Tutorial

How To Set Up and Configure a Certificate Authority (CA) On CentOS 8

Updated on April 6, 2020
English
How To Set Up and Configure a Certificate Authority (CA) On CentOS 8
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CentOS 8

Introduction

A Certificate Authority (CA) is an entity responsible for issuing digital certificates to verify identities on the internet. Although public CAs are a popular choice for verifying the identity of websites and other services that are provided to the general public, private CAs are typically used for closed groups and private services.

Building a private Certificate Authority will enable you to configure, test, and run programs that require encrypted connections between a client and a server. With a private CA, you can issue certificates for users, servers, or individual programs and services within your infrastructure.

Some examples of programs on Linux that use their own private CA are OpenVPN and Puppet . You can also configure your web server to use certificates issued by a private CA in order to make development and staging environments match production servers that use TLS to encrypt connections.

In this guide, we’ll learn how to set up a private Certificate Authority on a CentOS 8 server, and how to generate and sign a testing certificate using your new CA. You will also learn how to import the CA server’s public certificate into your operating system’s certificate store so that you can verify the chain of trust between the CA and remote servers or users. Finally you will learn how to revoke certificates and distribute a Certificate Revocation List to make sure only authorized users and systems can use services that rely on your CA.

Prerequisites

To follow this tutorial, you will need a CentOS 8 server with a sudo enabled, non-root user, and a firewall set up with firewalld. You can follow our Initial Server Setup with CentOS 8 guide to complete that set up.

This server will be referred to as the CA Server in this tutorial.

Ensure that the CA Server is a standalone system. It will only be used to import, sign, and revoke certificate requests. It should not run any other services, and ideally it will be offline or completely shut down when you are not actively working with your CA.

Note: The last section of this tutorial is optional if you would like to learn about signing and revoking certificates. If you choose to complete those practice steps, you will need a second CentOS 8 server or you can also use your own local Linux computer running CentOS 8, Fedora or a RedHat derivative.

Step 1 — Installing Easy-RSA

The first task in this tutorial is to install the easy-rsa set of scripts on your CA Server. easy-rsa is a Certificate Authority management tool that you will use to generate a private key, and public root certificate, which you will then use to sign requests from clients and servers that will rely on your CA.

The easy-rsa package is not available by default in CentOS 8, so you will need to enable the Extra Packages for Enterprise Linux (EPEL) repository. EPEL is managed by the Fedora Project and contains non-standard but popular packages for Fedora, CentOS, and other Linux distributions that use the RPM package format. Login to your CA Server as the non-root sudo user that you created during the initial setup steps and run the following:

  1. sudo dnf install epel-release

You will be prompted to download the package and install it. Press y to confirm you want to install the package.

Now install the easy-rsa package, again entering y at the prompt:

  1. sudo dnf install easy-rsa

At this point you have everything you need set up and ready to use Easy-RSA. In the next step you will create a Public Key Infrastructure, and then start building your Certificate Authority.

Step 2 — Preparing a Public Key Infrastructure Directory

Now that you have installed easy-rsa, it is time to create a skeleton Public Key Infrastructure (PKI) on the CA Server. Ensure that you are still logged in as your non-root user and create an easy-rsa directory. Make sure that you do not use sudo to run any of the following commands, since your normal user should manage and interact with the CA without elevated privileges.

  1. mkdir ~/easy-rsa

This will create a new directory called easy-rsa in your home folder. We’ll use this directory to create symbolic links pointing to the easy-rsa package files that we’ve installed in the previous step. These files are located in the /usr/share/easy-rsa/3 folder on the CA Server.

Create the symlinks with the ln command:

  1. ln -s /usr/share/easy-rsa/3/* ~/easy-rsa/

Note: While other guides might instruct you to copy the easy-rsa package files into your PKI directory, this tutorial adopts a symlink approach. As a result, any updates to the easy-rsa package will be automatically reflected in your PKI’s scripts.

To restrict access to your new PKI directory, ensure that only the owner can access it using the chmod command:

  1. chmod 700 /home/sammy/easy-rsa

Finally, initialize the PKI inside the easy-rsa directory:

  1. cd ~/easy-rsa
  2. ./easyrsa init-pki
Output
init-pki complete; you may now create a CA or requests. Your newly created PKI dir is: /home/sammy/easy-rsa/pki

After completing this section you have a directory that contains all the files that are needed to create a Certificate Authority. In the next section you will create the private key and public certificate for your CA.

Step 3 — Creating a Certificate Authority

Before you can create your CA’s private key and certificate, you need to create and populate a file called vars with some default values. First you will cd into the easy-rsa directory, then you will create and edit the vars file with nano or your preferred text editor.

The default text editor that comes with CentOS 8 is vi. vi is an extremely powerful text editor, but it can be somewhat obtuse for users who lack experience with it. You might want to install a more user-friendly editor such as nano to facilitate editing configuration files on your CentOS 8 server:

  1. sudo dnf install nano

When you are prompted to install nano enter y to continue with the installation steps. Now you are ready to edit the vars file:

  1. cd ~/easy-rsa
  2. nano vars

Once the file is opened, paste in the following lines and edit each highlighted value to reflect your own organization info. The important part here is to ensure that you do not leave any of the values blank:

~/easy-rsa/vars
set_var EASYRSA_REQ_COUNTRY "US" set_var EASYRSA_REQ_PROVINCE "NewYork" set_var EASYRSA_REQ_CITY "New York City" set_var EASYRSA_REQ_ORG "DigitalOcean" set_var EASYRSA_REQ_EMAIL "admin@example.com" set_var EASYRSA_REQ_OU "Community" set_var EASYRSA_ALGO "ec" set_var EASYRSA_DIGEST "sha512"

When you are finished, save and close the file. If you are using nano, you can do so by pressing CTRL+X, then Y and ENTER to confirm. You are now ready to build your CA.

To create the root public and private key pair for your Certificate Authority, run the ./easy-rsa command again, this time with the build-ca option:

  1. ./easyrsa build-ca

In the output, you’ll see some lines about the OpenSSL version and you will be prompted to enter a passphrase for your key pair. Be sure to choose a strong passphrase, and note it down somewhere safe. You will need to input the passphrase any time that you need to interact with your CA, for example to sign or revoke a certificate.

You will also be asked to confirm the Common Name (CN) for your CA. The CN is the name used to refer to this machine in the context of the Certificate Authority. You can enter any string of characters for the CA’s Common Name but for simplicity’s sake, press ENTER to accept the default name.

Output
. . . Enter New CA Key Passphrase: Re-Enter New CA Key Passphrase: . . . Common Name (eg: your user, host, or server name) [Easy-RSA CA]: CA creation complete and you may now import and sign cert requests. Your new CA certificate file for publishing is at: /home/sammy/easy-rsa/pki/ca.crt

Note: If you don’t want to be prompted for a password every time you interact with your CA, you can run the build-ca command with the nopass option, like this:

  1. ./easyrsa build-ca nopass

You now have two important files — ~/easy-rsa/pki/ca.crt and ~/easy-rsa/pki/private/ca.key — which make up the public and private components of a Certificate Authority.

  • ca.crt is the CA’s public certificate file. Users, servers, and clients will use this certificate to verify that they are part of the same web of trust. Every user and server that uses your CA will need to have a copy of this file. All parties will rely on the public certificate to ensure that someone is not impersonating a system and performing a Man-in-the-middle attack.

  • ca.key is the private key that the CA uses to sign certificates for servers and clients. If an attacker gains access to your CA and, in turn, your ca.key file, you will need to destroy your CA. This is why your ca.key file should only be on your CA machine and that, ideally, your CA machine should be kept offline when not signing certificate requests as an extra security measure.

With that, your CA is in place and it is ready to be used to sign certificate requests, and to revoke certificates.

Step 4 — Distributing your Certificate Authority’s Public Certificate

Now your CA is configured and ready to act as a root of trust for any systems that you want to configure to use it. You can add the CA’s certificate to your OpenVPN servers, web servers, mail servers, and so on. Any user or server that needs to verify the identity of another user or server in your network should have a copy of the ca.crt file imported into their operating system’s certificate store.

To import the CA’s public certificate into a second Linux system like another server or a local computer, first obtain a copy of the ca.crt file from your CA server. You can use the cat command to output it in a terminal, and then copy and paste it into a file on the second computer that is importing the certificate. You can also use tools like scp, rsync to transfer the file between systems. However we’ll use copy and paste with nano in this step since it will work on all systems.

As your non-root user on the CA Server, run the following command:

  1. cat ~/easy-rsa/pki/ca.crt

There will be output in your terminal that is similar to the following:

Output
-----BEGIN CERTIFICATE----- MIIDSzCCAjOgAwIBAgIUcR9Crsv3FBEujrPZnZnU4nSb5TMwDQYJKoZIhvcNAQEL BQAwFjEUMBIGA1UEAwwLRWFzeS1SU0EgQ0EwHhcNMjAwMzE4MDMxNjI2WhcNMzAw . . . . . . -----END CERTIFICATE-----

Copy everything, including the -----BEGIN CERTIFICATE----- and -----END CERTIFICATE----- lines and the dashes.

On your second Linux system use nano or your preferred text editor to open a file called /tmp/ca.crt:

  1. nano /tmp/ca.crt

Paste the contents that you just copied from the CA Server into the editor. When you are finished, save and close the file. If you are using nano, you can do so by pressing CTRL+X, then Y and ENTER to confirm.

Now that you have a copy of the ca.crt file on your second Linux system, it is time to import the certificate into its operating system certificate store.

On CentOS, Fedora, or other RedHat derived Linux systems run the following commands to import the certificate:

CentOS, Fedora, RedHat distributions
  1. sudo cp /tmp/ca.crt /etc/pki/ca-trust/source/anchors/
  2. update-ca-trust

To import the CA Server’s certificate on a Debian or Ubuntu based system, copy and paste the file contents onto the system just like in the previous example in a file called /tmp/ca.crt. Next, copy the certificate into /usr/local/share/ca-certificates/, then run the update-ca-certificates command.

Debian and Ubuntu derived distributions
  1. sudo cp /tmp/ca.crt /usr/local/share/ca-certificates/
  2. update-ca-certificates

Now your second Linux system will trust any certificate that has been signed by the CA server.

Note: If you are using your CA with web servers and use Firefox as a browser you will need to import the public ca.crt certificate into Firefox directly. Firefox does not use the local operating system’s certificate store. For details on how to add your CA’s certificate to Firefox please see this support article from Mozilla on Setting Up Certificate Authorities (CAs) in Firefox.

If you are using your CA to integrate with a Windows environment or desktop computers, please see the documentation on how to use certutil.exe to install a CA certificate.

If you are using this tutorial as a prerequisite for another tutorial, or are familiar with how to sign and revoke certificates you can stop here. If you would like to learn more about how to sign and revoke certificates, then the following optional section will explain each process in detail.

(Optional) — Creating Certificate Signing Requests and Revoking Certificates

The following sections of the tutorial are optional. If you have completed all the previous steps then you have a fully configured and working Certificate Authority that you can use as a prerequisite for other tutorials. You can import your CA’s ca.crt file and verify certificates in your network that have been signed by your CA.

If you would like to practice and learn more about how to sign certificate requests, and how to revoke certificates, then these optional sections will explain how both processes work.

(Optional) — Creating and Signing a Practice Certificate Request

Now that you have a CA ready to use, you can practice generating a private key and certificate request to get familiar with the signing and distribution process.

A Certificate Signing Request (CSR) consists of three parts: a public key, identifying information about the requesting system, and a signature of the request itself, which is created using the requesting party’s private key. The private key will be kept secret, and will be used to encrypt information that anyone with the signed public certificate can then decrypt.

The following steps will be run on your second Linux system running CentOS, Fedora, or another RedHat derived Linux distribution. It can be another remote server, or a local Linux machine like a laptop or a desktop computer. Since easy-rsa is not available by default on all systems, we’ll use the openssl tool to create a practice private key and certificate.

openssl is usually installed by default on most Linux distributions, but just to be certain, run the following on your system:

  1. sudo dnf install openssl

When you are prompted to install openssl enter y to continue with the installation steps. Now you are ready to create a practice CSR with openssl.

The first step that you need to complete to create a CSR is generating a private key. To create a private key using openssl, create a practice-csr directory and then generate a key inside it. We will make this request for a fictional server called sammy-server, as opposed to creating a certificate that is used to identify a user or another CA.

  1. mkdir ~/practice-csr
  2. cd ~/practice-csr
  3. openssl genrsa -out sammy-server.key
Output
Generating RSA private key, 2048 bit long modulus (2 primes) . . . . . . e is 65537 (0x010001)

Now that you have a private key you can create a corresponding CSR, again using the openssl utility. You will be prompted to fill out a number of fields like Country, State, and City. You can enter a . if you’d like to leave a field blank, but be aware that if this were a real CSR, it is best to use the correct values for your location and organization:

  1. openssl req -new -key sammy-server.key -out sammy-server.req
Output
. . . ----- Country Name (2 letter code) [XX]:US State or Province Name (full name) []:New York Locality Name (eg, city) [Default City]:New York City Organization Name (eg, company) [Default Company Ltd]:DigitalOcean Organizational Unit Name (eg, section) []:Community Common Name (eg, your name or your server's hostname) []:sammy-server Email Address []: Please enter the following 'extra' attributes to be sent with your certificate request A challenge password []: An optional company name []:

If you would like to automatically add those values as part of the openssl invocation instead of via the interactive prompt, you can pass the -subj argument to OpenSSL. Be sure to edit the highlighted values to match your practice location, organization, and server name:

  1. openssl req -new -key sammy-server.key -out sammy-server.req -subj \
  2. /C=US/ST=New\ York/L=New\ York\ City/O=DigitalOcean/OU=Community/CN=sammy-server

To verify the contents of a CSR, you can read in a request file with openssl and examine the fields inside:

  1. openssl req -in sammy-server.req -noout -subject
Output
subject=C = US, ST = New York, L = New York City, O = DigitalOcean, OU = Community, CN = sammy-server

Once you’re happy with the subject of your practice certificate request, copy the sammy-server.req file to your CA server using scp:

  1. scp sammy-server.req sammy@your_ca_server_ip:/tmp/sammy-server.req

In this step you generated a Certificate Signing Request for a fictional server called sammy-server. In a real-world scenario, the request could be from something like a staging or development web server that needs a TLS certificate for testing; or it could come from an OpenVPN server that is requesting a certificate so that users can connect to a VPN. In the next step, we’ll proceed to signing the certificate signing request using the CA Server’s private key.

(Optional) — Signing a CSR

In the previous step, you created a practice certificate request and key for a fictional server. You copied it to the /tmp directory on your CA server, emulating the process that you would use if you had real clients or servers sending you CSR requests that need to be signed.

Continuing with the fictional scenario, now the CA Server needs to import the practice certificate and sign it. Once a certificate request is validated by the CA and relayed back to a server, clients that trust the Certificate Authority will also be able to trust the newly issued certificate.

Since we will be operating inside the CA’s PKI where the easy-rsa utility is available, the signing steps will use the easy-rsa utility to make things easier, as opposed to using the openssl directly like we did in the previous example.

The first step to sign the fictional CSR is to import the certificate request using the easy-rsa script:

  1. cd ~/easy-rsa
  2. ./easyrsa import-req /tmp/sammy-server.req sammy-server
Output
. . . The request has been successfully imported with a short name of: sammy-server You may now use this name to perform signing operations on this request.

Now you can sign the request by running the easyrsa script with the sign-req option, followed by the request type and the Common Name that is included in the CSR. The request type can either be one of client, server, or ca. Since we’re practicing with a certificate for a fictional server, be sure to use the server request type:

  1. ./easyrsa sign-req server sammy-server

In the output, you’ll be asked to verify that the request comes from a trusted source. Type yes then press ENTER to confirm this:

Output
You are about to sign the following certificate. Please check over the details shown below for accuracy. Note that this request has not been cryptographically verified. Please be sure it came from a trusted source or that you have verified the request checksum with the sender. Request subject, to be signed as a server certificate for 3650 days: subject= commonName = sammy-server Type the word 'yes' to continue, or any other input to abort. Confirm request details: yes . . . Certificate created at: /home/sammy/easy-rsa/pki/issued/sammy-server.crt

If you encrypted your CA key, you’ll be prompted for your password at this point.

With those steps complete, you have signed the sammy-server.req CSR using the CA Server’s private key in /home/sammy/easy-rsa/pki/private/ca.key. The resulting sammy-server.crt file contains the practice server’s public encryption key, as well as a new signature from the CA Server. The point of the signature is to tell anyone who trusts the CA that they can also trust the sammy-server certificate.

If this request was for a real server like a web server or VPN server, the last step on the CA Server would be to distribute the new sammy-server.crt and ca.crt files from the CA Server to the remote server that made the CSR request:

  1. scp pki/issued/sammy-server.crt sammy@your_server_ip:/tmp
  2. scp pki/ca.crt sammy@your_server_ip:/tmp

At this point, you would be able to use the issued certificate with something like a web server, a VPN, configuration management tool, database system, or for client authentication purposes.

(Optional) — Revoking a Certificate

Occasionally, you may need to revoke a certificate to prevent a user or server from using it. Perhaps someone’s laptop was stolen, a web server was compromised, or an employee or contractor has left your organization.

To revoke a certificate, the general process follows these steps:

  1. Revoke the certificate with the ./easyrsa revoke client_name command.
  2. Generate a new CRL with the ./easyrsa gen-crl command.
  3. Transfer the updated crl.pem file to the server or servers that rely on your CA, and on those systems copy it to the required directory or directories for programs that refer to it.
  4. Restart any services that use your CA and the CRL file.

You can use this process to revoke any certificates that you’ve previously issued at any time. We’ll go over each step in detail in the following sections, starting with the revoke command.

Revoking a Certificate

To revoke a certificate, navigate to the easy-rsa directory on your CA server:

  1. cd ~/easy-rsa

Next, run the easyrsa script with the revoke option, followed by the client name you wish to revoke. Following the practice example above, the Common Name of the certificate is sammy-server:

  1. ./easyrsa revoke sammy-server

This will ask you to confirm the revocation by entering yes:

Output
Please confirm you wish to revoke the certificate with the following subject: subject= commonName = sammy-server Type the word 'yes' to continue, or any other input to abort. Continue with revocation: yes . . . Revoking Certificate 8348B3F146A765581946040D5C4D590A . . .

Note the highlighted value on the Revoking Certificate line. This value is the unique serial number of the certificate that is being revoked. If you want to examine the revocation list in the last step of this section to verify that the certificate is in it, you’ll need this value.

After confirming the action, the CA will revoke the certificate. However, remote systems that rely on the CA have no way to check whether any certificates have been revoked. Users and servers will still be able to use the certificate until the CA’s Certificate Revocation List (CRL) is distributed to all systems that rely on the CA.

In the next step you’ll generate a CRL or update an existing crl.pem file.

Generating a Certificate Revocation List

Now that you have revoked a certificate, it is important to update the list of revoked certificates on your CA server. Once you have an updated revocation list you will be able to tell which users and systems have valid certificates in your CA.

To generate a CRL, run the easy-rsa command with the gen-crl option while still inside the ~/easy-rsa directory:

  1. ./easyrsa gen-crl

If you have used a passphrase when creating your ca.key file, you will be prompted to enter it. The gen-crl command will generate a file called crl.pem, containing the updated list of revoked certificates for that CA.

Next you’ll need to transfer the updated crl.pem file to all servers and clients that rely on this CA each time you run the gen-crl command. Otherwise, clients and systems will still be able to access services and systems that use your CA, since those services need to know about the revoked status of the certificate.

Transferring a Certificate Revocation List

Now that you have generated a CRL on your CA server, you need to transfer it to remote systems that rely on your CA. To transfer this file to your servers, you can use the scp command.

Note: This tutorial explains how to generate and distribute a CRL manually. While there are more robust and automated methods to distribute and check revocation lists like OCSP-Stapling, configuring those methods is beyond the scope of this article.

Ensure you are logged into your CA server as your non-root user and run the following, substituting in your own server IP or DNS name in place of your_server_ip:

  1. scp ~/easy-rsa/pki/crl.pem sammy@your_server_ip:/tmp

Now that the file is on the remote system, the last step is to update any services with the new copy of the revocation list.

Updating Services that Support a CRL

Listing the steps that you need to use to update services that use the crl.pem file is beyond the scope of this tutorial. In general you will need to copy the crl.pem file into the location that the service expects and then restart it using systemctl.

Once you have updated your services with the new crl.pem file, your services will be able to reject connections from clients or servers that are using a revoked certificate.

Examining and Verifying the Contents of a CRL

If you would like to examine a CRL file, for example to confirm a list of revoked certificates, use the following openssl command from within your easy-rsa directory on your CA server:

  1. cd ~/easy-rsa
  2. openssl crl -in pki/crl.pem -noout -text

You can also run this command on any server or system that has the openssl tool installed with a copy of the crl.pem file. For example, if you transferred the crl.pem file to your second system and want to verify that the sammy-server certificate is revoked, you can use an openssl command like the following, substituting the serial number that you noted earlier when you revoked the certificate in place of the highlighted one here:

  1. openssl crl -in /tmp/crl.pem -noout -text |grep -A 1 8348B3F146A765581946040D5C4D590A
Output
Serial Number: 8348B3F146A765581946040D5C4D590A Revocation Date: Apr 1 20:48:02 2020 GMT

Notice how the grep command is used to check for the unique serial number that you noted in the revocation step. Now you can verify the contents of your Certificate Revocation List on any system that relies on it to restrict access to users and services.

Conclusion

In this tutorial you created a private Certificate Authority using the Easy-RSA package on a standalone CentOS 8 server. You learned how the trust model works between parties that rely on the CA. You also created and signed a Certificate Signing Request (CSR) for a practice server and then learned how to revoke a certificate. Finally, you learned how to generate and distribute a Certificate Revocation List (CRL) for any system that relies on your CA to ensure that users or servers that should not access services are prevented from doing so.

Now you can issue certificates for users and use them with services like OpenVPN. You can also use your CA to configure development and staging web servers with certificates to secure your non-production environments. Using a CA with TLS certificates during development can help ensure that your code and environments match your production environment as closely as possible.

If you would like to learn more about how to use OpenSSL, our OpenSSL Essentials: Working with SSL Certificates, Private Keys and CSRs tutorial has lots of additional information to help you become more familiar with OpenSSL fundamentals.

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A bit confusion here such server side or client side setup , due to you use ca.crt too many times. You did this CP, I think probably not to use same ca.crt here. It creates more confusion.

Awesome tutorial. I have one question on where to install the public cert of a client/server in CENTOS. This covers everything exception that and the publishing of the CRL.

Thanks for the excellent write up on very essential PKI fundamentals.

Related Open Source Solutions:

Smallstep CA https://github.com/smallstep/certificates

Hashicorp Vault CA/PKI https://cloudinvent.com/blog/howto-hashicorp-vault-ca-pki-deployment/

Thanks again for the amazing tutorial. Rod

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