Nenhuma descrição

orb li dd9e5cc259 Support for extension in csr 6 anos atrás
api 43dc320c02 Fix golint checks 6 anos atrás
auth 7e13f60773 Inserted auth-key whitespace stripping after ReadFile 6 anos atrás
bundler cb81b525c6 Fix remaining bundler tests 6 anos atrás
certdb bfcbf295f1 Revert accidental sqlite changes 6 anos atrás
certinfo b9ecf554cc Format SKI properly in certinfo (#819) 7 anos atrás
cli 33259b0d21 Add basic stats interface 6 anos atrás
cmd 9f4e721491 cfssljson: fixes parsing of bundle and root certificates (#842) 6 anos atrás
config 793fa93522 fix spelling mistake in config key content commitment 6 anos atrás
crl addf672bed CRL: Add a method for generating a CRL from the local DB 7 anos atrás
crypto 6ceae7ba3a fix dead-url for crypto/pkcs7/pkcs7.go 7 anos atrás
csr dd9e5cc259 Support for extension in csr 6 anos atrás
doc 7d88da830a Update documentation for sums in newcert endpoint. 7 anos atrás
errors d0cbfb546d errors: add OCSPError case to errors.Wrap. 6 anos atrás
helpers 6aeb6e3882 Add helpers for handling Ed25519 key (un)marshalling 6 anos atrás
info 71299729be Clean up some of the structures around info. 9 anos atrás
initca 3d237bf2a0 fix spelling in comments 6 anos atrás
log e5661b7acb remove flag definition in init() 8 anos atrás
multiroot 4bfe5353de fix unused value assignments caught by static checker (#718) 7 anos atrás
ocsp 33259b0d21 Add basic stats interface 6 anos atrás
revoke 0b5b47f07c TUN-1126: Add a VerifyCertErr method which shows why verification failed 6 anos atrás
scan c285e6cd98 Remove unnecessary refernce to internal/testenv 6 anos atrás
script 618ef555b9 Enabling build for ppc64le binaries 7 anos atrás
selfsign 1b0507f6a1 Use stdlib CSR CheckSignature (#803) 7 anos atrás
signer f6d8d0b8f4 Remove remnants of PKCS #11 support in README.md and comments 6 anos atrás
testdata c797d34f6a Add field to API docs and testdata. 9 anos atrás
transport 4e76834e51 Remove unused backoff files 6 anos atrás
ubiquity 3d237bf2a0 fix spelling in comments 6 anos atrás
vendor 3952cdb672 Fix Travis CI builds 6 anos atrás
whitelist 06c1874784 Fix staticcheck failures. 8 anos atrás
.dockerignore 055a97a5da build to the dist folder 9 anos atrás
.gitignore c71f2083af Remove go vet and staticcheck checks 6 anos atrás
.travis.yml 0019845322 Bump Go versions 6 anos atrás
BUILDING.md a1037dfad4 Update docker build instructions. 7 anos atrás
CHANGELOG 23e784e12c Adding a CHANGELOG. 9 anos atrás
Dockerfile 27b05afbb5 Checkout cfssl-trust in Dockerfile. 6 anos atrás
Dockerfile.build 39edc8b9d2 Dockerfiles: update golang to 1.8.5 7 anos atrás
Dockerfile.minimal b5accc70ea Update Dockerfile.minimal 6 anos atrás
Gopkg.lock 3952cdb672 Fix Travis CI builds 6 anos atrás
Gopkg.toml 3952cdb672 Fix Travis CI builds 6 anos atrás
LICENSE edc6592652 Initial import. 10 anos atrás
README.md f6d8d0b8f4 Remove remnants of PKCS #11 support in README.md and comments 6 anos atrás
test.sh 3952cdb672 Fix Travis CI builds 6 anos atrás

README.md

CFSSL

Build Status Coverage Status GoDoc

CloudFlare's PKI/TLS toolkit

CFSSL is CloudFlare's PKI/TLS swiss army knife. It is both a command line tool and an HTTP API server for signing, verifying, and bundling TLS certificates. It requires Go 1.8+ to build.

Note that certain linux distributions have certain algorithms removed (RHEL-based distributions in particular), so the golang from the official repositories will not work. Users of these distributions should install go manually to install CFSSL.

CFSSL consists of:

  • a set of packages useful for building custom TLS PKI tools
  • the cfssl program, which is the canonical command line utility using the CFSSL packages.
  • the multirootca program, which is a certificate authority server that can use multiple signing keys.
  • the mkbundle program is used to build certificate pool bundles.
  • the cfssljson program, which takes the JSON output from the cfssl and multirootca programs and writes certificates, keys, CSRs, and bundles to disk.

Building

See BUILDING

Installation

Installation requires a working Go 1.8+ installation and a properly set GOPATH.

$ go get -u github.com/cloudflare/cfssl/cmd/cfssl

will download and build the CFSSL tool, installing it in $GOPATH/bin/cfssl.

To install any of the other utility programs that are in this repo (for instance cfssljson in this case):

$ go get -u github.com/cloudflare/cfssl/cmd/cfssljson

This will download and build the CFSSLJSON tool, installing it in $GOPATH/bin/.

And to simply install all of the programs in this repo:

$ go get -u github.com/cloudflare/cfssl/cmd/...

This will download, build, and install all of the utility programs (including cfssl, cfssljson, and mkbundle among others) into the $GOPATH/bin/ directory.

Using the Command Line Tool

The cfssl command line tool takes a command to specify what operation it should carry out:

   sign             signs a certificate
   bundle           build a certificate bundle
   genkey           generate a private key and a certificate request
   gencert          generate a private key and a certificate
   serve            start the API server
   version          prints out the current version
   selfsign         generates a self-signed certificate
   print-defaults   print default configurations

Use cfssl [command] -help to find out more about a command. The version command takes no arguments.

Signing

cfssl sign [-ca cert] [-ca-key key] [-hostname comma,separated,hostnames] csr [subject]

The csr is the client's certificate request. The -ca and -ca-key flags are the CA's certificate and private key, respectively. By default, they are ca.pem and ca_key.pem. The -hostname is a comma separated hostname list that overrides the DNS names and IP address in the certificate SAN extension. For example, assuming the CA's private key is in /etc/ssl/private/cfssl_key.pem and the CA's certificate is in /etc/ssl/certs/cfssl.pem, to sign the cloudflare.pem certificate for cloudflare.com:

cfssl sign -ca     /etc/ssl/certs/cfssl.pem       \
           -ca-key /etc/ssl/private/cfssl_key.pem \
           -hostname cloudflare.com               \
           ./cloudflare.pem

It is also possible to specify CSR with the -csr flag. By doing so, flag values take precedence and will overwrite the argument.

The subject is an optional file that contains subject information that should be used in place of the information from the CSR. It should be a JSON file as follows:

{
    "CN": "example.com",
    "names": [
        {
            "C":  "US",
            "L":  "San Francisco",
            "O":  "Internet Widgets, Inc.",
            "OU": "WWW",
            "ST": "California"
        }
    ]
}

N.B. As of Go 1.7, self-signed certificates will not include the AKI.

Bundling

cfssl bundle [-ca-bundle bundle] [-int-bundle bundle] \
             [-metadata metadata_file] [-flavor bundle_flavor] \
             -cert certificate_file [-key key_file]

The bundles are used for the root and intermediate certificate pools. In addition, platform metadata is specified through -metadata. The bundle files, metadata file (and auxiliary files) can be found at:

    https://github.com/cloudflare/cfssl_trust

Specify PEM-encoded client certificate and key through -cert and -key respectively. If key is specified, the bundle will be built and verified with the key. Otherwise the bundle will be built without a private key. Instead of file path, use - for reading certificate PEM from stdin. It is also acceptable that the certificate file should contain a (partial) certificate bundle.

Specify bundling flavor through -flavor. There are three flavors: optimal to generate a bundle of shortest chain and most advanced cryptographic algorithms, ubiquitous to generate a bundle of most widely acceptance across different browsers and OS platforms, and force to find an acceptable bundle which is identical to the content of the input certificate file.

Alternatively, the client certificate can be pulled directly from a domain. It is also possible to connect to the remote address through -ip.

cfssl bundle [-ca-bundle bundle] [-int-bundle bundle] \
             [-metadata metadata_file] [-flavor bundle_flavor] \
             -domain domain_name [-ip ip_address]

The bundle output form should follow the example:

{
    "bundle": "CERT_BUNDLE_IN_PEM",
    "crt": "LEAF_CERT_IN_PEM",
    "crl_support": true,
    "expires": "2015-12-31T23:59:59Z",
    "hostnames": ["example.com"],
    "issuer": "ISSUER CERT SUBJECT",
    "key": "KEY_IN_PEM",
    "key_size": 2048,
    "key_type": "2048-bit RSA",
    "ocsp": ["http://ocsp.example-ca.com"],
    "ocsp_support": true,
    "root": "ROOT_CA_CERT_IN_PEM",
    "signature": "SHA1WithRSA",
    "subject": "LEAF CERT SUBJECT",
    "status": {
        "rebundled": false,
        "expiring_SKIs": [],
        "untrusted_root_stores": [],
        "messages": [],
        "code": 0
    }
}

Generating certificate signing request and private key

cfssl genkey csr.json

To generate a private key and corresponding certificate request, specify the key request as a JSON file. This file should follow the form:

{
    "hosts": [
        "example.com",
        "www.example.com"
    ],
    "key": {
        "algo": "rsa",
        "size": 2048
    },
    "names": [
        {
            "C":  "US",
            "L":  "San Francisco",
            "O":  "Internet Widgets, Inc.",
            "OU": "WWW",
            "ST": "California"
        }
    ]
}

Generating self-signed root CA certificate and private key

cfssl genkey -initca csr.json | cfssljson -bare ca

To generate a self-signed root CA certificate, specify the key request as a JSON file in the same format as in 'genkey'. Three PEM-encoded entities will appear in the output: the private key, the csr, and the self-signed certificate.

Generating a remote-issued certificate and private key.

cfssl gencert -remote=remote_server [-hostname=comma,separated,hostnames] csr.json

This calls genkey but has a remote CFSSL server sign and issue the certificate. You may use -hostname to override certificate SANs.

Generating a local-issued certificate and private key.

cfssl gencert -ca cert -ca-key key [-hostname=comma,separated,hostnames] csr.json

This generates and issues a certificate and private key from a local CA via a JSON request. You may use -hostname to override certificate SANs.

Updating an OCSP responses file with a newly issued certificate

cfssl ocspsign -ca cert -responder key -responder-key key -cert cert \
 | cfssljson -bare -stdout >> responses

This will generate an OCSP response for the cert and add it to the responses file. You can then pass responses to ocspserve to start an OCSP server.

Starting the API Server

CFSSL comes with an HTTP-based API server; the endpoints are documented in doc/api/intro.txt. The server is started with the serve command:

cfssl serve [-address address] [-ca cert] [-ca-bundle bundle] \
            [-ca-key key] [-int-bundle bundle] [-int-dir dir] [-port port] \
            [-metadata file] [-remote remote_host] [-config config] \
            [-responder cert] [-responder-key key] [-db-config db-config]

Address and port default to "127.0.0.1:8888". The -ca and -ca-key arguments should be the PEM-encoded certificate and private key to use for signing; by default, they are ca.pem and ca_key.pem. The -ca-bundle and -int-bundle should be the certificate bundles used for the root and intermediate certificate pools, respectively. These default to ca-bundle.crt and int-bundle.crt respectively. If the -remote option is specified, all signature operations will be forwarded to the remote CFSSL.

-int-dir specifies an intermediates directory. -metadata is a file for root certificate presence. The content of the file is a json dictionary (k,v) such that each key k is an SHA-1 digest of a root certificate while value v is a list of key store filenames. -config specifies a path to a configuration file. -responder and -responder-key are the certificate and the private key for the OCSP responder, respectively.

The amount of logging can be controlled with the -loglevel option. This comes after the serve command:

cfssl serve -loglevel 2

The levels are:

  • 0 - DEBUG
  • 1 - INFO (this is the default level)
  • 2 - WARNING
  • 3 - ERROR
  • 4 - CRITICAL

The multirootca

The cfssl program can act as an online certificate authority, but it only uses a single key. If multiple signing keys are needed, the multirootca program can be used. It only provides the sign, authsign and info endpoints. The documentation contains instructions for configuring and running the CA.

The mkbundle Utility

mkbundle is used to build the root and intermediate bundles used in verifying certificates. It can be installed with

go get -u github.com/cloudflare/cfssl/cmd/mkbundle

It takes a collection of certificates, checks for CRL revocation (OCSP support is planned for the next release) and expired certificates, and bundles them into one file. It takes directories of certificates and certificate files (which may contain multiple certificates). For example, if the directory intermediates contains a number of intermediate certificates:

mkbundle -f int-bundle.crt intermediates

will check those certificates and combine valid certificates into a single int-bundle.crt file.

The -f flag specifies an output name; -loglevel specifies the verbosity of the logging (using the same loglevels as above), and -nw controls the number of revocation-checking workers.

The cfssljson Utility

Most of the output from cfssl is in JSON. The cfssljson utility can take this output and split it out into separate key, certificate, CSR, and bundle files as appropriate. The tool takes a single flag, -f, that specifies the input file, and an argument that specifies the base name for the files produced. If the input filename is - (which is the default), cfssljson reads from standard input. It maps keys in the JSON file to filenames in the following way:

  • if cert or certificate is specified, basename.pem will be produced.
  • if key or private_key is specified, basename-key.pem will be produced.
  • if csr or certificate_request is specified, basename.csr will be produced.
  • if bundle is specified, basename-bundle.pem will be produced.
  • if ocspResponse is specified, basename-response.der will be produced.

Instead of saving to a file, you can pass -stdout to output the encoded contents to standard output.

Static Builds

By default, the web assets are accessed from disk, based on their relative locations. If you wish to distribute a single, statically-linked, cfssl binary, you’ll want to embed these resources before building. This can by done with the go.rice tool.

pushd cli/serve && rice embed-go && popd

Then building with go build will use the embedded resources.

Additional Documentation

Additional documentation can be found in the "doc" directory:

  • api/intro.txt: documents the API endpoints
  • bootstrap.txt: a walkthrough from building the package to getting up and running