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Merged revisions 292740 via svnmerge from

https://origsvn.digium.com/svn/asterisk/branches/1.8

........
  r292740 | twilson | 2010-10-22 09:49:34 -0700 (Fri, 22 Oct 2010) | 45 lines
  
  Add TLS cert helper script
  
  This script is useful for quickly generating self-signed CA, server, and client
  certificates for use with Asterisk. It is still recommended to obtain
  certificates from a recognized Certificate Authority and to develop an
  understanding how SSL certificates work. Real security is hard work.
  
  OPTIONS:
    -h  Show this message
    -m  Type of cert "client" or "server". Defaults to server.
    -f  Config filename (openssl config file format)
    -c  CA cert filename (creates new CA cert/key as ca.crt/ca.key if not passed)
    -k  CA key filename
    -C  Common name (cert field)
          For a server cert, this should be the same address that clients
          attempt to connect to. Usually this will be the Fully Qualified
          Domain Name, but might be the IP of the server. For a CA or client
          cert, it is merely informational. Make sure your certs have unique
          common names.
    -O  Org name (cert field)
          An informational string (company name)
    -o  Output filename base (defaults to asterisk) 
    -d  Output directory (defaults to the current directory)
  
  Example:
  
  To create a CA and a server (pbx.mycompany.com) cert with output in /tmp:
    ast_tls_cert -C pbx.mycompany.com -O "My Company" -d /tmp
  
  This will create a CA cert and key as well as asterisk.pem and the the two
  files that it is made from: asterisk.crt and asterisk.key. Copy asterisk.pem
  and ca.crt somewhere (like /etc/asterisk) and set tlscertfile=/etc/asterisk.pem
  and tlscafile=/etc/ca.crt. Since this is a self-signed key, many devices will
  require you to import the ca.crt file as a trusted cert.
  
  To create a client cert using the CA cert created by the example above:
    ast_tls_cert -m client -c /tmp/ca.crt -k /tmp/ca.key -C "Joe User" -O \
      "My Company" -d /tmp -o joe_user
  
  This will create client.crt/key/pem in /tmp. Use this if your device supports
  a client certificate. Make sure that you have the ca.crt file set up as
  a tlscafile in the necessary Asterisk configs. Make backups of all .key files
  in case you need them later.
........


git-svn-id: http://svn.digium.com/svn/asterisk/trunk@292743 f38db490-d61c-443f-a65b-d21fe96a405b
This commit is contained in:
twilson 2010-10-22 17:16:57 +00:00
parent 4425611ae5
commit 6aee3da4e4
1 changed files with 186 additions and 0 deletions

186
contrib/scripts/ast_tls_cert Executable file
View File

@ -0,0 +1,186 @@
#!/bin/sh -e
DEFAULT_ORG="Asterisk"
DEFAULT_CA_CN="Asterisk Private CA"
DEFAULT_CLIENT_CN="asterisk"
DEFAULT_SERVER_CN=`hostname -f`
# arguments
# $1 "ca" if we are to generate a CA cert
# $2 alternate config file name (for ca)
# $3 alternate common name
# $4 alternate org name
create_config () {
if [ "$1" = "ca" ]
then
castring="
[ext]
basicConstraints=CA:TRUE"
fi
cat > ${2:-"${CONFIG_FILE}"} << EOF
[req]
distinguished_name = req_distinguished_name
prompt = no
[req_distinguished_name]
CN=${3:-"${COMMON_NAME}"}
O=${4:-"${ORG_NAME}"}
${castring}
EOF
}
create_ca () {
echo "Creating ${CAKEY}"
openssl genrsa -des3 -out ${CAKEY} 4096 > /dev/null
echo "Creating ${CACERT}"
openssl req -new -config ${CACFG} -x509 -days 365 -key ${CAKEY} -out ${CACERT} > /dev/null
}
create_cert () {
local base=${OUTPUT_DIR}/${OUTPUT_BASE}
echo "Creating ${base}.key"
openssl genrsa -out ${base}.key 1024 > /dev/null
echo "Creating signing request"
openssl req -batch -new -config ${CONFIG_FILE} -key ${base}.key -out ${base}.csr > /dev/null
echo "Creating ${base}.crt"
openssl x509 -req -days 365 -in ${base}.csr -CA ${CACERT} -CAkey ${CAKEY} -set_serial 01 -out ${base}.crt > /dev/null
echo "Combining key and crt into ${base}.pem"
cat ${base}.key > ${base}.pem
cat ${base}.crt >> ${base}.pem
}
usage () {
cat << EOF
This script is useful for quickly generating self-signed CA, server, and client
certificates for use with Asterisk. It is still recommended to obtain
certificates from a recognized Certificate Authority and to develop an
understanding how SSL certificates work. Real security is hard work.
OPTIONS:
-h Show this message
-m Type of cert "client" or "server". Defaults to server.
-f Config filename (openssl config file format)
-c CA cert filename (creates new CA cert/key as ca.crt/ca.key if not passed)
-k CA key filename
-C Common name (cert field)
For a server cert, this should be the same address that clients
attempt to connect to. Usually this will be the Fully Qualified
Domain Name, but might be the IP of the server. For a CA or client
cert, it is merely informational. Make sure your certs have unique
common names.
-O Org name (cert field)
An informational string (company name)
-o Output filename base (defaults to asterisk)
-d Output directory (defaults to the current directory)
Example:
To create a CA and a server (pbx.mycompany.com) cert with output in /tmp:
ast_tls_cert -C pbx.mycompany.com -O "My Company" -d /tmp
This will create a CA cert and key as well as asterisk.pem and the the two
files that it is made from: asterisk.crt and asterisk.key. Copy asterisk.pem
and ca.crt somewhere (like /etc/asterisk) and set tlscertfile=/etc/asterisk.pem
and tlscafile=/etc/ca.crt. Since this is a self-signed key, many devices will
require you to import the ca.crt file as a trusted cert.
To create a client cert using the CA cert created by the example above:
ast_tls_cert -m client -c /tmp/ca.crt -k /tmp/ca.key -C "Joe User" -O \\
"My Company" -d /tmp -o joe_user
This will create client.crt/key/pem in /tmp. Use this if your device supports
a client certificate. Make sure that you have the ca.crt file set up as
a tlscafile in the necessary Asterisk configs. Make backups of all .key files
in case you need them later.
EOF
}
if ! type openssl >/dev/null 2>&1
then
echo "This script requires openssl to be in the path"
exit 1
fi
OUTPUT_BASE=asterisk # Our default cert basename
CERT_MODE=server
ORG_NAME=${DEFAULT_ORG}
while getopts "hf:c:k:o:d:m:C:O:" OPTION
do
case ${OPTION} in
h)
usage
exit 1
;;
f)
CONFIG_FILE=${OPTARG}
;;
c)
CACERT=${OPTARG}
;;
k)
CAKEY=${OPTARG}
;;
o)
OUTPUT_BASE=${OPTARG}
;;
d)
OUTPUT_DIR=${OPTARG}
;;
m)
CERT_MODE=${OPTARG}
;;
C)
COMMON_NAME=${OPTARG}
;;
O)
ORG_NAME=${OPTARG}
;;
?)
usage
exit
;;
esac
done
if [ -z "${OUTPUT_DIR}" ]
then
OUTPUT_DIR=.
else
mkdir -p "${OUTPUT_DIR}"
fi
case "${CERT_MODE}" in
server)
COMMON_NAME=${COMMON_NAME:-"${DEFAULT_SERVER_CN}"}
;;
client)
COMMON_NAME=${COMMON_NAME:-"${DEFAULT_CLIENT_CN}"}
;;
*)
echo
echo "Unknown mode. Exiting."
exit 1
;;
esac
if [ -z "${CONFIG_FILE}" ]
then
CONFIG_FILE="${OUTPUT_DIR}/tmp.cfg"
echo
echo "No config file specified, creating '${CONFIG_FILE}'"
echo "You can use this config file to create additional certs without"
echo "re-entering the information for the fields in the certificate"
create_config
fi
if [ -z ${CACERT} ]
then
CAKEY=${OUTPUT_DIR}/ca.key
CACERT=${OUTPUT_DIR}/ca.crt
CACFG=${OUTPUT_DIR}/ca.cfg
create_config ca "${CACFG}" "${DEFAULT_CA_CN}" "${DEFAULT_CA_ORG}"
create_ca
fi
create_cert