How to create Your Own Self-Signed Certificates
SSL Certificates Cheat-Sheet
X.509 is an ITU standard defining the format of public key certificates. X.509 are used in TLS/SSL, which is the basis for HTTPS. An X.509 certificate binds an identity to a public key using a digital signature. A certificate contains an identity (hostname, organization, etc.) and a public key (RSA, DSA, ECDSA, ed25519, etc.), and is either signed by a Certificate Authority or is Self-Signed.
Self-Signed Certificates
Generate CA
- Generate RSA
openssl genrsa -aes256 -out ca-key.pem 4096
- Generate a public CA Cert
openssl req -new -x509 -sha256 -days 365 -key ca-key.pem -out ca.pem
Generate Certificate
- Create a RSA key
openssl genrsa -out cert-key.pem 4096
- Create a Certificate Signing Request (CSR)
openssl req -new -sha256 -subj "/CN=yourcn" -key cert-key.pem -out cert.csr
- Create a
extfile
with all the alternative names
echo "subjectAltName=DNS:your-dns.record,IP:257.10.10.1" >> extfile.cnf
# optional echo extendedKeyUsage = serverAuth >> extfile.cnf
- Create the certificate
openssl x509 -req -sha256 -days 365 -in cert.csr -CA ca.pem -CAkey ca-key.pem -out cert.pem -extfile extfile.cnf -CAcreateserial
Certificate Formats
X.509 Certificates exist in Base64 Formats PEM (.pem, .crt, .ca-bundle), PKCS#7 (.p7b, p7s) and Binary Formats DER (.der, .cer), PKCS#12 (.pfx, p12).
Convert Certs
COMMAND | CONVERSION |
---|---|
openssl x509 -outform der -in cert.pem -out cert.der |
PEM to DER |
openssl x509 -inform der -in cert.der -out cert.pem |
DER to PEM |
openssl pkcs12 -in cert.pfx -out cert.pem -nodes |
PFX to PEM |
Verify Certificates
openssl verify -CAfile ca.pem -verbose cert.pem
Install the CA Cert as a trusted root CA
On Debian & Derivatives
- Move the CA certificate (
ca.pem
) into/usr/local/share/ca-certificates/ca.crt
. - Update the Cert Store with:
sudo update-ca-certificates
Refer the documentation here and here.
On Fedora
- Move the CA certificate (
ca.pem
) to/etc/pki/ca-trust/source/anchors/ca.pem
or/usr/share/pki/ca-trust-source/anchors/ca.pem
- Now run (with sudo if necessary):
update-ca-trust
Refer the documentation here.
On Arch
System-wide – Arch(p11-kit) (From arch wiki)
- Run (As root)
trust anchor --store myCA.crt
- The certificate will be written to /etc/ca-certificates/trust-source/myCA.p11-kit and the "legacy" directories automatically updated.
- If you get "no configured writable location" or a similar error, import the CA manually:
- Copy the certificate to the /etc/ca-certificates/trust-source/anchors directory.
- and then
update-ca-trust
wiki page here
On Windows
Assuming the path to your generated CA certificate as C:\ca.pem
, run:
Import-Certificate -FilePath "C:\ca.pem" -CertStoreLocation Cert:\LocalMachine\Root
- Set
-CertStoreLocation
toCert:\CurrentUser\Root
in case you want to trust certificates only for the logged in user.
OR
In Command Prompt, run:
certutil.exe -addstore root C:\ca.pem
certutil.exe
is a built-in tool (classicSystem32
one) and adds a system-wide trust anchor.
On Android
The exact steps vary device-to-device, but here is a generalised guide:
- Open Phone Settings
- Locate
Encryption and Credentials
section. It is generally found underSettings > Security > Encryption and Credentials
- Choose
Install a certificate
- Choose
CA Certificate
- Locate the certificate file
ca.pem
on your SD Card/Internal Storage using the file manager. - Select to load it.
- Done!