Botan 1.7.17 (Development branch)


 
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Old 10-12-2008
Botan 1.7.17 (Development branch)

Botan is a C++ library of cryptographic algorithms, including AES, DES, SHA-1, RSA, DSA, Diffie-Hellman, and many others. It also supports X.509 certificates and CRLs, and PKCS #10 certificate requests, and has a high level filter/pipe message processing system. The library is easily portable to most systems and compilers, and includes a substantial tutorial and API reference. License: BSD License (revised) Changes:
This release of Botan fixes all known bugs in the new implementation of the ECDSA and ECDH public key algorithms. Support for DLL builds was slightly improved. Image

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PKI(1)								    strongSwan								    PKI(1)

NAME
pki - Simple public key infrastructure (PKI) management tool SYNOPSIS
pki command [option ...] pki -h | --help DESCRIPTION
pki is a suite of commands that allow you to manage a simple public key infrastructure (PKI). Generate RSA and ECDSA key pairs, create PKCS#10 certificate requests containing subjectAltNames, create X.509 self-signed end-entity and root CA certificates, issue end-entity and intermediate CA certificates signed by the private key of a CA and containing subjectAltNames, CRL distribution points and URIs of OCSP servers. You can also extract raw public keys from private keys, certificate requests and certifi- cates and compute two kinds of SHA-1-based key IDs. COMMANDS
-h, --help Prints usage information and a short summary of the available commands. -g, --gen Generate a new private key. -s, --self Create a self-signed certificate. -i, --issue Issue a certificate using a CA certificate and key. -c, --signcrl Issue a CRL using a CA certificate and key. -r, --req Create a PKCS#10 certificate request. -7, --pkcs7 Provides PKCS#7 wrap/unwrap functions. -k, --keyid Calculate key identifiers of a key or certificate. -a, --print Print a credential (key, certificate etc.) in human readable form. -p, --pub Extract a public key from a private key or certificate. -v, --verify Verify a certificate using a CA certificate. EXAMPLES
Generating a CA Certificate The first step is to generate a private key using the --gen command. By default this generates a 2048-bit RSA key. pki --gen > ca_key.der This key is used to create the self-signed CA certificate, using the --self command. The distinguished name should be adjusted to your needs. pki --self --ca --in ca_key.der --dn "C=CH, O=strongSwan, CN=strongSwan CA" > ca_cert.der Generating End-Entity Certificates With the root CA certificate and key at hand end-entity certificates for clients and servers can be issued. Similarly intermediate CA cer- tificates can be issued, which in turn can issue other certificates. To generate a certificate for a server, we start by generating a pri- vate key. pki --gen > server_key.der The public key will be included in the certificate so lets extract that from the private key. pki --pub --in server_key.der > server_pub.der The following command will use the CA certificate and private key to issue the certificate for this server. Adjust the distinguished name, subjectAltName(s) and flags as needed (check pki --issue(8) for more options). pki --issue --in server_pub.der --cacert ca_cert.der --cakey ca_key.der --dn "C=CH, O=strongSwan, CN=VPN Server" --san vpn.strongswan.org --flag serverAuth > server_cert.der Instead of storing the public key in a separate file, the output of --pub may also be piped directly into the above command. Generating Certificate Revocation Lists (CRL) If end-entity certificates have to be revoked, CRLs may be generated using the --signcrl command. pki --signcrl --cacert ca_cert.der --cakey ca_key.der --reason superseded --cert server_cert.der > crl.der The certificate given with --cacert must be either a CA certificate or a certificate with the crlSign extended key usage (--flag crlSign). URIs to CRLs may be included in issued certificates with the --crl option. SEE ALSO
pki --gen(1), pki --self(1), pki --issue(1), pki --signcrl(1), pki --req(1), pki --pkcs7(1), pki --keyid(1), pki --print(1), pki --pub(1), pki --verify(1) 5.1.1 2013-07-31 PKI(1)