PKI stands for Public Key Infrastructure. Tokens are documents, cryptographically signed using the X509 standard. In order to work correctly token generation requires a public/private key pair. The public key must be signed in an X509 certificate, and the certificate used to sign it must be available as a Certificate Authority (CA) certificate. These files can be generated either using the keystone-manage utility, or externally generated. The files need to be in the locations specified by the top level Identity service configuration file keystone.conf as specified in the above section. Additionally, the private key should only be readable by the system user that will run the Identity service.
Warning
The certificates can be world readable, but the private key cannot be. The private key should only be readable by the account that is going to sign tokens. When generating files with the keystone-manage pki_setup command, your best option is to run as the pki user. If you run keystone-manage as root, you can append --keystone-user and --keystone-group parameters to set the user name and group keystone is going to run under.
The values that specify where to read the certificates are under the [signing] section of the configuration file. The configuration values are:
Location of certificate used to verify tokens. Default is /etc/keystone/ssl/certs/signing_cert.pem.
Location of private key used to sign tokens. Default is /etc/keystone/ssl/private/signing_key.pem.
Location of certificate for the authority that issued the above certificate. Default is /etc/keystone/ssl/certs/ca.pem.
Location of the private key used by the CA. Default is /etc/keystone/ssl/private/cakey.pem.
Default is 2048.
Default is 3650.
Certificate subject (auto generated certificate) for token signing. Default is /C=US/ST=Unset/L=Unset/O=Unset/CN=www.example.com.
When generating certificates with the keystone-manage pki_setup command, the ca_key, key_size, and valid_days configuration options are used.
If the keystone-manage pki_setup command is not used to generate certificates, or you are providing your own certificates, these values do not need to be set.
If provider=keystone.token.providers.uuid.Provider in the [token] section of the keystone configuration, a typical token looks like 53f7f6ef0cc344b5be706bcc8b1479e1. If provider=keystone.token.providers.pki.Provider, a typical token is a much longer string, such as:
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You can use a signing certificate issued by an external CA instead of generated by keystone-manage. However, a certificate issued by an external CA must satisfy the following conditions:
When using a signing certificate issued by an external CA, you do not need to specify key_size, valid_days, and ca_password as they will be ignored.
The basic workflow for using a signing certificate issued by an external CA involves:
One way to request a signing certificate from an external CA is to first generate a PKCS #10 Certificate Request Syntax (CRS) using OpenSSL CLI.
Create a certificate request configuration file. For example, create the cert_req.conf file, as follows:
1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 | [ req ]
default_bits = 4096
default_keyfile = keystonekey.pem
default_md = sha256
prompt = no
distinguished_name = distinguished_name
[ distinguished_name ]
countryName = US
stateOrProvinceName = CA
localityName = Sunnyvale
organizationName = OpenStack
organizationalUnitName = Keystone
commonName = Keystone Signing
emailAddress = keystone@openstack.org
|
Then generate a CRS with OpenSSL CLI. Do not encrypt the generated private key. You must use the -nodes option.
For example:
$ openssl req -newkey rsa:1024 -keyout signing_key.pem -keyform PEM \
-out signing_cert_req.pem -outform PEM -config cert_req.conf -nodes
If everything is successful, you should end up with signing_cert_req.pem and signing_key.pem. Send signing_cert_req.pem to your CA to request a token signing certificate and make sure to ask the certificate to be in PEM format. Also, make sure your trusted CA certificate chain is also in PEM format.
Assuming you have the following already:
(Keystone token) signing certificate in PEM format
Corresponding (non-encrypted) private key in PEM format
Trust CA certificate chain in PEM format
Copy the above to your certificate directory. For example:
# mkdir -p /etc/keystone/ssl/certs
# cp signing_cert.pem /etc/keystone/ssl/certs/
# cp signing_key.pem /etc/keystone/ssl/certs/
# cp cacert.pem /etc/keystone/ssl/certs/
# chmod -R 700 /etc/keystone/ssl/certs
Note
Make sure the certificate directory is only accessible by root.
Note
The procedure of copying the key and cert files may be improved if done after first running keystone-manage pki_setup since this command also creates other needed files, such as the index.txt and serial files.
Also, when copying the necessary files to a different server for replicating the functionality, the entire directory of files is needed, not just the key and cert files.
If your certificate directory path is different from the default /etc/keystone/ssl/certs, make sure it is reflected in the [signing] section of the configuration file.
The following procedure details how to switch out expired signing certificates with no cloud outages.
Except where otherwise noted, this document is licensed under Creative Commons Attribution 3.0 License http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0/legalcode.