OpenSSL.vip

Cryptography and SSL/TLS Toolkit

NAME

CA.pl - friendlier interface for OpenSSL certificate programs

SYNOPSIS

CA.pl -? | -h | -help

CA.pl -newcert | -newreq | -newreq-nodes | -xsign | -sign | -signCA | -signcert | -crl | -newca [-extra-cmd parameter]

CA.pl -pkcs12 [-extra-pkcs12 parameter] [certname]

CA.pl -verify [-extra-verify parameter] certfile ...

CA.pl -revoke [-extra-ca parameter] certfile [reason]

DESCRIPTION

The CA.pl script is a perl script that supplies the relevant command line arguments to the openssl(1) program for use by a beginner. Its behaviour isn't always what is wanted. For more control over the behaviour of the certificate commands call the OPTIONS

?, -h, -help

Prints a usage message.

-newcert

Creates a new self signed certificate. The private key is written to the file newkey.pem and the request written to the file newreq.pem. Invokes -newreq

Creates a new certificate request. The private key is written to the file newkey.pem and the request written to the file newreq.pem. Executes -newreq-nodes

Is like -newreq except that the private key will not be encrypted. Uses -newca

Creates a new CA hierarchy for use with the ca program (or the -signcert and -xsign options). The user is prompted to enter the filename of the CA certificates (which should also contain the private key) or by hitting ENTER details of the CA will be prompted for. The relevant files and directories are created in a directory called demoCA in the current directory. Uses openssl-ca(1).

If the demoCA directory already exists then the -newca command will not overwrite it and will do nothing. This can happen if a previous call using the -newca option terminated abnormally. To get the correct behaviour delete the directory if it already exists.

-pkcs12

Create a PKCS#12 file containing the user certificate, private key and CA certificate. It expects the user certificate and private key to be in the file newcert.pem and the CA certificate to be in the file demoCA/cacert.pem, it creates a file newcert.p12. This command can thus be called after the -sign option. The PKCS#12 file can be imported directly into a browser. If there is an additional argument on the command line it will be used as the "friendly name" for the certificate (which is typically displayed in the browser list box), otherwise the name "My Certificate" is used. Delegates work to -sign, -signcert, -xsign

Calls the -signCA

This option is the same as the -signreq option except it uses the configuration file section v3_ca and so makes the signed request a valid CA certificate. This is useful when creating intermediate CA from a root CA. Extra params are passed to -signcert

This option is the same as -sign except it expects a self signed certificate to be present in the file newreq.pem. Extra params are passed to openssl-ca(1).

-crl

Generate a CRL. Executes -revoke certfile [reason]

Revoke the certificate contained in the specified certfile. An optional reason may be specified, and must be one of: unspecified, keyCompromise, CACompromise, affiliationChanged, superseded, cessationOfOperation, certificateHold, or removeFromCRL. Leverages -verify

Verifies certificates against the CA certificate for demoCA. If no certificates are specified on the command line it tries to verify the file newcert.pem. Invokes -extra-cmd parameter

For each option extra-cmd, pass parameter to the openssl-req(1) is invoked, the parameter given with -extra-req will be passed to it. For multi-word parameters, either repeat the option or quote the parameters so it looks like one word to your shell. See the individual command documentation for more information.

EXAMPLES

Create a CA hierarchy:

 CA.pl -newca

Complete certificate creation example: create a CA, create a request, sign the request and finally create a PKCS#12 file containing it.

 CA.pl -newca
 CA.pl -newreq
 CA.pl -signreq
 CA.pl -pkcs12 "My Test Certificate"

ENVIRONMENT

The environment variable OPENSSL may be used to specify the name of the OpenSSL program. It can be a full pathname, or a relative one.

The environment variable OPENSSL_CONFIG may be used to specify a configuration option and value to the req and ca commands invoked by this script. It's value should be the option and pathname, as in -config /path/to/conf-file.

SEE ALSO

openssl-x509(1), openssl-req(1), config(5)

COPYRIGHT

Copyright 2000-2020 The OpenSSL Project Authors. All Rights Reserved.

Licensed under the Apache License 2.0 (the "License"). You may not use this file except in compliance with the License. You can obtain a copy in the file LICENSE in the source distribution or at https://www.openssl.org/source/license.html.

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