LINUX - Add certificates to CA file
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Introduction
You may need, at some point, to manually add some certs to the system CA store.
Use cases:
- self signed certs for instance,
- or certs associated to a local/internal PKI,
- or CA certs not known by default by your system.
- ...
How to add cert?
Ubuntu
See this manpage about update-ca-certificate command.
CA Cert
Steps:
- get the cert(s) you want to add, and create files
vi mycert.pem
- put those files in a subfolder of /usr/share/ca-certificates/
mkdir /usr/share/ca-certificates/mysubfolder mv mycert.pem /usr/share/ca-certificates/mysubfolder/
- edit /etc/ca-certificates.conf and add 1 line per new cert at the end of the file
mysubfolder/mycert.pem
- finally, update the CA store with the appropriate command:
root@mymachine:/usr/share/ca-certificates/manitou# update-ca-certificates Updating certificates in /etc/ssl/certs... ... 1 added, 0 removed; done. Running hooks in /etc/ca-certificates/update.d... done.
Local cert
- If needed rename your cert(s) file(s) with a .crt extension.
- Then place it in /usr/share/local/ca-certificates/.
- Finally update the store
update-ca-certificates --fresh
Environment variable
You may have to set an environment variable for some third party apps to properly work with this CA store (Ansible, Python...):
export SSL_CERT_FILE=/etc/ssl/certs/ca-certificates.crt
Think about adding this environment variable to your .bashrc file for instance.