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Command line CA, including bootable Root CA medium and Secret Sharing

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CLCA command line CA script

Copyright (c) 2004 - 2018 Martin Bartosch, WhiteRabbitSecurity GmbH

This software is distributed under the GNU General Public License - see the accompanying LICENSE file for more details.

Introduction

This is a collection of tools that allow for basic PKI operations such as Sub CA certificate issuance (signing certificate requests), certificate revocation and CRL issuance. The script was originally designed to be used for a Root CA, but may also be used for lower level CAs or even end entity certificates as well.

CA private keys can be held either in encrypted files (encrypted either with a simple passphrase or using Shamir's Secret Sharing) or stored in an HSM.

The script was successfully tested with

  • Thales nCipher nShield HSM
  • Gemalto SafeNet Luna SA HSM

Please note that this script does not support concurrent use of multiple sessions. Unpredictable behaviour must be expected if two instances of the CA script are run concurrently.

Quick start: CA creation

You can handle an arbitrary number of CA instances using this script.

  • For each CA create a new top level directory and change into this directory. Within this directory create an 'etc' directory and copy the contents of the sample etc directory from the CLCA distribution.

  • Modify CA configuration etc/clca.cfg to reflect your needs. Set ENGINE as required for HSM or software CA support.

  • Modify etc/openssl.cnf according to your CA policy and certificate profile (see "Configuration")

  • Create root key (see "Root key generation")

  • Create self-signed CA certificate OR

  • Create CA certificate request, export it to higher level CA and import the certified CA certificate

Root key generation

Only required for nCipher HSM support:

  • Install nCipher module and software.
  • Create a Security World
  • Create an administrator card set
  • Create an operator card set that protects your root key
  • Create a root key using generatekey2 hwcrhk

Only required for Gemalto SafeNet Luna SA HSM support:

  • Install HSM drivers
  • Establish trust link to Luna SA HSM
  • Obtain Gamalto SafeNet support document DOW4073 (or newer document containing the OpenSSL gem engine)
  • Install OpenSSL Engine and sautil command line tool

Only required for software CA support with simple passphrase:

  • create a private directory in $CA_HOME
  • adapt the RSA key name in clca.cfg
  • run openssl genrsa -des3 $CA_HOME/private/<keyname>

See README.keyceremony-shared-interactive.md for an example using Secret Sharing.

Configuration

Edit etc/clca.cfg and etc/openssl.cnf to reflect your needs, particularly certificate profile and other policy settings.

Please note that CA initialization takes care of setting the proper paths in openssl.cnf, so no manual modification is needed for this section.

Basic usage and getting help

The CA system is contained in one single script (bin/clca). If called without arguments it prints an overview on the supported commands. In order to get online help about a certain command use

$ clca help COMMAND or $ clca COMMAND --help

PIN entry

If a HSM is used the PIN entry is usually handled by a preload command that calls OpenSSL in turn. Thus the configuration variable HSM_PRELOAD must set to the appropriate executable that allows to open the HSM for private key operations.

CA initialization

Before the system an be used the CA must be created. This is necessary only once.

For initial setup of a new CA the necessary steps are:

Verify if the etc/clca.cfg and etc/openssl.cnf settings are OK.

Run

$ clca initialize --startdate DATESPEC --enddate DATESPEC

The script performes several sanity checks and refuses to overwrite an existing CA. If the CA certificates have been manually removed from the ca/ directory the existing CA is automatically backed up to the directory attic/ and a new CA is created.

Startdate and enddate are specified in UTC time zone. Note that the year must be specified with two digits only!

Date/time may be specified in truncated form, omitting any number of "right-hand side" date/time components (e. g. "YYMM").

Run clca help datespec for more details on the date specification.

Unless you are using a HSM you will be prompted to enter the PINs protecting the CA private key during the creation of the CA.

Once a CA has been set up, be sure to backup the CA key and the certificate database. If the key is lost no new certificates or CRLs can be issued.

Signing certificate requests

Call

$ clca certify --profile PROFILE [--startdate DATESPEC --enddate DATESPEC] <request file>

in order to certify a PKCS #10 request. The request format (DER/PEM) is automatically detected.

Please note that the --profile is mandatory and must reference a section in the openssl.cnf file which contains an x509_extensions reference and does NOT contain a distinguished_name or crl_extensions reference.

It is possible to override the Subject DN and add SubjectAlternativeNames to the request. Refer to the command help text for details.

The startdate and enddate options are optional and are specified in UTC time zone. Note that the year must be specified with two digits only!

Date/time may be specified in truncated form, omitting any number of "right-hand side" date/time components (e. g. "YYMM").

Run clca help datespec for more details on the date specification.

If no startdate/enddate is specified the default validity from the profile is used.

Omitting startdate and enddate is only recommended for end entity certificates, use the explicit validity for any certificate that is used as a CA.

The resulting certificate is placed in the certs/ directory. A copy of the most current certificate is also written to newcert.pem in the current working directory.

Revoking certificates

In order to revoke a certificate call

$ clca revoke <serial number>

This will identify the certificate in the certificate database (certs/ directory) and mark the certificate as revoked.

Listing certificates

Calling

$ clca list <filter>

lists all certificates matching the specified filter. Filter may be empty or either 'valid' or 'revoked'. If no filter is specified, all certificates are printed to standard out,

Issuing CRLs

For creating a new CRL run

$ clca issue_crl

This will create a new CRL and write it to the directory crls/YYYYMMDDHHMMSS.crl. (The capital letters are replaced with the current time stamp.)

The CRL validity is configured in the etc/openssl.cnf file.

CA Key Login

If multiple clca commands should be executed in a row (e. g. for signing multiple certificates) it is possible to enter a subshell in which the CA key passphrase is cached.

Running

$ clca login

will first ask for the CA key passphrase and then drop into the subshell. It is possible to execute any number of clca commands which require the CA passphrase without having to enter the passphrase again.

Type exit to leave this shell.

Checking software integrity

Integrity checks of the configuration and all required external programs can be performed by running

$ clca check

This command will report individual check sums for the configuration files and one compound checksum over all external UNIX utilities used by the script.

Creating CA backups

At any time it is possible to create a snapshot of the current CA status, including the certificate database, revocation state and all related data (including private keys if no HSM is used).

To create such a backup simply run

$ clca backup [filename]

This will create a gzip compressed tar backup in the current directory named YYYYMMDDHHMMSS-ca-backup.tar.gz if no filename is specified, otherwise it will create the specified file.

This backup contains all information to recover the CA to the state it was in when the backup command was run. To recover to this point simply erase the $CA_HOME directory and extract the desired backup archive. This will restore configuration file, ca executable and certificate database.