-17",
"Statement": [
{
"Effect": "Allow",
"Action": [
"s3:GetObject"
],
"Resource": ["arn:aws:s3:::CertificateS3BucketName
/*"]
},
{
"Sid": "VisualEditor0",
"Effect": "Allow",
"Action": [
"kms:Decrypt"
],
"Resource": "arn:aws:kms:region
:*:key/EncryptionKmsKeyId
"
},
{
"Effect": "Allow",
"Action": "iam:GetRole",
"Resource": "arn:aws:iam::123456789012:role/acm-role
"
}
]
}
Use the put-role-policy
command to add the additional policies to the acm-role
role, and specify the path to the JSON policy file.
$
aws iam put-role-policy --role-name acm-role --policy-name acm-role-policy --policy-document file://acm-role-policies.json
Step 6: Attach the role to the instance
You must attach the IAM role to the instance to give it permission to use the certificate.
Create a new instance profile named acm-instance-profile
using the create-instance-profile command.
$
aws iam create-instance-profile --instance-profile-name acm-instance-profile
Example output
{
"InstanceProfile": {
"Path": "/",
"InstanceProfileName": "acm-instance-profile",
"InstanceProfileId": "ABCDUS6G56GWDIEXAMPLE",
"Arn": "arn:aws:iam::123456789012:instance-profile/acm-instance-profile",
"CreateDate": "2020-10-14T03:38:08+00:00",
"Roles": []
}
}
Add the acm-role
that you created earlier to the acm-instance-profile
that you just
created. Use the
add-role-to-instance-profile command.
$
aws iam add-role-to-instance-profile --instance-profile-name acm-instance-profile --role-name acm-role
Associate the instance profile with the instance that you launched previously. Use the associate-iam-instance-profile command
and specify the instance profile to attach and the instance to attach it to.
$
aws ec2 --region region
associate-iam-instance-profile --instance-id instance_id
--iam-instance-profile Name=acm-instance-profile
Example output
{
"IamInstanceProfileAssociation":
{
"AssociationId": "iip-assoc-0a411083b4EXAMPLE",
"InstanceId": "i-1234567890abcdef0",
"IamInstanceProfile":
{
"Arn": "arn:aws:iam::123456789012:instance-profile/acm-instance-profile",
"Id": "ABCDUS6G56GWDIEXAMPLE"
},
"State": "associating"
}
}
Step 7: Configure the web server to use ACM for Nitro Enclaves
Configure the NGINX or Apache HTTP web server to use the ACM certificate. Choose the correct procedure
depending on the web server you're using.
- NGINX
-
To configure NGINX
-
SSH into the instance that you launched previously.
-
Nitro Enclaves ships with a sample ACM for Nitro Enclaves configuration file that you can use as a starting
point for your own configuration. To use the sample configuration file, rename the configuration file from
/etc/nitro_enclaves/acm.example.yaml
to /etc/nitro_enclaves/acm.yaml
.
$
sudo mv /etc/nitro_enclaves/acm.example.yaml /etc/nitro_enclaves/acm.yaml
-
Specify the ARN of the certificate that you associated with the IAM role that is attached to the parent
instance. Using your preferred text editor, open /etc/nitro_enclaves/acm.yaml
. In the Acm
section, for certificate_arn
, specify the ARN of the certificate. Save and close the file.
-
Configure NGINX to use the pkcs11 SSL engine by setting the top-level ssl_engine
directive.
Using your preferred text editor, open /etc/nginx/nginx.conf
. Add the following line below
pid /run/nginx.pid;
.
ssl_engine pkcs11;
Example
# For more information on configuration, see:
# * Official English Documentation: http://nginx.org/en/docs/
user nginx;
worker_processes auto;
error_log /var/log/nginx/error.log;
pid /run/nginx.pid;
ssl_engine pkcs11;
-
Enable the TLS server and configure the server to use your certificate.
In /etc/nginx/nginx.conf
, scroll to the bottom of the file and do the following:
-
Uncomment all of the lines below Settings for a TLS enabled server
.
-
In the first block, for server_name
, specify the host name, or the common
name (CN), that you specified when you created the certificate.
-
In the second block, remove the following lines.
ssl_certificate "/etc/pki/nginx/server.crt";
ssl_certificate_key "/etc/pki/nginx/private/server.key";
ssl_ciphers PROFILE=SYSTEM;
And add the following line.
ssl_protocols TLSv1.2;
-
Add the following as a new block below the second block.
# Set this to the stanza path configured in /etc/nitro_enclaves/acm.yaml
include "/etc/pki/nginx/nginx-acm.conf";
The completed section should appear as follows.
# Settings for a TLS enabled server.
#
server {
listen 443 ssl http2;
listen [::]:443 ssl http2;
server_name example.com
;
root /usr/share/nginx/html;
ssl_protocols TLSv1.2;
ssl_session_cache shared:SSL:1m;
ssl_session_timeout 10m;
ssl_prefer_server_ciphers on;
# Set this to the stanza path configured in /etc/nitro_enclaves/acm.yaml
include "/etc/pki/nginx/nginx-acm.conf";
# Load configuration files for the default server block.
include /etc/nginx/default.d/*.conf;
error_page 404 /404.html;
location = /40x.html {
}
error_page 500 502 503 504 /50x.html;
location = /50x.html {
}
}
-
(Amazon Linux 2023) Edit the OpenSSL configuration file
/etc/pki/tls/openssl.cnf
as
follows.
[openssl_init]
...
engines = engine_section
[engine_section]
pkcs11 = pkcs11_section
[ pkcs11_section ]
engine_id = pkcs11
init = 1
...
-
Start the ACM for Nitro Enclaves service and ensure that it starts automatically at instance boot.
$
sudo systemctl start nitro-enclaves-acm.service
$
sudo systemctl enable nitro-enclaves-acm
-
Test that the ACM for Nitro Enclaves is working as expected.
If you used a public certificate, use the following command.
$
curl https://host_name_or_IP
If you used a private certificate, you must add the host name to /etc/hosts
in the following format:
127.0.0.1 host_name
, for example 127.0.0.1 example.com
.
And you must specify the certificate chain to use to validate the certificate. For more information about generating
the certificate chain for your certificate, see Exporting a Private Certificate in
the AWS Certificate Manager User Guide.
$
curl --cacert path_to_pem_file
https://host_name_or_IP
A successful test displays the NGINX index.htm. The ACM for Nitro Enclaves service continuously polls and fetches
the ACMcertificate data and updates NGINX accordingly. It does this by generating an NGINX config snippet and
including it in the main nginx.conf
.
If you renew the ACM certificate by running
acm renew-certificate, the ACM for Nitro Enclaves automatically reconfigures the enclave and the NGINX web server. You
can use the following command to check the log for update announcements and to diagnose possible issues.
$
journalctl -u nitro-enclaves-acm.service
If you encounter any unexpected errors, you can also check the NGINX service log for more
details.
$
journalctl -u nginx.service
- Apache
-
To configure Apache HTTP server
-
SSH into the instance that you launched previously.
-
Nitro Enclaves ships with a sample ACM for Nitro Enclaves configuration file that you can use as a starting
point for your own configuration. Rename the sample ACM for Nitro Enclaves configuration file from
/etc/nitro_enclaves/acm-httpd.example.yaml
to /etc/nitro_enclaves/acm.yaml
.
$
sudo mv /etc/nitro_enclaves/acm-httpd.example.yaml /etc/nitro_enclaves/acm.yaml
-
Specify the ARN of the certificate that you associated with the IAM role that is attached to the parent
instance. Using your preferred text editor, open /etc/nitro_enclaves/acm.yaml
. In the Acm
section, for certificate_arn
, specify the ARN of the certificate. Save and close the file.
-
Using your preferred text editor, open /etc/httpd/conf.d/httpd-acm.conf
. For ServerName
,
specify the host name, or the common name (CN), that you specified when you created the certificate, and configure
the remaining settings as needed. The following is an example of a minimal SSL/TLS configuration:
<VirtualHost *:443>
ServerName www.example.com
SSLEngine on
SSLProtocol -all +TLSv1.2
SSLCertificateKeyFile "/etc/pki/tls/private/localhost.key"
SSLCertificateFile "/etc/pki/tls/certs/localhost.crt"
</VirtualHost>
The SSLCertificateFile
and SSLCertificateKeyFile
entries must
be present in the configuration file. These entries will be automatically updated with the
URIs after starting the ACM for Nitro Enclaves service.
-
Apache HTTP server ships with a configuration file that you can use. To use the configuration file,
rename it from /etc/httpd/conf.d/ssl.conf
to /etc/httpd/conf.d/httpd-acm.conf
.
$
sudo mv /etc/httpd/conf.d/ssl.conf /etc/httpd/conf.d/httpd-acm.conf
-
Start the ACM for Nitro Enclaves service and ensure that it starts automatically at instance boot.
$
sudo systemctl start nitro-enclaves-acm.service
$
sudo systemctl enable nitro-enclaves-acm
-
Test that the ACM for Nitro Enclaves is working as expected.
-
If you used a public certificate, use the following command.
$
curl https://host_name_or_IPM
-
If you used a private certificate, you must add the host name to /etc/hosts
in the
following format: 127.0.0.1 host_name
, for example 127.0.0.1 example.com
.
And you must specify the certificate chain to use to validate the certificate. For more information
about generating the certificate chain for your certificate, see Exporting a Private Certificate
in the AWS Certificate Manager User Guide.
$
curl --cacert path_to_pem_file
https://host_name_or_IP
A successful test displays the Apache HTTP index.htm. The ACM for Nitro Enclaves service continuously polls
and fetches the ACM certificate data and updates Apache accordingly.
If you renew the ACM certificate by running
acm renew-certificate, the ACM for Nitro Enclaves automatically reconfigures the enclave and the Apache
web server. You can use the following command to check the log for update announcements and to diagnose
possible issues.
$
$ journalctl -u nitro-enclaves-acm.service
If you encounter any unexpected errors, you can also check the Apache HTTP
service log for more details.
$
journalctl -u httpd.service
Using multiple certificates
You can also add multiple ACM certificates; one for each PKCS#11 token. For each additional
certificate that you need to add, repeat Step 4: Associate the role with the ACM certificate
in order to associate your IAM role with the additional ACM certificates.
Then to add more PKCS#11 tokens, open /etc/nitro_enclaves/acm.yaml
with your
preferred text editor, and under the token
section, add another
label
block and specify a label name, the ARN of the additional certificate, and
a path for the NGINX stanza or Apache HTTP configuration file respectively. For example, the following snippet shows the format to be used
for two ACM certificates (the initial certificate and two additional certificates):
- NGINX
-
tokens:
# A label for this PKCS#11 token
- label: nginx-acm-token
# Configure a managed token, sourced from an ACM certificate.
source:
Acm:
# The certificate ARN
# Note: this certificate must have been associated with the IAM role assigned to the instance on
# which ACM for Nitro Enclaves is run.
certificate_arn: "arn:aws:acm:us-east-1:123456789012:certificate/d4c3b2a1-e5d0-4d51-95d9-1927fEXAMPLE"
target:
NginxStanza:
# Path to the nginx stanza to be written by the ACM service whenever # the certificate configuration
# changes (e.g. after a certificate renewal). # This file must be included from the main nginx config
# `server` section, as it will contain the TLS nginx configuration directives.
path: /etc/pki/nginx/nginx-acm.conf
# Stanza file owner (i.e. the user nginx is configured to run as).
user: nginx
# PKCS#11 token 2
- label: token_2_name
source:
Acm:
certificate_arn: "certificate_2_ARN
"
target:
NginxStanza:
path: /etc/pki/nginx/nginx-acm-2.conf
user: nginx
- Apache
-
tokens:
# A label for this PKCS#11 token
- label: token_1_name
# Configure a managed token, sourced from an ACM certificate.
source:
Acm:
# The certificate ARN
# Note: this certificate must have been associated with the IAM role assigned to the instance
# on which ACM for Nitro Enclaves is run.
certificate_arn: "certificate_1_ARN
"
target:
Conf:
# Path to the server configuration file to be written by # the ACM service whenever the
# certificate configuration changes (e.g. after a certificate renewal). The SSLCertificateKeyFile
# and optionally the SSLCertificateFile directives shall be populated.
path: /etc/httpd/conf.d/httpd-acm.conf
# Configuration file owner (i.e. the user httpd is configured to run as).
user: apache
# Attestation period (seconds)
refresh_interval_secs: 43200
- label: token_2_name
# Configure a managed token, sourced from an ACM certificate.
source:
Acm:
# The certificate ARN
# Note: this certificate must have been associated with the IAM role assigned to the instance
# on which ACM for Nitro Enclaves is run.
certificate_arn: "certificate_2_ARN
"
target:
Conf:
# Path to the server configuration file to be written by the ACM service whenever the certificate
# configuration changes (e.g. after a certificate renewal). The SSLCertificateKeyFile and optionally
# the SSLCertificateFile directives shall be populated.
path: /etc/httpd/conf.d/httpd-acm-2.conf
# Configuration file owner (i.e. the user httpd is configured to run as).
user: apache
# Attestation repeat period (seconds)
refresh_interval_secs: 43200
You also need to update the /etc/nginx/nginx.conf
configuration (NGINX) or the
/etc/httpd/conf.d/httpd-acm.conf
configuration file (Apache) to include the additional
ACM certificates. For more information about configuring NGINX for multiple domains and about
different use cases, refer to the NGINX documentation
or Apache HTTP server documentation.
After you have completed the necessary configuration, run the following command to restart the Start the ACM
for Nitro Enclaves service.
$
sudo systemctl restart nitro-enclaves-acm.service