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5.4. Determining the Requirements for Subsystem Certificates


The CA configuration determines many of the characteristics of the certificates which it issues, regardless of the actual type of certificate being issued. Constraints on the CA's own validity period, distinguished name, and allowed encryption algorithms impact the same characteristics in their issued certificates. Additionally, the Certificate Managers have predefined profiles that set rules for different kinds of certificates that they issue, and additional profiles can be added or modified. These profile configurations also impact issued certificates.

5.4.1. Determining Which Certificates to Install

When a Certificate System subsystem is first installed and configured, the certificates necessary to access and administer it are automatically created. These include an agent's certificate, server certificate, and subsystem-specific certificates. These initial certificates are shown in Table 5.1, “Initial Subsystem Certificates”.
Table 5.1. Initial Subsystem Certificates
Subsystem Certificates
Certificate Manager
  • CA signing certificate
  • OCSP signing certificate
  • SSL/TLS server certificate
  • Subsystem certificate
  • User's (agent/administrator) certificate
  • Audit log signing certificate
OCSP
  • OCSP signing certificate
  • SSL/TLS server certificate
  • Subsystem certificate
  • User's (agent/administrator) certificate
  • Audit log signing certificate
KRA
  • Transport certificate
  • Storage certificate
  • SSL/TLS server certificate
  • Subsystem certificate
  • User's (agent/administrator) certificate
  • Audit log signing certificate
TKS
  • SSL/TLS server certificate
  • User's (agent/administrator) certificate
  • Audit log signing certificate
TPS
  • SSL/TLS server certificate
  • User's (agent/administrator) certificate
  • Audit log signing certificate
There are some cautionary considerations about replacing existing subsystem certificates.
  • Generating new key pairs when creating a new self-signed CA certificate for a root CA will invalidate all certificates issued under the previous CA certificate.
    This means none of the certificates issued or signed by the CA using its old key will work; subordinate Certificate Managers, KRAs, OCSPs, TKSs, and TPSs will no longer function, and agents can no longer to access agent interfaces.
    This same situation occurs if a subordinate CA's CA certificate is replaced by one with a new key pair; all certificates issued by that CA are invalidated and will no longer work.
    Instead of creating new certificates from new key pairs, consider renewing the existing CA signing certificate.
  • If the CA is configured to publish to the OCSP and it has a new CA signing certificate or a new CRL signing certificate, the CA must be identified again to the OCSP.
  • If a new transport certificate is created for the KRA, the KRA information must be updated in the CA's configuration file, CS.cfg. The existing transport certificate must be replaced with the new one in the ca.connector.KRA.transportCert parameter.
  • If a CA is cloned, then when creating a new SSL/TLS server certificate for the master Certificate Manager, the clone CAs' certificate databases all need updated with the new SSL/TLS server certificate.
  • If the Certificate Manager is configured to publish certificates and CRLs to an LDAP directory and uses the SSL/TLS server certificate for SSL/TLS client authentication, then the new SSL/TLS server certificate must be requested with the appropriate extensions. After installing the certificate, the publishing directory must be configured to use the new server certificate.
  • Any number of SSL/TLS server certificates can be issued for a subsystem instance, but it really only needs one SSL/TLS certificate. This certificate can be renewed or replaced as many times as necessary.

5.4.2. Planning the CA Distinguished Name

The core elements of a CA are a signing unit and the Certificate Manager identity. The signing unit digitally signs certificates requested by end entities. A Certificate Manager must have its own distinguished name (DN), which is listed in every certificate it issues.
Like any other certificate, a CA certificate binds a DN to a public key. A DN is a series of name-value pairs that in combination uniquely identify an entity. For example, the following DN identifies a Certificate Manager for the Engineering department of a corporation named Example Corporation:
cn=demoCA, o=Example Corporation, ou=Engineering, c=US
Many combinations of name-value pairs are possible for the Certificate Manager's DN. The DN must be unique and readily identifiable, since any end entity can examine it.

5.4.3. Setting the CA Signing Certificate Validity Period

Every certificate, including a Certificate Manager signing certificate, must have a validity period. The Certificate System does not restrict the validity period that can be specified. Set as long a validity period as possible, depending on the requirements for certificate renewal, the place of the CA in the certificate hierarchy, and the requirements of any public CAs that are included in the PKI.
A Certificate Manager cannot issue a certificate that has a validity period longer than the validity period of its CA signing certificate. If a request is made for a period longer than the CA certificate's validity period, the requested validity date is ignored and the CA signing certificate validity period is used.

5.4.4. Choosing the Signing Key Type and Length

A signing key is used by a subsystem to verify and "seal" something. CAs use a CA signing certificate to sign certificates or CRLs that it issues; OCSPs use signing certificates to verify their responses to certificate status requests; all subsystems use log file signing certificates to sign their audit logs.
The signing key must be cryptographically strong to provide protection and security for its signing operations. The following signing algorithms are considered secure:
  • SHA256withRSA
  • SHA512withRSA
  • SHA256withEC
  • SHA512withEC

Note

Certificate System includes native ECC support. It is also possible to load and use a third-party PKCS #11 module with ECC-enabled. This is covered in Chapter 9, Installing an Instance with ECC System Certificates.
Along with a key type, each key has a specific bit length. Longer keys are considered cryptographically stronger than shorter keys. However, longer keys require more time for signing operations.
The default RSA key length in the configuration wizard is 2048 bits; for certificates that provide access to highly sensitive data or services, consider increasing the length to 4096 bits. ECC keys are much stronger than RSA keys, so the recommended length for ECC keys is 256 bits, which is equivalent in strength to a 2048-bit RSA key.

5.4.5. Using Certificate Extensions

An X.509 v3 certificate contains an extension field that permits any number of additional fields to be added to the certificate. Certificate extensions provide a way of adding information such as alternative subject names and usage restrictions to certificates. Older Netscape servers, such as Red Hat Directory Server and Red Hat Certificate System, require Netscape-specific extensions because they were developed before PKIX part 1 standards were defined.
The X.509 v1 certificate specification was originally designed to bind public keys to names in an X.500 directory. As certificates began to be used on the Internet and extranets and directory lookups could not always be performed, problem areas emerged that were not covered by the original specification.
  • Trust. The X.500 specification establishes trust by means of a strict directory hierarchy. By contrast, Internet and extranet deployments frequently involve distributed trust models that do not conform to the hierarchical X.500 approach.
  • Certificate use. Some organizations restrict how certificates are used. For example, some certificates may be restricted to client authentication only.
  • Multiple certificates. It is not uncommon for certificate users to possess multiple certificates with identical subject names but different key material. In this case, it is necessary to identify which key and certificate should be used for what purpose.
  • Alternate names. For some purposes, it is useful to have alternative subject names that are also bound to the public key in the certificate.
  • Additional attributes. Some organizations store additional information in certificates, such as when it is not possible to look up information in a directory.
  • Relationship with CA. When certificate chaining involves intermediate CAs, it is useful to have information about the relationships among CAs embedded in their certificates.
  • CRL checking. Since it is not always possible to check a certificate's revocation status against a directory or with the original certificate authority, it is useful for certificates to include information about where to check CRLs.
The X.509 v3 specification addressed these issues by altering the certificate format to include additional information within a certificate by defining a general format for certificate extensions and specifying extensions that can be included in the certificate. The extensions defined for X.509 v3 certificates enable additional attributes to be associated with users or public keys and manage the certification hierarchy. The Internet X.509 Public Key Infrastructure Certificate and CRL Profile recommends a set of extensions to use for Internet certificates and standard locations for certificate or CA information. These extensions are called standard extensions.

Note

For more information on standard extensions, see RFC 2459, RFC 3280, and RFC 3279.
The X.509 v3 standard for certificates allows organizations to define custom extensions and include them in certificates. These extensions are called private, proprietary, or custom extensions, and they carry information unique to an organization or business. Applications may not able to validate certificates that contain private critical extensions, so it not recommended that these be used in wide-spread situations.
The X.500 and X.509 specifications are controlled by the International Telecommunication Union (ITU), an international organization that primarily serves large telecommunication companies, government organizations, and other entities concerned with the international telecommunications network. The Internet Engineering Task Force (IETF), which controls many of the standards that underlie the Internet, is currently developing public-key infrastructure X.509 (PKIX) standards. These proposed standards further refine the X.509 v3 approach to extensions for use on the Internet. The recommendations for certificates and CRLs have reached proposed standard status and are in a document referred to as PKIX Part 1.
Two other standards, Abstract Syntax Notation One (ASN.1) and Distinguished Encoding Rules (DER), are used with Certificate System and certificates in general. These are specified in the CCITT Recommendations X.208 and X.209. For a quick summary of ASN.1 and DER, see A Layman's Guide to a Subset of ASN.1, BER, and DER, which is available at RSA Laboratories' web site, http://www.rsa.com.

5.4.5.1. Structure of Certificate Extensions

In RFC 3280, an X.509 certificate extension is defined as follows:
Extension  ::=  SEQUENCE  {

extnID OBJECT IDENTIFIER,
critical BOOLEAN DEFAULT FALSE,
extnValue OCTET STRING  }
The means a certificate extension consists of the following:
  • The object identifier (OID) for the extension. This identifier uniquely identifies the extension. It also determines the ASN.1 type of value in the value field and how the value is interpreted. When an extension appears in a certificate, the OID appears as the extension ID field (extnID) and the corresponding ASN.1 encoded structure appears as the value of the octet string (extnValue).
  • A flag or Boolean field called critical.
    The value, which can be either true or false, assigned to this field indicates whether the extension is critical or noncritical to the certificate.
    • If the extension is critical and the certificate is sent to an application that does not understand the extension based on the extension's ID, the application must reject the certificate.
    • If the extension is not critical and the certificate is sent to an application that does not understand the extension based on the extension's ID, the application can ignore the extension and accept the certificate.
  • An octet string containing the DER encoding of the value of the extension.
Typically, the application receiving the certificate checks the extension ID to determine if it can recognize the ID. If it can, it uses the extension ID to determine the type of value used.
Some of the standard extensions defined in the X.509 v3 standard include the following:
  • Authority Key Identifier extension, which identifies the CA's public key, the key used to sign the certificate.
  • Subject Key Identifier extension, which identifies the subject's public key, the key being certified.

Note

Not all applications support certificates with version 3 extensions. Applications that do support these extensions may not be able to interpret some or all of these specific extensions.

5.4.6. Using and Customizing Certificate Profiles

Certificates have different types and different applications. They can be used to establish a single sign-on environment for a corporate network, to set up VPNs, to encrypt email, or to authenticate to a website. The requirements for all of these certificates can be different, just as there may also be different requirements for the same type of certificate for different kinds of users. These certificate characteristics are set in certificate profiles. The Certificate Manager defines a set of certificate profiles that it uses as enrollment forms when users or machines request certificates.

Certificate Profiles

A certificate profile defines everything associated with issuing a particular type of certificate, including the authentication method, the certificate content (defaults), constraints for the values of the content, and the contents of the input and output for the certificate profile. Enrollment requests are submitted to a certificate profile and are then subject to the defaults and constraints set in that certificate profile. These constraints are in place whether the request is submitted through the input form associated with the certificate profile or through other means. The certificate that is issued from a certificate profile request contains the content required by the defaults with the information required by the default parameters. The constraints provide rules for what content is allowed in the certificate.
For example, a certificate profile for user certificates defines all aspects of that certificate, including the validity period of the certificate. The default validity period can be set to two years, and a constraint can be set on the profile that the validity period for certificates requested through this certificate profile cannot exceed two years. When a user requests a certificate using the input form associated with this certificate profile, the issued certificate contains the information specified in the defaults and will be valid for two years. If the user submits a pre-formatted request for a certificate with a validity period of four years, the request is rejected since the constraints allow a maximum of two years validity period for this type of certificate.
A set of certificate profiles have been predefined for the most common certificates issued. These certificate profiles define defaults and constraints, associate the authentication method, and define the needed inputs and outputs for the certificate profile.

Modifying the Certificate Profile Parameters

The parameters of the default certificate profiles can be modified; this includes the authentication method, the defaults, the constraints used in each profile, the values assigned to any of the parameters in a profile, the input, and the output. It is also possible to create new certificate profiles for other types of certificates or for creating more than one certificate profile for a certificate type. There can be multiple certificate profiles for a particular type of certificate to issue the same type of certificate with a different authentication method or different definitions for the defaults and constraints. For example, there can be two certificate profiles for enrollment of SSL/TLS server certificates where one certificate profile issues certificates with a validity period of six months and another certificate profile issues certificates with a validity period of two years.
An input sets a text field in the enrollment form and what kind of information needs gathered from the end entity; this includes setting the text area for a certificate request to be pasted, which allows a request to be created outside the input form with any of the request information required. The input values are set as values in the certificate. The default inputs are not configurable in the Certificate System.
An output specifies how the response page to a successful enrollment is presented. It usually displays the certificate in a user-readable format. The default output shows a printable version of the resultant certificate; other outputs set the type of information generated at the end of the enrollment, such as PKCS #7.
Policy sets are sets of constraints and default extensions attached to every certificate processed through the profile. The extensions define certificate content such as validity periods and subject name requirements. A profile handles one certificate request, but a single request can contain information for multiple certificates. A PKCS#10 request contains a single public key. One CRMF request can contain multiple public keys, meaning multiple certificate requests. A profile may contain multiple sets of policies, with each set specifying how to handle one certificate request within a CRMF request.

Certificate Profile Administration

An administrator sets up a certificate profile by associating an existing authentication plug-in, or method, with the certificate profile; enabling and configuring defaults and constraints; and defining inputs and outputs. The administrator can use the existing certificate profiles, modify the existing certificate profiles, create new certificate profiles, and delete any certificate profile that will not be used in this PKI.
Once a certificate profile is set up, it appears on the Manage Certificate Profiles page of the agent services page where an agent can approve, and thus enable, a certificate profile. Once the certificate profile is enabled, it appears on the Certificate Profile tab of the end-entities page where end entities can enroll for a certificate using the certificate profile.
The certificate profile enrollment page in the end-entities interface contains links to each certificate profile that has been enabled by the agents. When an end entity selects one of those links, an enrollment page appears containing an enrollment form specific to that certificate profile. The enrollment page is dynamically generated from the inputs defined for the profile. If an authentication plug-in is configured, additional fields may be added to authenticate the user.
When an end entity submits a certificate profile request that is associated with an agent-approved (manual) enrollment, an enrollment where no authentication plug-in is configured, the certificate request is queued in the agent services interface. The agent can change some aspects of the enrollment, request, validate it, cancel it, reject it, update it, or approve it. The agent is able to update the request without submitting it or validate that the request adheres to the profile's defaults and constraints. This validation procedure is only for verification and does not result in the request being submitted. The agent is bound by the constraints set; they cannot change the request in such a way that a constraint is violated. The signed approval is immediately processed, and a certificate is issued.
When a certificate profile is associated with an authentication method, the request is approved immediately and generates a certificate automatically if the user successfully authenticates, all the information required is provided, and the request does not violate any of the constraints set up for the certificate profile. There are profile policies which allow user-supplied settings like subject names or validity periods. The certificate profile framework can also preserve user-defined content set in the original certificate request in the issued certificate.
The issued certificate contains the content defined in the defaults for this certificate profile, such as the extensions and validity period for the certificate. The content of the certificate is constrained by the constraints set for each default. Multiple policies (defaults and constraints) can be set for one profile, distinguishing each set by using the same value in the policy set ID. This is particularly useful for dealing with dual keys enrollment where encryption keys and signing keys are submitted to the same profile. The server evaluates each set with each request it receives. When a single certificate is issued, one set is evaluated, and any other sets are ignored. When dual-key pairs are issued, the first set is evaluated with the first certificate request, and the second set is evaluated with the second certificate request. There is no need for more than one set for issuing a single certificate or more than two sets for issuing dual-key pairs.

Guidelines for Customizing Certificate Profiles

Tailor the profiles for the organization to the real needs and anticipated certificate types used by the organization:
  • Decide which certificate profiles are needed in the PKI. There should be at least one profile for each type of certificate issued. There can be more than one certificate profile for each type of certificate to set different authentication methods or different defaults and constraints for a particular type of certificate type. Any certificate profile available in the administrative interface can be approved by an agent and then used by an end entity to enroll.
  • Delete any certificate profiles that will not be used.
  • Modify the existing certificate profiles for specific characteristics for the company's certificates.
    • Change the defaults set up in the certificate profile, the values of the parameters set in the defaults, or the constraints that control the certificate content.
    • Change the constraints set up by changing the value of the parameters.
    • Change the authentication method.
    • Change the inputs by adding or deleting inputs in the certificate profile, which control the fields on the input page.
    • Add or delete the output.

5.4.6.1. Adding SAN Extensions to the SSL Server Certificate

Certificate System enables adding Subject Alternative Name (SAN) extensions to the SSL server certificate during the installation of non-root CA or other Certificate System instances. To do so, follow the instructions in the /usr/share/pki/ca/profiles/ca/caInternalAuthServerCert.cfg file and add the following parameters to the configuration file supplied to the pkispawn utility:
pki_san_inject
Set the value of this parameter to True.
pki_san_for_server_cert
Provide a list of the required SAN extensions separated by commas (,).
For example:
pki_san_inject=True
pki_san_for_server_cert=intca01.example.com,intca02.example.com,intca.example.com

5.4.7. Planning Authentication Methods

As implied in Section 5.4.6, “Using and Customizing Certificate Profiles”, authentication for the certificate process means the way that a user or entity requesting a certificate proves that they are who they say they are. There are three ways that the Certificate System can authenticate an entity:
  • In agent-approved enrollment, end-entity requests are sent to an agent for approval. The agent approves the certificate request.
  • In automatic enrollment, end-entity requests are authenticated using a plug-in, and then the certificate request is processed; an agent is not involved in the enrollment process.
  • In CMC enrollment, a third party application can create a request that is signed by an agent and then automatically processed.
A Certificate Manager is initially configured for agent-approved enrollment and for CMC authentication. Automated enrollment is enabled by configuring one of the authentication plug-in modules. More than one authentication method can be configured in a single instance of a subsystem. The HTML registration pages contain hidden values specifying the method used. With certificate profiles, the end-entity enrollment pages are dynamically-generated for each enabled profile. The authentication method associated with this certificate profile is specified in the dynamically-generated enrollment page.
The authentication process is simple.
  1. An end entity submits a request for enrollment. The form used to submit the request identifies the method of authentication and enrollment. All HTML forms are dynamically-generated by the profiles, which automatically associate the appropriate authentication method with the form.
  2. If the authentication method is an agent-approved enrollment, the request is sent to the request queue of the CA agent. If the automated notification for a request in queue is set, an email is sent to the appropriate agent that a new request has been received. The agent can modify the request as allowed for that form and the profile constraints. Once approved, the request must pass the certificate profiles set for the Certificate Manager, and then the certificate is issued. When the certificate is issued, it is stored in the internal database and can be retrieved by the end entity from the end-entities page by serial number or by request ID.
  3. If the authentication method is automated, the end entity submits the request along with required information to authenticate the user, such as an LDAP user name and password. When the user is successfully authenticated, the request is processed without being sent to an agent's queue. If the request passes the certificate profile configuration of the Certificate Manager, the certificate is issued and stored in the internal database. It is delivered to the end entity immediately through the HTML forms.
The requirements for how a certificate request is authenticated can have a direct impact on the necessary subsystems and profile settings. For example, if an agent-approved enrollment requires that an agent meet the requester in person and verify their identity through supported documentation, the authentication process can be time-intensive, as well as constrained by the physical availability of both the agent and the requester.

5.4.8. Publishing Certificates and CRLs

A CA can publish both certificates and CRLs. Certificates can be published to a plain file or to an LDAP directory; CRLs can be published to file or an LDAP directory, as well, and can also be published to an OCSP responder to handle certificate verification.
Configuring publishing is fairly straightforward and is easily adjusted. For continuity and accessibility, though, it is good to plan out where certificates and CRLs need to be published and what clients need to be able to access them.
Publishing to an LDAP directory requires special configuration in the directory for publishing to work:
  • If certificates are published to the directory, than every user or server to which a certificate is issued must have a corresponding entry in the LDAP directory.
  • If CRLs are published to the directory, than they must be published to an entry for the CA which issued them.
  • For SSL/TLS, the directory service has to be configured in SSL/TLS and, optionally, be configured to allow the Certificate Manager to use certificate-based authentication.
  • The directory administrator should configure appropriate access control rules to control DN (entry name) and password based authentication to the LDAP directory.

5.4.9. Renewing or Reissuing CA Signing Certificates

When a CA signing certificate expires, all certificates signed with the CA's corresponding signing key become invalid. End entities use information in the CA certificate to verify the certificate's authenticity. If the CA certificate itself has expired, applications cannot chain the certificate to a trusted CA.
There are two ways of resolving CA certificate expiration:
  • Renewing a CA certificate involves issuing a new CA certificate with the same subject name and public and private key material as the old CA certificate, but with an extended validity period. As long as the new CA certificate is distributed to all users before the old CA certificate expires, renewing the certificate allows certificates issued under the old CA certificate to continue working for the full duration of their validity periods.
  • Reissuing a CA certificate involves issuing a new CA certificate with a new name, public and private key material, and validity period. This avoids some problems associated with renewing a CA certificate, but it requires more work for both administrators and users to implement. All certificates issued by the old CA, including those that have not yet expired, must be renewed by the new CA.
There are problems and advantages with either renewing or reissuing a CA certificate. Begin planning the CA certificate renewal or re-issuance before installing any Certificate Managers, and consider the ramifications the planned procedures may have for extensions, policies, and other aspects of the PKI deployment.

Note

Correct use of extensions, for example the authorityKeyIdentifier extension, can affect the transition from an old CA certificate to a new one.
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