CA.pl

 


 CA.PL(1)                     OpenSSL                     CA.PL(1)
 
 
 
 NAME
        CA.pl - friendlier interface for OpenSSL certificate programs
 

 SYNOPSIS

        CA.pl [-?]  
              [-h] 
              [-help] 
              [-newcert] 
              [-newreq] 
              [-newca]
              [-xsign] 
              [-sign] 
              [-signreq] 
              [-signcert] 
              [-verify] 
              [files]
 

 DESCRIPTION

        The CA.pl script is a perl script that supplies the
        relevant command line arguments to the openssl command for
        some common certificate operations.  It is intended to
        simplify the process of certificate creation and
        management by the use of some simple options.
 

 COMMAND OPTIONS

        ?, -h, -help
            prints a usage message.
 
        -newcert
            creates a new self signed certificate. The private key
            and certificate are written to the file "newreq.pem".
 
        -newreq
            creates a new certificate request. The private key and
            request are written to the file "newreq.pem".
 
        -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.
 
        -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.
 
        -sign, -signreq, -xsign
            calls the ca program to sign a certificate request. It
            expects the request to be in the file "newreq.pem".
            The new certificate is written to the file
            "newcert.pem" except in the case of the -xsign option
            when it is written to standard output.
 
        -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.
 
        -signcert
            this option is the same as -sign except it expects a
            self signed certificate to be present in the file
            "newreq.pem".
 
        -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".
 
        files
            one or more optional certificate file names for use
            with the -verify command.
 
 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"
 
 
 DSA CERTIFICATES
        Although the CA.pl creates RSA CAs and requests it is
        still possible to use it with DSA certificates and
        requests using the req(1) command directly. The following
        example shows the steps that would typically be taken.
 
        Create some DSA parameters:
 
         openssl dsaparam -out dsap.pem 1024
 
        Create a DSA CA certificate and private key:
 
         openssl req -x509 -newkey dsa:dsap.pem -keyout cacert.pem -out cacert.pem
 
        Create the CA directories and files:
 
         CA.pl -newca
 
        enter cacert.pem when prompted for the CA file name.
 
        Create a DSA certificate request and private key (a
        different set of parameters can optionally be created
        first):
 
         openssl req -out newreq.pem -newkey dsa:dsap.pem
 
        Sign the request:
 
         CA.pl -signreq
 
 
 NOTES
        Most of the filenames mentioned can be modified by editing
        the CA.pl script.
 
        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 demoCA directory if it already exists.
 
        Under some environments it may not be possible to run the
        CA.pl script directly (for example Win32) and the default
        configuration file location may be wrong. In this case the
        command:
 
         perl -S CA.pl
 
        can be used and the OPENSSL_CONF environment variable
        changed to point to the correct path of the configuration
        file "../openssl.cnf".
 
        The script is intended as a simple front end for the
        openssl 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 openssl command
        directly.
 
 ENVIRONMENT VARIABLES
        The variable OPENSSL_CONF if defined allows an alternative
        configuration file location to be specified, it should
        contain the full path to the configuration file, not just
        its directory.
 
 SEE ALSO
        x509(1), ca(1), req(1), pkcs12(1), config(5)
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 7/Sep/2000                    0.9.6b                     CA.PL(1)