NAME¶
pki --acert - Issue an attribute certificate
SYNOPSIS¶
pki --acert |
[--in file]
[--group membership]
--issuerkey file|--issuerkeyid hex
--issuercert file [--lifetime
hours] [--not-before
datetime] [--not-after
datetime] [--serial
hex] [--digest digest]
[--outform encoding]
[--debug level] |
pki --acert |
--options file |
DESCRIPTION¶
This sub-command of pki(1) is used to issue an attribute
certificate using an issuer certificate with its private key and the holder
certificate.
OPTIONS¶
- -h, --help
- Print usage information with a summary of the available options.
- -v, --debug
level
- Set debug level, default: 1.
- -+, --options file
- Read command line options from file.
- -i, --in
file
- Holder certificate to issue an attribute certificate for. If not given the
certificate is read from STDIN.
- -m, --group
membership
- Group membership the attribute certificate shall certify. The specified
group is included as a string. To include multiple groups, the option can
be repeated.
- -k, --issuerkey
file
- Issuer private key file. Either this or --issuerkeyid is
required.
- -x, --issuerkeyid
hex
- Key ID of a issuer private key on a smartcard. Either this or
--issuerkey is required.
- -c, --issuercert
file
- Issuer certificate file. Required.
- -l, --lifetime
hours
- Hours the attribute certificate is valid, default: 24. Ignored if both an
absolute start and end time are given.
- -F, --not-before
datetime
- Absolute time when the validity of the AC begins. The datetime format is
defined by the --dateform option.
- -T, --not-after
datetime
- Absolute time when the validity of the AC ends. The datetime format is
defined by the --dateform option.
- -D, --dateform
form
- strptime(3) format for the --not-before and --not-after
options, default: %d.%m.%y %T
- -s, --serial
hex
- Serial number in hex. It is randomly allocated by default.
- -g, --digest
digest
- Digest to use for signature creation. One of md5, sha1,
sha224, sha256, sha384, or sha512. Defaults to
sha1.
- -f, --outform
encoding
- Encoding of the created certificate file. Either der (ASN.1 DER) or
pem (Base64 PEM), defaults to der.
EXAMPLES¶
To save repetitive typing, command line options can be stored in
files. Lets assume acert.opt contains the following contents:
--issuercert aacert.der --issuerkey aakey.der --digest sha256 --lifetime 4
Then the following command can be used to issue an attribute
certificate based on a holder certificate and the options above:
pki --acert --options acert.opt --in holder.der --group sales --group finance -f pem