Skip to content

Latest commit

 

History

History
86 lines (59 loc) · 2.48 KB

README.md

File metadata and controls

86 lines (59 loc) · 2.48 KB

Build Status codecov

easypki

Easy Public Key Infrastructure intends to provide most of the components needed to manage a PKI, so you can either use the API in your automation, or use the CLI.

API

godoc

For the latest API:

import "gopkg.in/google/easypki.v1"

Legacy API

API below pkg/ has been rewritten to allow extensibility in terms of PKI storage and better readability.

If you used the legacy API that was only writing files to disk, a tag has been applied so you can still import it:

import "gopkg.in/google/easypki.v0"

CLI

Current implementation of the CLI uses the local store and uses a structure compatible with openssl, so you are not restrained.

# Get the CLI:
go get github.com/google/easypki/cmd/easypki


# You can also pass the following through arguments if you do not want to use
# env variables.
export PKI_ROOT=/tmp/pki
export PKI_ORGANIZATION="Acme Inc."
export PKI_ORGANIZATIONAL_UNIT=IT
export PKI_COUNTRY=US
export PKI_LOCALITY="Agloe"
export PKI_PROVINCE="New York"

mkdir $PKI_ROOT

# Create the root CA:
easypki create --filename root --ca "Acme Inc. Certificate Authority"

# In the following commands, ca-name corresponds to the filename containing
# the CA.

# Create a server certificate for blog.acme.com and www.acme.com:
easypki create --ca-name root --dns blog.acme.com --dns www.acme.com www.acme.com

# Create an intermediate CA:
easypki create --ca-name root --filename intermediate --intermediate "Acme Inc. - Internal CA"

# Create a wildcard certificate for internal use, signed by the intermediate ca:
easypki create --ca-name intermediate --dns "*.internal.acme.com" "*.internal.acme.com"

# Create a client certificate:
easypki create --ca-name intermediate --client --email bob@acme.com bob@acme.com

# Revoke the www certificate.
easypki revoke $PKI_ROOT/root/certs/www.acme.com.crt

# Generate a CRL expiring in 1 day (PEM Output on stdout):
easypki crl --ca-name root --expire 1

You will find the generated certificates in $PKI_ROOT/ca_name/certs/ and private keys in $PKI_ROOT/ca_name/keys/

For more info about available flags, checkout out the help easypki -h.

Disclaimer

This is not an official Google product.