Book Image

Demystifying Cryptography with OpenSSL 3.0

By : Alexei Khlebnikov
Book Image

Demystifying Cryptography with OpenSSL 3.0

By: Alexei Khlebnikov

Overview of this book

Security and networking are essential features of software today. The modern internet is full of worms, Trojan horses, men-in-the-middle, and other threats. This is why maintaining security is more important than ever. OpenSSL is one of the most widely used and essential open source projects on the internet for this purpose. If you are a software developer, system administrator, network security engineer, or DevOps specialist, you’ve probably stumbled upon this toolset in the past – but how do you make the most out of it? With the help of this book, you will learn the most important features of OpenSSL, and gain insight into its full potential. This book contains step-by-step explanations of essential cryptography and network security concepts, as well as practical examples illustrating the usage of those concepts. You’ll start by learning the basics, such as how to perform symmetric encryption and calculate message digests. Next, you will discover more about cryptography: MAC and HMAC, public and private keys, and digital signatures. As you progress, you will explore best practices for using X.509 certificates, public key infrastructure, and TLS connections. By the end of this book, you’ll be able to use the most popular features of OpenSSL, allowing you to implement cryptography and TLS in your applications and network infrastructure.
Table of Contents (20 chapters)
1
Part 1: Introduction
3
Part 2: Symmetric Cryptography
8
Part 3: Asymmetric Cryptography and Certificates
12
Part 4: TLS Connections and Secure Communication
16
Part 5: Running a Mini-CA

Providing certificate revocation status via OCSP

To serve OCSP responses, we have to sign them. An OCSP response for a certificate can be signed by its issuer certificate. The same issuer can also issue another certificate for signing OCSP requests. That certificate must have OCSPSigning included in the X509v3 extendedKeyUsage extension.

When we created the intermediate CA config file, we included the following X509v3 extensions section:

[v3_ocsp_cert]
subjectKeyIdentifier = hash
authorityKeyIdentifier = keyid:always, issuer
basicConstraints = critical, CA:FALSE
keyUsage = critical, digitalSignature
extendedKeyUsage = critical, OCSPSigning
crlDistributionPoints = URI:http://crl.tls-experts.no/intermediate_crl.der
authorityInfoAccess = OCSP;URI:http://ocsp.tls-experts.no/

That X509v3 extensions section will help us to generate a certificate for an OCSP responder. Let’s make this certificate:

  1. As usual, we will start by preparing the directory:
    $ cd mini-ca
    $ mkdir...