source: postlfs/security/make-ca.xml@ f8359b8

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Last change on this file since f8359b8 was 47274444, checked in by Pierre Labastie <pieere@…>, 4 years ago

Format postlfs/security and misc/forgotten

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1<?xml version="1.0" encoding="ISO-8859-1"?>
2<!DOCTYPE sect1 PUBLIC "-//OASIS//DTD DocBook XML V4.5//EN"
3 "http://www.oasis-open.org/docbook/xml/4.5/docbookx.dtd" [
4 <!ENTITY % general-entities SYSTEM "../../general.ent">
5 %general-entities;
6
7 <!ENTITY certhost "https://hg.mozilla.org/">
8 <!ENTITY certpath "/lib/ckfw/builtins/certdata.txt">
9 <!ENTITY make-ca-buildsize "6.6 MB (with all runtime deps)">
10 <!ENTITY make-ca-time "0.1 SBU (with all runtime deps)">
11
12 <!ENTITY make-ca-download "https://github.com/djlucas/make-ca/releases/download/v&make-ca-version;/make-ca-&make-ca-version;.tar.xz">
13 <!ENTITY make-ca-size "28.5 KB">
14 <!ENTITY make-ca-md5sum "e0356f5ae5623f227a3f69b5e8848ec6">
15]>
16
17<sect1 id="make-ca" xreflabel="make-ca-&make-ca-version;">
18 <?dbhtml filename="make-ca.html"?>
19
20 <sect1info>
21 <othername>$LastChangedBy$</othername>
22 <date>$Date$</date>
23 </sect1info>
24
25 <title>make-ca-&make-ca-version;</title>
26 <indexterm zone="make-ca">
27 <primary sortas="a-make-ca">make-ca</primary>
28 </indexterm>
29
30 <sect2 role="package">
31 <title>Introduction to make-ca</title>
32
33 <para>
34 Public Key Infrastructure (PKI) is a method to validate the authenticity
35 of an otherwise unknown entity across untrusted networks. PKI works by
36 establishing a chain of trust, rather than trusting each individual host
37 or entity explicitly. In order for a certificate presented by a remote
38 entity to be trusted, that certificate must present a complete chain of
39 certificates that can be validated using the root certificate of a
40 Certificate Authority (CA) that is trusted by the local machine.
41 </para>
42
43 <para>
44 Establishing trust with a CA involves validating things like company
45 address, ownership, contact information, etc., and ensuring that the CA
46 has followed best practices, such as undergoing periodic security audits
47 by independent investigators and maintaining an always available
48 certificate revocation list. This is well outside the scope of BLFS (as
49 it is for most Linux distributions). The certificate store provided here
50 is taken from the Mozilla Foundation, who have established very strict
51 inclusion policies described <ulink
52 url="https://www.mozilla.org/en-US/about/governance/policies/security-group/certs/">here</ulink>.
53 </para>
54
55 &lfs91_checked;
56
57 <bridgehead renderas="sect3">Package Information</bridgehead>
58 <itemizedlist spacing="compact">
59 <listitem>
60 <para>
61 Download (HTTP): <ulink url="&make-ca-download;"/>
62 </para>
63 </listitem>
64 <listitem>
65 <para>
66 Download size: &make-ca-size;
67 </para>
68 </listitem>
69 <listitem>
70 <para>
71 Download MD5 Sum: &make-ca-md5sum;
72 </para>
73 </listitem>
74 <listitem>
75 <para>
76 Estimated disk space required: &make-ca-buildsize;
77 </para>
78 </listitem>
79 <listitem>
80 <para>
81 Estimated build time: &make-ca-time;
82 </para>
83 </listitem>
84 </itemizedlist>
85
86 <bridgehead renderas="sect3">make-ca Dependencies</bridgehead>
87
88 <bridgehead renderas="sect4">Required</bridgehead>
89 <para role="required">
90 <xref linkend="p11-kit"/> (required at runtime to
91 generate certificate stores from trust anchors)
92 </para>
93 <!-- /usr/bin/trust is needed to extract the certs to /etc/ssl/certs -->
94
95 <bridgehead renderas="sect4">Optional (runtime)</bridgehead>
96 <para role="optional">
97 <xref role="runtime" linkend="nss"/> (to generate a shared NSSDB)
98 </para>
99
100 <para condition="html" role="usernotes">User Notes:
101 <ulink url='&blfs-wiki;/make-ca'/></para>
102 </sect2>
103
104 <sect2 role="installation">
105 <title>Installation of make-ca</title>
106
107 <para>
108 The <application>make-ca</application> script will download and process
109 the certificates included in the <filename>certdata.txt</filename> file
110 for use as trust anchors for the <xref linkend="p11-kit"/> trust module.
111 Additionally, it will generate system certificate stores used by BLFS
112 applications (if the recommended and optional applications are present
113 on the system). Any local certificates stored in
114 <filename>/etc/ssl/local</filename> will be imported to both the trust
115 anchors and the generated certificate stores (overriding Mozilla's
116 trust). Additionally, any modified trust values will be copied from the
117 trust anchors to <filename>/etc/ssl/local</filename> prior to any
118 updates, preserving custom trust values that differ from Mozilla when
119 using the <command>trust</command> utility from
120 <application>p11-kit</application> to operate on the trust store.
121 </para>
122
123 <para>
124 To install the various certificate stores, first install the
125 <application>make-ca</application> script into the correct location.
126 As the <systemitem class="username">root</systemitem> user:
127 </para>
128
129<screen role="root"><userinput>make install &amp;&amp;
130install -vdm755 /etc/ssl/local</userinput></screen>
131
132 <para>
133 As the <systemitem class="username">root</systemitem> user, after
134 installing <xref linkend="p11-kit"/>, download the certificate source and
135 prepare for system use with the following command:
136 </para>
137
138 <note>
139 <para>
140 If running the script a second time with the same version of
141 <filename>certdata.txt</filename>, for instance, to add additional
142 stores as the requisite software is installed, add the
143 <parameter>-r</parameter> switch to the command line. If packaging,
144 run <command>make-ca --help</command> to see all available command
145 line options.
146 </para>
147 </note>
148
149<screen role="root"><userinput>/usr/sbin/make-ca -g</userinput></screen>
150
151 <para>
152 You should periodically update the store with the above command,
153 either manually, or via a <phrase revision="sysv">cron job.</phrase>
154 <phrase revision="systemd">systemd timer. A timer is installed at
155 <filename>/usr/lib/systemd/system/update-pki.timer</filename> that, if
156 enabled, will check for updates weekly.</phrase><phrase
157 revision="sysv">If you've installed <xref linkend="fcron"/> and
158 completed the section on periodic jobs, execute</phrase><phrase
159 revision="systemd">Execute</phrase> the following commands, as the
160 <systemitem class="username">root</systemitem> user, to <phrase
161 revision="sysv">create a weekly cron job:</phrase><phrase
162 revision="systemd">enable the systemd timer:</phrase>
163 </para>
164
165<screen role="root" revision="sysv"><userinput>install -vdm755 /etc/cron.weekly &amp;&amp;
166cat &gt; /etc/cron.weekly/update-pki.sh &lt;&lt; "EOF" &amp;&amp;
167<literal>#!/bin/bash
168/usr/sbin/make-ca -g</literal>
169EOF
170chmod 754 /etc/cron.weekly/update-pki.sh</userinput></screen>
171
172<screen role="root" revision="systemd"><userinput>systemctl enable update-pki.timer</userinput></screen>
173
174 </sect2>
175
176 <sect2 role="configuration" id="make-ca-config">
177 <title>Configuring make-ca</title>
178
179 <para>
180 For most users, no additional configuration is necessary, however,
181 the default <filename>certdata.txt</filename> file provided by make-ca
182 is obtained from the mozilla-release branch, and is modified to provide a
183 Mercurial revision. This will be the correct version for most systems.
184 There are several other variants of the file available for use that might
185 be preferred for one reason or another, including the files shipped with
186 Mozilla products in this book. RedHat and OpenSUSE, for instance, use the
187 version included in <xref linkend="nss"/>. Additional upstream downloads
188 are available at the links included in
189 <filename>/etc/make-ca.conf.dist</filename>. Simply copy the file to
190 <filename>/etc/make-ca.conf</filename> and edit as appropriate.
191 </para>
192
193 <indexterm zone="make-ca make-ca-config">
194 <primary sortas="e-etc-make-ca-conf">/etc/make-ca.conf</primary>
195 </indexterm>
196
197 <bridgehead renderas="sect3">About Trust Arguments</bridgehead>
198
199 <para>
200 There are three trust types that are recognized by the
201 <application>make-ca</application> script, SSL/TLS, S/Mime, and code
202 signing. For <application>OpenSSL</application>, these are
203 <parameter>serverAuth</parameter>,
204 <parameter>emailProtection</parameter>, and
205 <parameter>codeSigning</parameter> respectively. If one of the three
206 trust arguments is omitted, the certificate is neither trusted, nor
207 rejected for that role. Clients that use
208 <application>OpenSSL</application> or <application>NSS</application>
209 encountering this certificate will present a warning to the user.
210 Clients using
211 <application>GnuTLS</application> without
212 <application>p11-kit</application> support are not aware of trusted
213 certificates. To include this CA into the
214 <filename>ca-bundle.crt</filename>,
215 <filename>email-ca-bundle.crt</filename>, or
216 <filename>objsign-ca-bundle.crt</filename> files
217 (the <application>GnuTLS</application> legacy bundles), it must have the
218 appropriate trust arguments.
219 </para>
220
221 <bridgehead renderas="sect3">Adding Additional CA Certificates</bridgehead>
222
223 <para>
224 The <filename class="directory">/etc/ssl/local</filename> directory
225 is available to add additional CA certificates to the system. For
226 instance, you might need to add an organization or government CA
227 certificate. Files in this directory must be in the
228 <application>OpenSSL</application> trusted certificate format. To
229 create an <application>OpenSSL</application> trusted certificate from
230 a regular PEM encoded file, you need to add trust arguments to the
231 <command>openssl</command> command, and create a new certificate. For
232 example, using the <ulink url="http://www.cacert.org/">CAcert</ulink>
233 roots, if you want to trust both for all three roles, the following
234 commands will create appropriate OpenSSL trusted certificates (run as
235 the <systemitem class="username">root</systemitem> user after <xref
236 linkend="wget"/> is installed):
237 </para>
238
239<screen role="nodump"><userinput>wget http://www.cacert.org/certs/root.crt &amp;&amp;
240wget http://www.cacert.org/certs/class3.crt &amp;&amp;
241openssl x509 -in root.crt -text -fingerprint -setalias "CAcert Class 1 root" \
242 -addtrust serverAuth -addtrust emailProtection -addtrust codeSigning \
243 > /etc/ssl/local/CAcert_Class_1_root.pem &amp;&amp;
244openssl x509 -in class3.crt -text -fingerprint -setalias "CAcert Class 3 root" \
245 -addtrust serverAuth -addtrust emailProtection -addtrust codeSigning \
246 > /etc/ssl/local/CAcert_Class_3_root.pem &amp;&amp;
247/usr/sbin/make-ca -r -f</userinput></screen>
248
249 <bridgehead renderas="sect3">Overriding Mozilla Trust</bridgehead>
250
251 <para>
252 Occasionally, there may be instances where you don't agree with
253 Mozilla's inclusion of a particular certificate authority. If you'd like
254 to override the default trust of a particular CA, simply create a copy of
255 the existing certificate in <filename
256 class="directory">/etc/ssl/local</filename> with different trust
257 arguments. For example, if you'd like to distrust the
258 "Makebelieve_CA_Root" file, run the following commands:
259 </para>
260
261<screen role="nodump"><userinput>openssl x509 -in /etc/ssl/certs/Makebelieve_CA_Root.pem \
262 -text \
263 -fingerprint \
264 -setalias "Disabled Makebelieve CA Root" \
265 -addreject serverAuth \
266 -addreject emailProtection \
267 -addreject codeSigning \
268 > /etc/ssl/local/Disabled_Makebelieve_CA_Root.pem &amp;&amp;
269/usr/sbin/make-ca -r -f</userinput></screen>
270
271 </sect2>
272
273 <sect2 role="content">
274 <title>Contents</title>
275
276 <segmentedlist>
277 <segtitle>Installed Programs</segtitle>
278 <segtitle>Installed Directories</segtitle>
279
280 <seglistitem>
281 <seg>make-ca</seg>
282 <seg>/etc/ssl/{certs,local} and
283 /etc/pki/{nssdb,anchors,tls/{certs,java}}</seg>
284 </seglistitem>
285 </segmentedlist>
286
287 <variablelist>
288 <bridgehead renderas="sect3">Short Descriptions</bridgehead>
289 <?dbfo list-presentation="list"?>
290 <?dbhtml list-presentation="table"?>
291
292 <varlistentry id="make-ca-bin">
293 <term><command>make-ca</command></term>
294 <listitem>
295 <para>
296 is a shell script that adapts a current version of
297 <filename>certdata.txt</filename>, and prepares it for use
298 as the system trust store.
299 </para>
300 <indexterm zone="make-ca make-ca">
301 <primary sortas="b-make-ca">make-ca</primary>
302 </indexterm>
303 </listitem>
304 </varlistentry>
305 </variablelist>
306
307 </sect2>
308</sect1>
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