Introduction
- The JS7 - Certificate Authority included with the JOC Cockpit benefits users by allowing them to create and rollout private keys and certificates.
- The built-in Certificate Authority:
- creates X.509 certificates for HTTPS Mutual Authentication
- between JOC Cockpit and Controller instances,
- between Primary and Secondary Controller instances,
- between Controller instances and Agents.
- is not used to create Server Authentication Certificates for access to JOC Cockpit. Access is performed by user browsers and therefore it is preferable to use a Server Authentication Certificate which has been signed by a known Certificate Authority and whose Root CA certificate is recognized by user's browsers.
- Users benefit from the simplified rollout of private keys and certificates when using the built-in Certificate Authority.
JS7 provides a Certificate Rollout Client as part of the Controller and Agent instance's Start Scripts. This client creates and rolls out private keys and certificates using the built-in Certificate Authority. Rollout of private keys and certificates created with an external Certificate Authority are not in scope of the Certificate Rollout Client. The Certificate Rollout Client provides the following functions:
- use of a security token to authenticate with the JOC Cockpit, see JS7 - Certificate Authority - Manage Certificates with JOC Cockpit for more information.
- requesting a private key and certificate to be created by the JOC Cockpit on-the-fly,
- updating a Controller or Agent instance's configuration for use of the private key and certificate with HTTPS mutual authentication.
Certificate Rollout
Rollout of certificates includes performing the following steps:
- JOC Cockpit
- Controller/Agent Instance
- Both components include the Certificate Rollout Client which is available from the Controller/Agent Instance Start Script.
- The Certificate Rollout Client connects to the JOC Cockpit. Authentication is performed using the one-time security token generated in the previous step.
- The JOC Cockpit Certificate Authority is requested to create a private key and Server/Client Authentication Certificate for the specified host. The private key and certificate are created on-the-fly and are returned to the Certificate Rollout Client. In addition, the JOC Cockpit stores the certificate in the JS7 - Database.
The Certificate Rollout Client:- stores the private key in a keystore file,
- stores the Server/Client Authentication Certificate in a truststore file,
- updates the configuration in the
./config/private/private.conf
file.
Certificate Rollout Client
The Controller/Agent Instance Start Script includes the Certificate Rollout Client and is available from the following locations:
- for a Controller instance:
./bin/controller_instance.sh|cmd
- for an Agent instance:
./bin/agent_<port>.sh|cmd
Standard Arguments
The following arguments are used independently of whether the connection to the JOC Cockpit is made with HTTP or HTTPS:
List of Standard Arguments
Argument | Required | Description | Example |
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--joc-uri | Yes | URI of the JOC Cockpit instance from which to receive the private key and certificate. | --joc-uri=http://myhost.example.com:4446 |
--token | Yes | UUID of the security token for one-time authentication with the JOC Cockpit. | --token=73bfc4b8-3f15-44b9-a75b-cdb44aec8f4b |
--dn-only | No | Flag to receive relevant Distinguished Names (DN) to update the private.conf file, without generating certificates. | --dn-only |
--subject-dn | Yes | The subject of the requested certificate includes the Distinguished Name (DN) consisting of CN, OU, O, L, S, C attributes. The hostname of the requesting client is specified as CN. | --subject-dn="CN=myhost, OU=IT Operations, O=SOS, L=Berlin, S=Berlin, C=DE" |
--san | Yes | The Subject Alternative Name (SAN) specifies the hostname of the requesting client and optionally variations of the hostname, e.g. the domain part (FQDN). Alternative hostnames are separated by comma. | --san="myhost, myhost.example.com" |
--key-alias | Yes | Alias name used when storing the requested private key and certificate in the target keystore. | --key-alias="MyKeyAlias" |
--ca-alias | Yes | Alias name used when storing the requested CA certificate in both the target keystore and truststore. | --ca-alias="MyTrustedCertificateAlias" |
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--target-keystore | Yes | Path to the keystore in which the requested private key and certificate should be stored. | --target-keystore=/var/sos-berlin.com/js7/controller/var/config/private/https-keystore.p12 |
--target-keystore-type | No | Type of the keystore used. Supported values include: PKCS12 (default),
JKS (deprecated). | --target-keystore-type=PKCS12 |
--target-keystore-pass | No | Password for access to the keystore. | --target-keystore-pass="YourKeystorePassword" |
--target-keystore-entry-pass | No | Password for the requested private key that should be added to the keystore. | --target-keystore-entry-pass="YourKeystoreEntryPassword" |
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--target-truststore | Yes | Path to the truststore to which the trusted CA certificate should be stored. | --target-truststore=/var/sos-berlin.com/js7/controller/var/config/private/https-truststore.p12 |
--target-truststore-type | No | Type of the truststore used. Supported values include: PKCS12 (default),
JKS (deprecated). | --target-truststore-type=PKCS12 |
--target-truststore-pass | No | Password for access to the truststore. | --target-truststore-pass=" YourTruststorePassword"
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--help | No | Displays usage information, this option has to be specified as the only command line option and has no value. |
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Explanation:
Arguments for use with JOC Cockpit HTTPS Connections
The following arguments are used in addition to standard arguments if the JOC Cockpit has been set up for HTTPS connections:
List of Arguments for use with JOC Cockpit HTTPS Connections
Argument | Required | Description | Example |
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--source-truststore | No | Path to the truststore holding the trusted certificate(s) to connect to JOC Cockpit by HTTPS. | --source-truststore=/home/sos/public/js7-truststore.p12 |
--source-truststore-type | No | Type of the truststore used. Supported values include: PKCS12 (default),
JKS (deprecated). | --source-truststore-type=PKCS12 |
--source-truststore-pass | No | Password for access to the truststore. | --source-truststore-pass="YourTruststorePassword" |
--source-certificate | No | Path to a certificate file holding the JOC Cockpit server authentication certificate. | --source-certificate=/home/sos/public/js7-joc-cockpit.crt |
--source-ca-cert | No | Path to the CA certificate file(s) that are used to verify the JOC Cockpit server authentication certificate. A number of paths can be specified, separated by comma. | --source-ca-cert="/home/sos/public/intermediate_ca.crt, /home/sos/public/root_ca.crt" |
Explanation:
Arguments for use with JOC Cockpit HTTPS Connections using Mutual Authentication
The following arguments are used in addition to HTTPS connection arguments if the JOC Cockpit is set up for JOC Cockpit - HTTPS Mutual Authentication.
List of Arguments for use with JOC Cockpit HTTPS Connections using Mutual Authentication
Argument | Required | Description | Example |
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--source-keystore | No | Path of the keystore holding the client's private key and certificate for client authentication. | --source-keystore=/home/sos/private/js7-keystore.p12 |
--source-keystore-type | No | Type of keystore used. Supported values include: PKCS12 (default),
JKS (deprecated). | --source-keystore-type=PKCS12 |
--source-keystore-pass | No | Password for access to the keystore holding the private key for client authentication. | --source-keystore-pass="YourKeystorePassword" |
--source-keystore-entry-pass | No | Password for the private key entry in the keystore. | --source-keystore-entry-pass="YourKeystoreEntryPassword" |
--source-private-key | No | Path to the private key file holding the client authentication private key. | --source-private-key=/home/sos/private/client.key |
Explanation:
Examples
Standard Examples
Example for use with the Controller/Agent Instance Start Script and default values
# use with a Controller instance
./bin/controller_instance.sh cert --token=73bfc4b8-3f15-44b9-a75b-cdb44aec8f4b --joc-uri=https://myhost.example.com:4446
# use with an Agent instance
./bin/agent_<port>.sh cert --token=73bfc4b8-3f15-44b9-a75b-cdb44aec8f4b --joc-uri=https://myhost.example.com:4446
Explanation:
- the
cert
argument for the Instance Start Script is used to build the Java classpath and start the Java executable. - The
--token
argument specifies the one-time token to connect to JOC Cockpit. - The
--joc-uri
argument specifies the URL for JOC Cockpit. - If no additional arguments are used then the Command Line Client determines default values for the Keystore and Truststore from the instances'
./config/private/private.conf
configuration file, including defaults for the DN and for the SAN of the certificate.
Example for use with the Controller/Agent Instance Start Script to update relevant DN entries
# use with a Controller instance
./bin/controller_instance.sh cert --dn-only --token=73bfc4b8-3f15-44b9-a75b-cdb44aec8f4b --joc-uri=https://myhost.example.com:4446
# use with an Agent instance
./bin/agent_<port>.sh cert --dn-only --token=73bfc4b8-3f15-44b9-a75b-cdb44aec8f4b --joc-uri=https://myhost.example.com:4446
Explanation:
- With the
--dn-only
argument only relevant Distinguished Names (DNs) will be updated to the ./config/private/private.conf
configuration file.
Advanced Examples
Example for use with an HTTP Connection to JOC Cockpit
./bin/controller_instance.sh cert \
--token=73bfc4b8-3f15-44b9-a75b-cdb44aec8f4b \
--joc-uri=http://somehost.example.com:4446 \
--san="myhost.example.com, myhost" \
--subject-dn="CN=myhost, OU=IT Operations, O=SOS, C=DE, L=Berlin, ST=Berlin" \
--key-alias=myhost \
--ca-alias="Root CA" \
--target-keystore=/var/sos-berlin.com/js7/controller/config/private/https-keystore.p12 \
--target-keystore-pass=jobscheduler \
--target-keystore-entry-pass=jobscheduler \
--target-truststore=/var/sos-berlin.com/js7/controller/config/private/https-truststore.p12 \
--target-truststore-pass=jobscheduler
Example for use with an HTTPS Connection to JOC Cockpit and Mutual Authentication from a Client Keystore
./bin/controller_instance.sh cert \
--token=73bfc4b8-3f15-44b9-a75b-cdb44aec8f4b \
--joc-uri=https://somehost.example.com:4446 \
--san="myhost.example.com, myhost" \
--subject-dn="CN=myhost, OU=IT Operations, O=SOS, C=DE, L=Berlin, ST=Berlin" \
--key-alias=myhost \
--ca-alias="Root CA" \
--source-keystore=/home/sos/private/js7-keystore.p12 \
--source-keystore-pass="" \
--source-keystore-entry-pass="" \
--source-truststore=/home/sos/private/js7-truststore.p12 \
--source-truststore-pass="" \
--target-keystore=/var/sos-berlin.com/js7/controller/config/private/https-keystore.p12 \
--target-keystore-pass=jobscheduler \
--target-keystore-entry-pass=jobscheduler \
--target-truststore=/var/sos-berlin.com/js7/controller/config/private/https-truststore.p12 \
--target-truststore-pass=jobscheduler
Example for use with an HTTPS Connection to JOC Cockpit and Mutual Authentication from a Client Key File
./bin/controller_instance.sh cert \
--token=73bfc4b8-3f15-44b9-a75b-cdb44aec8f4b \
--joc-uri=https://myhost.example.com:4446 \
--san="myhost.example.com, myhost" \
--subject-dn="CN=myhost, OU=IT Operations, O=SOS, C=DE, L=Berlin, ST=Berlin" \
--key-alias=myhost \
--ca-alias="Root CA" \
--source-private-key=/home/sos/private/myhost.key \
--source-certificate=/home/sos/public/myhost.pem \
--source-ca-cert="/home/sos/public/intermediate_ca.pem, /home/sos/public/root_ca.pem" \
--target-keystore=var/sos-berlin.com/js7/controller/config/private/https-keystore.p12 \
--target-keystore-pass=jobscheduler \
--target-keystore-entry-pass=jobscheduler \
--target-truststore=var/sos-berlin.com/js7/controller/config/private/https-truststore.p12 \
--target-truststore-pass=jobscheduler