Openssl Operations: Difference between revisions
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==Inspect a Certificate Signing Request (CSR)== | ==Inspect a Certificate Signing Request (CSR)== | ||
<syntaxhighlight lang='bash'> | |||
openssl req -in ./test-csr.pem -noout -text | |||
</syntaxhighlight> | |||
==<span id='Generate_the_Digitally-Signed_Certificate'></span>Generate the Digitally-Signed Certificate from CSR== | ==<span id='Generate_the_Digitally-Signed_Certificate'></span>Generate the Digitally-Signed Certificate from CSR== | ||
The CSR submitted by the user will be used to generate a digitally-signed certificate. The Certificate Authority's private key will be used to sign the certificate. This operation can be used to generate a self-signed certificate, as part of the [[Public_Key_Security#Send_the_Certificate_Signing_Request_to_CA|procedure to generate digitally signed certificates]]. | The CSR submitted by the user will be used to generate a digitally-signed certificate. The Certificate Authority's private key will be used to sign the certificate. This operation can be used to generate a self-signed certificate, as part of the [[Public_Key_Security#Send_the_Certificate_Signing_Request_to_CA|procedure to generate digitally signed certificates]]. | ||
<syntaxhighlight lang='bash'> | |||
openssl x509 -req -days 365 -in ./test-csr.pem -signkey ./ca-private-key.pem -out ./test-certificate.pem | |||
</syntaxhighlight> | |||
==Self-Signed Certificates== | ==Self-Signed Certificates== | ||
Note that there is no need to create a CSR if all that is needed is a [[Public_Key_Security#Self-Signed_Certificate|self-signed certificate]]. The procedure to create a self-signed certificate, based on the private key, as part of the [[Public_Key_Security#Send_the_Certificate_Signing_Request_to_CA|procedure to generate digitally signed certificates]]. | Note that there is no need to create a CSR if all that is needed is a [[Public_Key_Security#Self-Signed_Certificate|self-signed certificate]]. The procedure to create a self-signed certificate, based on the private key, as part of the [[Public_Key_Security#Send_the_Certificate_Signing_Request_to_CA|procedure to generate digitally signed certificates]]. | ||
<syntaxhighlight lang='bash'> | |||
openssl req -new -x509 -days 365 -key ./server-private-key.pem -out ./self-signed-server-certificate.pem -subj "/C=US/L=Menlo Park/O=Nova Ordis LLC/CN=www.novaordis.com" | |||
</syntaxhighlight> | |||
Note that -subj is optional, if omitted, the data will be provided at stdin. | Note that -subj is optional, if omitted, the data will be provided at stdin. | ||
Latest revision as of 02:03, 28 February 2024
External
Internal
Generate a Public/Private Key Pair
Generate an RSA Private Key
This is the procedure to generate a public/private key pair. The keys can be further used in the procedure to generate digitally signed certificates, or even to configure ssh, though ssh has its own procedure to generate key pairs, which produces equivalent keys in the same PEM format.
openssl genrsa -out <keyfile-name>.pem <key-lenght>
openssl genrsa -out ./server-private-key.pem 2048
The command generates a RSA or DSA key of specified length in PEM format.
For more general considerations on private keys, see:
Inspect an RSA Private Key
openssl rsa -text -in ./server-private-key.pem
The output provides, between others, the length of the key.
Extract the Matching Public RSA Key from a Private Key
The matching public key can be always extracted from the private key.
openssl rsa -pubout -in ./server-private-key.pem -out ./server-public-key.pem
Note that the private key is protected by a password, the tool will require password at stdin. The key is written in a PKCS8 PEM format.
⚠️ The public key thus generated cannot be directed used with OpenSSH, for example in an authorized_key
file, it has to be converted to a compatible OpenSSH format with ssh-keygen
:
Generate a DSA Private Key
DSA key generation is a two-step process: the DSA parameters are created in the first step, and the key in the second:
openssl dsaparam -genkey 2048 | openssl dsa -out test-pvtkey.pem -aes128
Generate a Private Key
openssl genpkey -algorithm RSA
Get a Certificate Signed by a CA
Create a Certificate Signing Request (CSR)
This procedure generates a Certificate Signing Request (CSR) that should be sent to the certificate authority for signature. This step is part of the procedure to generate digitally signed certificates. The CSR command (openssl req) may use an existing private key, previously generated with openssl genrsa, or it can create a new private key.
If you want a field to be empty during the interactive phase, provide a single dot (.), rather then just hit Return. If you do the latter, OpenSSL will populate the corresponding field with the default value.
The challenge password is an optional field that was intended for use during certificate revocation as a way of identifying the original entity that had requested the certificate. If entered, the password will be included verbatim in the CSR and communicated to the CA. It’s rare to find a CA that relies on this field, so it's best not to include it. Having a challenge password does not increase the security of the CSR in any way. Further, this field should not be confused with the key passphrase, which is a separate feature.
To use an existing private key:
openssl req -new -key ./test-pk.pem -out ./test-csr.pem
The new CSR will be generated in PEM format as ./test-csr.pem
.
To create a new private key at the time of creation of the certificate signing request, use the following command.
Note that the command will require private key password, which must be longer than four characters. The password can be provided interactively, during the certificate request creation process, or it can be specified in a file (no newline) and then provided to the command with -passout file:./password-file.txt
. Provide a long, random password, and then chmod
the password file to make it readable only by you. When the certificate is used, the tools using is usually offer the option of reading the password from the file. The password can be provided in-line with the -passin
option.
openssl req -new -newkey rsa:2048 -sha256 -passout file:./password-file.txt -keyout ./test-pk.pem -out ./test-csr.pem
The new CSR will be generated in PEM format as ./test-csr.pem and a new private key will be written, also in PEM format as ./test-pk.pem.
Inspect a Certificate Signing Request (CSR)
openssl req -in ./test-csr.pem -noout -text
Generate the Digitally-Signed Certificate from CSR
The CSR submitted by the user will be used to generate a digitally-signed certificate. The Certificate Authority's private key will be used to sign the certificate. This operation can be used to generate a self-signed certificate, as part of the procedure to generate digitally signed certificates.
openssl x509 -req -days 365 -in ./test-csr.pem -signkey ./ca-private-key.pem -out ./test-certificate.pem
Self-Signed Certificates
Note that there is no need to create a CSR if all that is needed is a self-signed certificate. The procedure to create a self-signed certificate, based on the private key, as part of the procedure to generate digitally signed certificates.
openssl req -new -x509 -days 365 -key ./server-private-key.pem -out ./self-signed-server-certificate.pem -subj "/C=US/L=Menlo Park/O=Nova Ordis LLC/CN=www.novaordis.com"
Note that -subj is optional, if omitted, the data will be provided at stdin.
Inspect the Certificate
Certificates can be displayed with the openssl 'x509' command:
openssl x509 -noout -text -in ./server-certificate.pem
Options
-noout
Skip displaying the certificate in base64 format.
Obtain a Server Certificate
openssl s_client -connect nexus-cicd.apps.openshift.novaordis.io:443
The response includes the server's certificate:
[...] Certificate chain 0 s:/CN=*.apps.openshift.novaordis.io [...] --- Server certificate -----BEGIN CERTIFICATE----- MIIDRTCCAi2gAwIBAgIBEjANBgkqhkiG9w0BAQsFADAmMSQwIgYDVQQDDBtvcGVu [...] 65vqsz8NTtde1vJ5qW31Af0pO9YehiSRfA== -----END CERTIFICATE----- subject=/CN=*.apps.openshift.novaordis.io [...]
Key Format Conversions
PKCS#12 to PEM
The following command will convert PKCS#12 keys to PEM.
openssl pkcs12 -in ./test-pvtkey.p12 -out ./test-pvtkey.pem
Generate a HMAC
Generates a HMAC using an MD5 digest algorithm:
echo -n "some value to be hashed and encrypted" | openssl dgst -md5 -hmac 'some-secret-key'
Generate an MD5 Hash
Generates the MD5 hash in hexadecimal format (default)
echo -n "some value to be hashed" | openssl dgst -md5 [-hex]
When using echo, make sure not to send the automatically generated "\n" to OpenSSL.
Generate the MD5 hash in binary format, which can optionally be base64 encoded:
echo -n "some value to be hashed" | openssl dgst -md5 -binary
echo -n "some value to be hashed" | openssl dgst -md5 -binary | openssl base64
Encrypt/Decrypt
To encrypt:
openssl aes-256-cbc -pbkdf2 -in cleartext.txt | base64 > ciphertext-base64.txt
The password will be requested at the console.
-pbkdf2 triggers using PBKDF2 (Password-Based Key Derivation Function 2) algorithm.
To decrypt:
cat ciphertext-base64.txt | base64 -D | openssl aes-256-cbc -pbkdf2 -d > cleartext.txt