# python-csr ## Purpose Generate a key, self-signed certificate, and certificate request. ## Information You'll notice there is only one version of python scripts. This can be used with both python(2.7) and python(3.5). ## Installation / Dependencies The following modules are required: - OpenSSL (pyopenssl) - Argparse (argparse) - YAML (pyyaml) I've included a setup.py that will install these dependencies if you run: ```bash python setup.py install ``` ## Usage ```bash csrgen -n [fqdn] ``` Note: you could always use '-h' in order to get some informations ;) ```bash user@host> ./csrgen.py -h usage: csrgen.py [-h] [-v] [-d] [-l LOG] [-n NAME] [-s [SAN [SAN ...]]] [-k KEYSIZE] [-u UNATTENDED] [-f FILE] [-a] [-c] optional arguments: -h, --help show this help message and exit -v, --verbose Output more infos -d, --debug Enable debug mode -l LOG, --log LOG Define log file (default: /var/log/certGen.log -n NAME, --name NAME Provide the FQDN -s [SAN [SAN ...]], --san [SAN [SAN ...]] SANS, define alternative names -k KEYSIZE, --keysize KEYSIZE Provide the key size -u UNATTENDED, --unattended UNATTENDED Load CSR predefined options -f FILE, --file FILE Load hosts file (CN and optional Alternate Names) list -a, --authority Generate Authority certificate (Default is server) -c, --client Generate client certificate (Default is server) ``` Basic usage would be ```python python csrgen -n test.test.com ``` When more than one hostname is provided, a SAN (Subject Alternate Name) certificate and request are generated. This can be acheived by adding a -s. csrgen -s ```bash python csrgen -n test.test.com -s mushu.test.com pushu.test.com ``` You can pass a yaml file as arguments to pre-fill your CSR values (C, ST, L, O, OU). Basically any attribute defined in the YAML file will be set in the certificate. On exception: if you force the hostname with -n parameter, it will override the 'Hostname' set in YAML file. ```python python csrgen -f sample.yaml -u csr.yaml ``` ## Debug options A debug option (-d) and a verbose flag (-v) are available. If in any case you want to check the content of generated files, here is a quick cheat-sheet... ### To read a CSR ```bash openssl req -in test.test.com.csr -noout -text ``` ### To read a Certificate (CER) ```bash openssl x509 -in cerfile.cer -noout -text ``` ### To read a Certificate (PEM) ```bash openssl x509 -inform pem -in cerfile.cer -noout -text ``` # TODO - Implement Unit Tests