Cfssl
CFSSL: Cloudflare's PKI and TLS toolkit
Install / Use
/learn @cloudflare/CfsslREADME
CFSSL
CloudFlare's PKI/TLS toolkit
CFSSL is CloudFlare's PKI/TLS swiss army knife. It is both a command line tool and an HTTP API server for signing, verifying, and bundling TLS certificates. It requires Go 1.20+ to build.
Note that certain linux distributions have certain algorithms removed (RHEL-based distributions in particular), so the golang from the official repositories will not work. Users of these distributions should install go manually to install CFSSL.
CFSSL consists of:
- a set of packages useful for building custom TLS PKI tools
- the
cfsslprogram, which is the canonical command line utility using the CFSSL packages. - the
multirootcaprogram, which is a certificate authority server that can use multiple signing keys. - the
mkbundleprogram is used to build certificate pool bundles. - the
cfssljsonprogram, which takes the JSON output from thecfsslandmultirootcaprograms and writes certificates, keys, CSRs, and bundles to disk.
Building
Building cfssl requires a working Go 1.20+ installation.
$ git clone git@github.com:cloudflare/cfssl.git
$ cd cfssl
$ make
$ make install
The resulting binaries will be in the bin folder:
$ tree bin
bin
├── cfssl
├── cfssl-bundle
├── cfssl-certinfo
├── cfssl-newkey
├── cfssl-scan
├── cfssljson
├── mkbundle
└── multirootca
0 directories, 8 files
Cross Compilation
You can set the GOOS and GOARCH environment variables to have Go cross compile for alternative platforms; however, cfssl requires cgo, and cgo requires a working compiler toolchain for the target platform.
Installation
Installation requires a working Go 1.20+ installation. Alternatively, prebuilt binaries are available
$ go install github.com/cloudflare/cfssl/cmd/...@latest
This will download, build, and install all of the utility programs
(including cfssl, cfssljson, and mkbundle among others).
Using the Command Line Tool
The cfssl command line tool takes a command to specify what
operation it should carry out:
sign signs a certificate
bundle build a certificate bundle
genkey generate a private key and a certificate request
gencert generate a private key and a certificate
serve start the API server
version prints out the current version
selfsign generates a self-signed certificate
print-defaults print default configurations
Use cfssl [command] -help to find out more about a command.
The version command takes no arguments.
Signing
cfssl sign [-ca cert] [-ca-key key] [-hostname comma,separated,hostnames] csr [subject]
The csr is the client's certificate request. The -ca and -ca-key
flags are the CA's certificate and private key, respectively. By
default, they are ca.pem and ca_key.pem. The -hostname is
a comma separated hostname list that overrides the DNS names and
IP address in the certificate SAN extension.
For example, assuming the CA's private key is in
/etc/ssl/private/cfssl_key.pem and the CA's certificate is in
/etc/ssl/certs/cfssl.pem, to sign the cloudflare.pem certificate
for cloudflare.com:
cfssl sign -ca /etc/ssl/certs/cfssl.pem \
-ca-key /etc/ssl/private/cfssl_key.pem \
-hostname cloudflare.com \
./cloudflare.pem
It is also possible to specify CSR with the -csr flag. By doing so,
flag values take precedence and will overwrite the argument.
The subject is an optional file that contains subject information that should be used in place of the information from the CSR. It should be a JSON file as follows:
{
"CN": "example.com",
"names": [
{
"C": "US",
"L": "San Francisco",
"O": "Internet Widgets, Inc.",
"OU": "WWW",
"ST": "California"
}
]
}
N.B. As of Go 1.7, self-signed certificates will not include the AKI.
Bundling
cfssl bundle [-ca-bundle bundle] [-int-bundle bundle] \
[-metadata metadata_file] [-flavor bundle_flavor] \
-cert certificate_file [-key key_file]
The bundles are used for the root and intermediate certificate
pools. In addition, platform metadata is specified through -metadata.
The bundle files, metadata file (and auxiliary files) can be
found at:
https://github.com/cloudflare/cfssl_trust
Specify PEM-encoded client certificate and key through -cert and
-key respectively. If key is specified, the bundle will be built
and verified with the key. Otherwise the bundle will be built
without a private key. Instead of file path, use - for reading
certificate PEM from stdin. It is also acceptable that the certificate
file should contain a (partial) certificate bundle.
Specify bundling flavor through -flavor. There are three flavors:
optimal to generate a bundle of shortest chain and most advanced
cryptographic algorithms, ubiquitous to generate a bundle of most
widely acceptance across different browsers and OS platforms, and
force to find an acceptable bundle which is identical to the
content of the input certificate file.
Alternatively, the client certificate can be pulled directly from
a domain. It is also possible to connect to the remote address
through -ip.
cfssl bundle [-ca-bundle bundle] [-int-bundle bundle] \
[-metadata metadata_file] [-flavor bundle_flavor] \
-domain domain_name [-ip ip_address]
The bundle output form should follow the example:
{
"bundle": "CERT_BUNDLE_IN_PEM",
"crt": "LEAF_CERT_IN_PEM",
"crl_support": true,
"expires": "2015-12-31T23:59:59Z",
"hostnames": ["example.com"],
"issuer": "ISSUER CERT SUBJECT",
"key": "KEY_IN_PEM",
"key_size": 2048,
"key_type": "2048-bit RSA",
"ocsp": ["http://ocsp.example-ca.com"],
"ocsp_support": true,
"root": "ROOT_CA_CERT_IN_PEM",
"signature": "SHA1WithRSA",
"subject": "LEAF CERT SUBJECT",
"status": {
"rebundled": false,
"expiring_SKIs": [],
"untrusted_root_stores": [],
"messages": [],
"code": 0
}
}
Generating certificate signing request and private key
cfssl genkey csr.json
To generate a private key and corresponding certificate request, specify the key request as a JSON file. This file should follow the form:
{
"hosts": [
"example.com",
"www.example.com",
"https://www.example.com",
"jdoe@example.com",
"127.0.0.1"
],
"key": {
"algo": "rsa",
"size": 2048
},
"names": [
{
"C": "US",
"L": "San Francisco",
"O": "Internet Widgets, Inc.",
"OU": "WWW",
"ST": "California"
}
]
}
Generating self-signed root CA certificate and private key
cfssl genkey -initca csr.json | cfssljson -bare ca
To generate a self-signed root CA certificate, specify the key request as a JSON file in the same format as in 'genkey'. Three PEM-encoded entities will appear in the output: the private key, the csr, and the self-signed certificate.
Generating a remote-issued certificate and private key.
cfssl gencert -remote=remote_server [-hostname=comma,separated,hostnames] csr.json
This calls genkey but has a remote CFSSL server sign and issue
the certificate. You may use -hostname to override certificate SANs.
Generating a local-issued certificate and private key.
cfssl gencert -ca cert -ca-key key [-hostname=comma,separated,hostnames] csr.json
This generates and issues a certificate and private key from a local CA
via a JSON request. You may use -hostname to override certificate SANs.
Updating an OCSP responses file with a newly issued certificate
cfssl ocspsign -ca cert -responder key -responder-key key -cert cert \
| cfssljson -bare -stdout >> responses
This will generate an OCSP response for the cert and add it to the
responses file. You can then pass responses to ocspserve to start an
OCSP server.
Starting the API Server
CFSSL comes with an HTTP-based API server; the endpoints are
documented in doc/api/intro.txt. The server is started with the serve
command:
cfssl serve [-address address] [-ca cert] [-ca-bundle bundle] \
[-ca-key key] [-int-bundle bundle] [-int-dir dir] [-port port] \
[-metadata file] [-remote remote_host] [-config config] \
[-responder cert] [-responder-key key] [-db-config db-config]
Address and port default to "127.0.0.1:8888". The -ca and -ca-key
arguments should be the PEM-encoded certificate and private key to use
for signing; by default, they are ca.pem and ca_key.pem. The
-ca-bundle and -int-bundle should be the certificate bundles used
for the root and intermediate certificate pools, respectively. These
default to ca-bundle.crt and int-bundle.crt respectively. If the
-remote option is specified, all signature operations will be forwarded
to the remote CFSSL.
-int-dir specifies an intermediates directory. -metadata is a file for
root certificate presence. The content of the file is a json dictionary
(k,v) such that each key k is an SHA-1 dig
