5.4. CA Connectors¶
You can use eduMFA to enroll certificates and assign certificates to users.
You can define connections to Certificate Authorities, that are used when enrolling certificates.
When you enroll a Token of type certificate the Certificate Signing Request gets signed by one of the CAs attached to eduMFA by the CA connectors.
The first CA connector that ships with eduMFA is a connector to a local openSSL based Certificate Authority as shown in figure A local CA definition.
When enrolling a certificate token you can choose, which CA should sign the certificate request.
5.4.1. Local CA Connector¶
The local CA connector calls a local openSSL configuration.
Note
This description is meant to be as an example. When setting up a productive CA, you should ask a PKI consultant for assistance.
5.4.1.1. Setup¶
You can use the The edumfa-manage Script tool to setup a new CA like this:
edumfa-manage ca create myCA
This will ask you for all necessary parameters for the CA and then automatically
Create the files for this new CA and
Create the CA connector in eduMFA.
5.4.1.2. Management¶
There are different ways to enroll a certificate token. See Certificate Token.
When an administrator revokes a certificate token, the certificate is revoked and a CRL is created.
Note
eduMFA does not create the CRL regularly. The CRL usually has a validity period of 30 days. I.e. you need to create the CRL on a regular basis. You can use openssl to do so or the edumfa-manage command.
edumfa-manage ca list
lists all configured CA connectors. You can use the -v
switch to get more
information.
You can create a new CRL with the command:
edumfa-manage ca create_crl <CA name>
This command will check the overlap period and only create a new CRL if it is necessary. If you want to force the creation of the CRL, you can use the switch -f.
For more information on edumfa-manage see The edumfa-manage Script.
5.4.1.3. Templates¶
The local CA supports a kind of certificate templates. These “templates”
are predefined combinations of extensions and validity days, as they are
passed to openSSL via the parameters -extensions
and -days
.
This way the administrator can define certificate templates with certain X.509 extensions like keyUsage, extendedKeyUsage, CDPs or AIAs and certificate validity periods.
The extensions are defined in YAML file and the location of this file is added to the CA connector definition.
The file can look like this, defining three templates “user”, “webserver” and “template3”:
user:
days: 365
extensions: "user"
webserver:
days: 750
extensions: "server"
template3:
days: 10
extensions: "user"
5.4.2. Microsoft CA Connector¶
This CA connector communicates to the eduMFA MS CA worker, that is installed on a Windows server in the Windows Domain. Through this worker, eduMFA can connect potentially to all Microsoft CAs in the Windows Domain.
The Microsoft CA Connector has the following options.
Hostname
The hostname (FQDN) or IP address where the eduMFA MS CA worker is running.
Note
If you configure Use SSL, you need to provide the correct hostname as it is contained in the server certificate.
Port
The port on which the worker listens.
Connect via Proxy
Whether the worker is situated behind a HTTP proxy.
Domain CA
The worker will provide a list of available CAs in the domain. This is the actual CA to which eduMFA shall communicate. After providing the initial connection information hostname and Port, eduMFA can fetch the available CAs in the Windows Domain. The CA is identified by the hostname where the Microsoft CA is running and the name of the CA like <hostname>\<name of CA>.
Use SSL
This is a boolean parameter. If it is checked, then eduMFA will communicate to the CA worker via TLS. Depending on the worker configuration it will also be required, to provide a client certificate for authentication.
Note
In productive use SSL should always be activated and a client certificate must be used for authentication.
CA certificate
This is the location of the file, that contains the CA certificate, that issued the CA worker server certificate. This file is located on the eduMFA server in PEM format.
Client certificate
This is the file location of the certificate that eduMFA uses to authenticate against the CA worker. It is in PEM format.
Note
The subject of this certificate must match the name of the eduMFA server as seen by the CA worker. It is a good idea to request the client certificate from the CA on the domain where the CA worker is actually running at.
Client private key
This is the location of the file containing the private key that belongs to the Client certificate. It is in PEM format and can either be password protected (encrypted) or not.
The key can be provided in PKCS1 or PKCS8 format.
Note
The PCKCS1 format will start with -----BEGIN RSA PRIVATE KEY-----
, the PKCS8 format
will start with -----BEGIN PRIVATE KEY-----
.
To convert between PKCS1 and PKCS8 format you can use:
openssl pkcs8 -in private-p1.pem -topk8 -out private-p8.pem -nocrypt
openssl pkcs8 -in private-p1.pem -topk8 -out private-p8-encrypted.pem
openssl rsa -in private-p8.pem -out private-p1.pem
Password of client certificate
This is the password of the encrypted client private key.
Note
We strongly recommend to protect the file with a password. As encrypted key files we only support PKCS8!
5.4.2.1. Basic setup from the command line¶
Of course the MS CA Connector can be configured in the eduMFA Web UI. For quick setup, you can also configure a connector at the command line using The edumfa-manage Script like this:
edumfa-manage ca create -t microsoft <name-of-connector>
It will ask you all relevant questions and setup a connector in eduMFA.