SSL: Difference between revisions

From miki
Jump to navigation Jump to search
No edit summary
Line 1: Line 1:
== Split PKCS#12 certificate into CA / Cert / Private key ==
Use <code>openssl pkcs12</code> to split a pkcs#12 data into the CA / certificates / private keys component. By default, PKCS#12 produces '''PEM''' files

<source lang=bash>
openssl pkcs12 -in mywindowscert.pfx -nocerts -out mycert.key
openssl pkcs12 -in mywindowscert.pfx -clcerts -nokeys -out mycert.crt.pem
openssl pkcs12 -in mywindowscert.pfx -cacerts -nokeys -out mycert.ca.pem
</source>

== Checking Certificate Chain with OpenSSL ==
== Checking Certificate Chain with OpenSSL ==
[http://langui.sh/2009/03/14/checking-a-remote-certificate-chain-with-openssl/ Checking A Remote Certificate Chain With OpenSSL]
[http://langui.sh/2009/03/14/checking-a-remote-certificate-chain-with-openssl/ Checking A Remote Certificate Chain With OpenSSL]

Revision as of 14:48, 4 March 2015

Split PKCS#12 certificate into CA / Cert / Private key

Use openssl pkcs12 to split a pkcs#12 data into the CA / certificates / private keys component. By default, PKCS#12 produces PEM files

openssl pkcs12 -in mywindowscert.pfx -nocerts -out mycert.key
openssl pkcs12 -in mywindowscert.pfx -clcerts -nokeys -out mycert.crt.pem
openssl pkcs12 -in mywindowscert.pfx -cacerts -nokeys -out mycert.ca.pem

Checking Certificate Chain with OpenSSL

Checking A Remote Certificate Chain With OpenSSL

Change .p12 / .pfx password

Say you have a private key / certificate file mycert.pfx, and you want to change its password:

# Strangely we cannot pipe output of 1st command into 2nd (error 'No certificate matches private key')
openssl pkcs12 -in mycert.pfx -out mycert.pem -nodes         # Don't encrypt private key at all
openssl pkcs12 -export -in mycert.pem -out mycert-new.pfx
rm mycert.pem                                               # DON'T FORGET THIS!

Extract key from .p12/ .pfx

  • openssl pkcs12 takes a file in pkcs#12 format (.p12/.pfx) and produces a file in PEM format, that is parseable with openssl rsa. The PEM may contain either private key, certificates, root certificates or even public keys.
openssl pkcs12 -in mycert.pfx -out mycert.pem -nocerts -nodes  # Don't encrypt private key at all, don't output certificates
openssl rsa -noout -modulus -in mycert.pem                     # To extract the modulus
openssl rsa -noout -text -in mycert.pem                        # To extract all the fields