This is a small RSA key management package, based on the openssl command line tool, that can be found in the easy-rsa subdirectory of the OpenVPN distribution. These are reference notes. For step by step instructions, see the HOWTO: http://openvpn.net/howto.html INSTALL 1. Edit vars. 2. Set KEY_CONFIG to point to the openssl.cnf file included in this distribution. 3. Set KEY_DIR to point to a directory which will contain all keys, certificates, etc. This directory need not exist, and if it does, it will be deleted with rm -rf, so BE CAREFUL how you set KEY_DIR. 4. (Optional) Edit other fields in vars per your site data. You may want to increase KEY_SIZE to 2048 if you are paranoid and don't mind slower key processing, but certainly 1024 is fine for testing purposes. KEY_SIZE must be compatible across both peers participating in a secure SSL/TLS connection. 5 . vars 6. ./clean-all 7. As you create certificates, keys, and certificate signing requests, understand that only .key files should be kept confidential. .crt and .csr files can be sent over insecure channels such as plaintext email. 8. You should never need to copy a .key file between computers. Normally each computer will have its own certificate/key pair. BUILD YOUR OWN ROOT CERTIFICATE AUTHORITY (CA) CERTIFICATE/KEY 1. ./build-ca 2. ca.crt and ca.key will be built in your KEY_DIR directory BUILD AN INTERMEDIATE CERTIFICATE AUTHORITY CERTIFICATE/KEY (optional) 1. ./build-inter inter 2. inter.crt and inter.key will be built in your KEY_DIR directory and signed with your root certificate. BUILD DIFFIE-HELLMAN PARAMETERS (necessary for the server end of a SSL/TLS connection). 1. ./build-dh BUILD A CERTIFICATE SIGNING REQUEST (If you want to sign your certificate with a root certificate controlled by another individual or organization, or residing on a different machine). 1. Get ca.crt (the root certificate) from your certificate authority. Though this transfer can be over an insecure channel, to prevent man-in-the-middle attacks you must confirm that ca.crt was not tampered with. Large CAs solve this problem by hardwiring their root certificates into popular web browsers. A simple way to verify a root CA is to call the issuer on the telephone and confirm that the md5sum or sha1sum signatures on the ca.crt files match (such as with the command: "md5sum ca.crt"). 2. Choose a name for your certificate such as your computer name. In our example we will use "mycert". 3. ./build-req mycert 4. You can ignore most of the fields, but set "Common Name" to something unique such as your computer's host name. Leave all password fields blank, unless you want your private key to be protected by password. Using a password is not required -- it will make your key more secure but also more inconvenient to use, because you will need to supply your password anytime the key is used. NOTE: if you are using a password, use ./build-req-pass instead of ./build-req 5. Your key will be written to $KEY_DIR/mycert.key 6. Your certificate signing request will be written to to $KEY_DIR/mycert.csr 7. Email mycert.csr to the individual or organization which controls the root certificate. This can be done over an insecure channel. 8. After the .csr file is signed by the root certificate authority, you will receive a file mycert.crt (your certificate). Place mycert.crt in your KEY_DIR directory. 9. The combined files of mycert.crt, mycert.key, and ca.crt can now be used to secure one end of an SSL/TLS connection. SIGN A CERTIFICATE SIGNING REQUEST 1. ./sign-req mycert 2. mycert.crt will be built in your KEY_DIR directory using mycert.csr and your root CA file as input. BUILD AND SIGN A CERTIFICATE SIGNING REQUEST USING A LOCALLY INSTALLED ROOT CERTIFICATE/KEY -- this script generates and signs a certificate in one step, but it requires that the generated certificate and private key files be copied to the destination host over a secure channel. 1. ./build-key mycert (no password protection) 2. OR ./build-key-pass mycert (with password protection) 3. OR ./build-key-pkcs12 mycert (PKCS #12 format) 4. OR ./build-key-server mycert (with nsCertType=server) 5. mycert.crt and mycert.key will be built in your KEY_DIR directory, and mycert.crt will be signed by your root CA. If ./build-key-pkcs12 was used a mycert.p12 file will also be created including the private key, certificate and the ca certificate. IMPORTANT To avoid a possible Man-in-the-Middle attack where an authorized client tries to connect to another client by impersonating the server, make sure to enforce some kind of server certificate verification by clients. There are currently four different ways of accomplishing this, listed in the order of preference: (1) Build your server certificates with the build-key-server script. This will designate the certificate as a server-only certificate by setting nsCertType=server. Now add the following line to your client configuration: ns-cert-type server This will block clients from connecting to any server which lacks the nsCertType=server designation in its certificate, even if the certificate has been signed by the CA which is cited in the OpenVPN configuration file (--ca directive). (2) Use the --tls-remote directive on the client to accept/reject the server connection based on the common name of the server certificate. (3) Use a --tls-verify script or plugin to accept/reject the server connection based on a custom test of the server certificate's embedded X509 subject details. (4) Sign server certificates with one CA and client certificates with a different CA. The client config "ca" directive should reference the server-signing CA while the server config "ca" directive should reference the client-signing CA. NOTES Show certificate fields: openssl x509 -in cert.crt -text