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Setting up the CA
=================

The first step is to set up a certificate authority (CA). It must be
maintained by a trustworthy person (or group) and approves the
identities of all machines. It does so by issuing their certificates.
In a small setup, the administrator can provide the CA function. What is
important is the CA's private key is well-protected and machine 
certificates are only issued if it is know they are valid (in a 
single-admin case that means the admin should not issue certificates to 
anyone else except himself).

The CA creates a so-called self-signed certificate. That is, it approves
its own authenticity. This sounds useless, but the key point to understand
is that every machine will be provided a copy of the CA's certificate.
Accepting this certificate is a matter of trust. So by configuring the
CA certificate, the administrator tells
`rsyslog <http://www.rsyslog.com>`_ which certificates to trust. This is
the root of all trust under this model. That is why the CA's private key
is so important - everyone getting hold of it is trusted by our rsyslog
instances.

.. figure:: tls_cert_ca.jpg
   :align: center
   :alt: 

To create a self-signed certificate, use the following commands with
GnuTLS (which is currently the only supported TLS library, what may
change in the future). Please note that GnuTLS' tools are not installed
by default on many platforms. Also, the tools do not necessarily come
with the GnuTLS core package. If you do not have certtool on your
system, check if there is package for the GnuTLS tools available (under
Fedora, for example, this is named gnutls-utils-<version> and it is NOT
installed by default).

#. generate the private key:

   ::

       certtool --generate-privkey --outfile ca-key.pem

   This takes a short while. Be sure to do some work on your
   workstation, it waits for random input. Switching between windows is
   sufficient ;)
   

#. now create the (self-signed) CA certificate itself:

   ::

       certtool --generate-self-signed --load-privkey ca-key.pem --outfile ca.pem

   This generates the CA certificate. This command queries you for a
   number of things. Use appropriate responses. When it comes to
   certificate validity, keep in mind that you need to recreate all
   certificates when this one expires. So it may be a good idea to use a
   long period, eg. 3650 days (roughly 10 years). You need to specify
   that the certificates belongs to an authority. The certificate is
   used to sign other certificates.

Sample Screen Session
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

Text in red is user input. Please note that for some questions, there is
no user input given. This means the default was accepted by simply
pressing the enter key. 

::

    [root@rgf9dev sample]# certtool --generate-privkey --outfile ca-key.pem --bits 2048
    Generating a 2048 bit RSA private key...
    [root@rgf9dev sample]# certtool --generate-self-signed --load-privkey ca-key.pem --outfile ca.pem
    Generating a self signed certificate...
    Please enter the details of the certificate's distinguished name. Just press enter to ignore a field.
    Country name (2 chars): US
    Organization name: SomeOrg
    Organizational unit name: SomeOU
    Locality name: Somewhere
    State or province name: CA
    Common name: someName (not necessarily DNS!)
    UID: 
    This field should not be used in new certificates.
    E-mail: 
    Enter the certificate's serial number (decimal): 


    Activation/Expiration time.
    The certificate will expire in (days): 3650


    Extensions.
    Does the certificate belong to an authority? (Y/N): y
    Path length constraint (decimal, -1 for no constraint): 
    Is this a TLS web client certificate? (Y/N): 
    Is this also a TLS web server certificate? (Y/N): 
    Enter the e-mail of the subject of the certificate: someone@example.net
    Will the certificate be used to sign other certificates? (Y/N): y
    Will the certificate be used to sign CRLs? (Y/N): 
    Will the certificate be used to sign code? (Y/N): 
    Will the certificate be used to sign OCSP requests? (Y/N): 
    Will the certificate be used for time stamping? (Y/N): 
    Enter the URI of the CRL distribution point:        
    X.509 Certificate Information:
        Version: 3
        Serial Number (hex): 485a365e
        Validity:
            Not Before: Thu Jun 19 10:35:12 UTC 2008
            Not After: Sun Jun 17 10:35:25 UTC 2018
        Subject: C=US,O=SomeOrg,OU=SomeOU,L=Somewhere,ST=CA,CN=someName (not necessarily DNS!)
        Subject Public Key Algorithm: RSA
            Modulus (bits 2048):
                d9:9c:82:46:24:7f:34:8f:60:cf:05:77:71:82:61:66
                05:13:28:06:7a:70:41:bf:32:85:12:5c:25:a7:1a:5a
                28:11:02:1a:78:c1:da:34:ee:b4:7e:12:9b:81:24:70
                ff:e4:89:88:ca:05:30:0a:3f:d7:58:0b:38:24:a9:b7
                2e:a2:b6:8a:1d:60:53:2f:ec:e9:38:36:3b:9b:77:93
                5d:64:76:31:07:30:a5:31:0c:e2:ec:e3:8d:5d:13:01
                11:3d:0b:5e:3c:4a:32:d8:f3:b3:56:22:32:cb:de:7d
                64:9a:2b:91:d9:f0:0b:82:c1:29:d4:15:2c:41:0b:97
            Exponent:
                01:00:01
        Extensions:
            Basic Constraints (critical):
                Certificate Authority (CA): TRUE
            Subject Alternative Name (not critical):
                RFC822name: someone@example.net
            Key Usage (critical):
                Certificate signing.
            Subject Key Identifier (not critical):
                fbfe968d10a73ae5b70d7b434886c8f872997b89
    Other Information:
        Public Key Id:
            fbfe968d10a73ae5b70d7b434886c8f872997b89

    Is the above information ok? (Y/N): y


    Signing certificate...
    [root@rgf9dev sample]# chmod 400 ca-key.pem
    [root@rgf9dev sample]# ls -l
    total 8
    -r-------- 1 root root  887 2008-06-19 12:33 ca-key.pem
    -rw-r--r-- 1 root root 1029 2008-06-19 12:36 ca.pem
    [root@rgf9dev sample]# 

**Be sure to safeguard ca-key.pem!** Nobody except the CA itself needs
to have it. If some third party obtains it, you security is broken!