/easy-ca

OpenSSL wrapper scripts for managing basic CA functions

Primary LanguageShellMozilla Public License 2.0MPL-2.0

easy-ca

OpenSSL wrapper scripts for managing basic CA functions

A suite of bash scripts for automating very basic OpenSSL Certificate Authority operations:

  • Creating Root CAs
  • Creating Intermediate Signing CAs
  • Creating Server certificates (with optional subjectAltNames)
  • Creating Client certificates
  • Revoking certificates and maintaining CRLs

Usage

Create a new Root CA

The create-root-ca script will initialize a new Root CA directory structure. This script can be run directly from the source repo or from within an existing Easy CA installation. The CA is self-contained within the specified directory tree. It is portable and can be stored on removable media for security.

create-root-ca -d $ROOT_CA_DIR

create-root-ca will prompt for the basic DN configuration to use as defaults for this CA. Optionally, you can edit defaults.conf to set this information in advance. The new CA is now ready for use. The CA key, certificate, and CRL are available for review:

$ROOT_CA_DIR/ca/ca.crt
$ROOT_CA_DIR/private/ca.key
$ROOT_CA_DIR/crl/ca.crl

(Optional) Create an Intermediate Signing CA

Running create-signing-ca from within a Root CA installation will initialize a new Intermediate CA directory structure, indepedent and separate from the Root CA. A Root CA may issue multiple Intermediate CAs.

$ROOT_CA_DIR/bin/create-signing-ca -d $SIGNING_CA_DIR

create-signing-ca will prompt for basic DN configuration, using the Root CA configuration as defaults. The Intermediate Signing CA is now ready for use. The CA key, certificate, chain file, and CRL are available for review:

$SIGNING_CA_DIR/ca/ca.crt
$SIGNING_CA_DIR/ca/chain.pem
$SIGNING_CA_DIR/private/ca.key
$SIGNING_CA_DIR/crl/ca.crl

Using the Created Certificate Authority

After the Certificate Authority has been created, the scripts should be run on the created CA directory (At the first run the directory must no exist). For example:

create-root-ca -d /opt/CA
cd /opt/CA/bin
create-client -c user1@bogus.com -n user1

Issue a Server Certificate

Running create-server from within any CA installation will issue a new server (serverAuth) certificate:

$CA_DIR/bin/create-server -s fqdn.domain.com

Optionally, you can specify one (or more) subjectAltNames to accompany the new certificate:

$CA_DIR/bin/create-server -s fqdn.domain.com -a alt1.domain.com -a alt2.domain.com

create-server will prompt for basic DN configuration, using the CA configuration as defaults. After the script is completed, the server certificate, key, and CSR are available for review:

$CA_DIR/certs/fqdn-domain-com.server.crt
$CA_DIR/private/fqdn-domain-com.server.key
$CA_DIR/csr/fqdn-domain-com.server.csr

Issue a Client Certificate

Running create-client from within any CA installation will issue a new client (clientAuth) certificate:

$CA_DIR/bin/create-client -c user@domain.com -n certname

create-client will prompt for basic DN configuration, using the CA configuration as defaults. After the script is completed, the client certificate, key, and CSR are available for review:

$CA_DIR/certs/user-domain-com.client.crt
$CA_DIR/private/user-domain-com.client.key
$CA_DIR/csr/user-domain-com.client.csr

The older create-client-o script will also create a client certificate but without the need of specifing a certificate name:

$CA_DIR/bin/create-client-o -c user@domain.com 

Revoke a Certificate

Running revoke-cert from within a CA installation allows you to revoke a certificate issued by that CA and update the CRL:

For Server certificates:

$CA_DIR/bin/revoke-cert -c $CA_DIR/certs/fqdn-domain-com.server.crt

For Client certificates:

$CA_DIR/bin/revoke-cert -c $CA_DIR/certs/certificate.client.crt

revoke-cert will prompt for the revocation reason. After the script is completed, the server CRL is updated and available for review:

$CA_DIR/crl/ca.crl

Caveats

These scripts are very simple, and make some hard-coded assumptions about behavior and configuration:

  • Root and Intermediate CAs have a 3652-day lifetime
  • Root and Intermediate CAs have 4096-bit RSA keys
  • Root and Intermediate CA keys are always encrypted
  • Only one level of Intermediate CA is supported
  • Client and Server certificates have a 730-day lifetime
  • Client and Server certificates have 4096-bit RSA keys and SHA512
  • Client and Server keys are never encrypted
  • There is no wrapper for renewing certificates