This is an opinionated single-file TLS certificate manager. It has no dependencies on any other external tool such as openssl. It is a simpler replacement for openssl(1).
- Uses a single boltdb instance to store the certificates and keys.
- All data strored in the database is encrypted with keys derived from a user supplied CA passphrase.
- The certificates and keys are opinionated:
- Secp256k1 EC certificate private keys
- "SSL-Server" attribute set on server certificates (nsCertType)
- "SSL-Client" attribute set on client certificates (nsCertType)
- ECDSA with SHA512 is used as the signature algorithm
You will need a fairly recent golang toolchain (>1.10):
$ git clone https://github.com/opencoff/certik
$ cd certik
$ ./build -s
The build script puts the binary in a platform specific directory:
- macOS:
bin/darwin-amd64
- Linux:
bin/linux-amd64
- OpenBSD:
bin/openbsd-amd64
And so on. The build script can generate a fully standalone
statically-linked binary on platforms that support it. To build
statically linked binaries, use build -s
.
You can also do cross-platform builds for any supported OS, Arch combination supported by the golang toolchain. e.g., on macOS, to build a statically linked binary for linux-amd64 architecture:
$ ./build -s --arch linux-amd64
The common pattern for invoking certik is:
certik DB CMD [options] [arguments]
Where:
-
DB is the name of the certificate store (database). This is a boltdb instance.
-
CMD is a command - one of
init
,server
,client
,export
,list
,delete
,crl
.
The tool writes the certificates, keys into an encrypted boltdb instance.
The tool comes with builtin help:
$ ./bin/openbsd-amd64/certik --help
Every subcommand comes with its own help; but, requires you to at least supply a database name as the first argument. e.g.,
$ ./bin/openbsd-amd64/certik foo.db server --help
In what follows, we will assume that you have built certik and
installed somewhere in your $PATH
.
Before any certificates are generated, one must first create a CA and initialize the certificate DB:
$ certik -v foo.db init my-CA
You can optionally initialize a CA from a previously exported JSON dump:
$ certik -v foo.db init --from-json FILE
You can see the generated CA certificate via two ways:
- Using
-v
for the certik's global options - Using the
list
command with the--root-ca
option.
In general, using the -v
global option when generating the CA, server
or client certificates will print the certificate to stdout at the end.
The CA can be initialized with additional data such as Organization Name,
Organization Unit Name etc. See init --help
for additional details.
The default lifetime of the CA is 5 years; you can change this via
the -V
(--validity
) option to "init".
An TLS server needs a few things:
- A server common name - so client can either address it by DNS Name.
- Optionally, an IP Address
Creating a new server certificate/key pair:
$ certik -v foo.db server -i IP.ADDR.ES server.domain.name
Of course, you should use the appropriate values for IP.ADDR.ES
and server.domain.name
for your setup.
The IP Address and Server FQDN show up in the certificate as Certificate.IPAddress and Certificate.Sibject.CommonName. Additionally, the server FQDN also shows up in Certificate.DNSNames.
You can request the server certificate to have a different
validity via the V
(--validity
) option; this option takes the
value in units of years.
You can of course create as many server certificates as needed.
An TLS client certificate is quite simple - it just needs a common name. For convenience, you may use the email address as the common Name.
$ certik -v foo.db client user@domain.name
You can ask the client private key to be encrypted with a user
supplied passphrase by using the -p
or --password
option to the
client
command. You can request the client certificate to have
a different validity via the V
(--validity
) option; this option
takes the value in units of years.
Once in a while you will want to delete users and prevent them from connecting to the TLS server. E.g.,
$ certik -v foo.db delete user@domain.name user2@domain
This only deletes the users from the certificate DB. You still need to generate a new CRL (Certificate Revocation List) and push it to your server. See the next workflow.
Once a user is deleted from the system, you will need to generate a new CRL and push it to the server. The command to generate a new CRL:
$ certik -v foo.db crl -o crl.pem
This write the PEM encoded CRL to crl.pem
. You must copy this file
to the OpenVPN server and reload (or restart) it.
You can also just view a full list of revoked users:
$ certik foo.db crl --list
To see a list of certificates in the database:
$ certik foo.db list
While the tool manages certificates, for use in a TLS client or server, we need to export the CA certificate, server certificate and key. To export a certificate & key configuration:
$ certik foo.db export server.domain.name
$ certik foo.db export user@domain.name
This prints the PEM encoded cert & key to stdout. To write each to a separate file:
$ certik foo.db export server.domain.name -o server
This will write the certificate into server.crt
and key to
server.key
.
The CA certificate anchors the root of trust; so, the TLS Server and Client both need the CA Certificate. One exports it like so:
$ certik foo.db export --ca -o ca.crt
- Tests
If you wish to hack on this, notes here might be useful.
The code is organized as a library & command line frontend for that library.
-
We use go module support; you will need go 1.10+ or later
-
The build script
build
is a shell script to build the program. It does two very important things:- Puts the binary in an OS+Arch specific directory
- Injects a git version-tag into the final binary ("linker resolved symbol")
-
Uses an external PKI library from go-pki
-
src/
: Command line interface to the library capabilities. Each command is in its own file.