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=head1 NAME
swtpm-create-tpmca - Tool to create a local CA for swtpm_localca
=head1 SYNOPSIS
B<swtpm-create-tpmca [OPTIONS]>
=head1 DESCRIPTION
B<swtpm-create-tpmca> is a tool to create a TPM 1.2 based CA that
can be used by B<swtpm_localca> to sign EK and platform certificates.
The CA uses a GnuTLS key to sign certificates. To do this,
GnuTLS talks to the TPM 1.2 using the B<tcsd> (TrouSerS) daemon.
Since the TPM CA's certificate must be signed by a CA, a root certificate authority
will also be created and will sign this certificate. The root CA's
private key and certificate will be located in the same directory as the
signing key and have the names swtpm-localca-rootca-privkey.pem and
swtpm-localca-rootca-cert.pem respectively. The environment variable
SWTPM_ROOTCA_PASSWORD can be set for the password of the root CA's
private key.
Note: This tool is experimental. See the section on known issues below.
The following options are supported:
=over 4
=item B<--dir dir>
The directory where the keys will be written to. An existing root CA with
the files I<swtpm-localca-rootca-privkey.pem> and
I<swtpm-localca-rootca-cert.pem> in this directory will be reused. If
either one of these files does not exist, a new root CA will be created.
=item B<--overwrite>
Overwrite the contents of the output directory.
=item B<--register>
Register the key with TCSD. For the key to be available for signing,
the same user that created the TPM CA has to run the swtpm_localca tool
later on. If this option is not passed, the private key is written
into a file and can be used by others as well.
=item B<--key-password s>
The new signing key will get this password.
Note: Due to a bug in GnuTLS certtool it may be necessary to use the
same password for the signing key as for the SRK.
=item B<--srk-password s>
The TPM SRK password.
Note: Since GnuTLS tpmtool does not support the 'well known' password
of 20 zero bytes, the SRK password must be set.
=item B<--outfile filename>
The name of a file where to write the swtpm-localca.conf configuration
to.
=item B<--owner owner>
The name or uid number of the owner who will own the directory and
outfile file. This option only has an effect if this swtpm-create-tpmca
is run by the root user.
=item B<--group group>
The name or gid number of the group who will own the directory and
outfile file. This option only has an effect if this swtpm-create-tpmca
is run by the root user.
=item B<--tss-tcsd-hostname>
The hostname where tcsd is running on. The default hostname is 'localhost'.
=item B<-tss-tcsd-port>
The TCP port on which tcsd is listening for messages. The default port is
30003.
=item B<--tpm2>
The TPM to use for signing the certificates is a TPM 2 and Intel's TSS stack
must be running (tpm2-abrmd) along with its PKCS11 module.
The TPM 2 PKCS11 module must have been initialized using the tpm2_ptool.
The environment variables SWTPM_PKCS11_PIN and SWTPM_PKCS11_SO_PIN should be
set to hold the PINs. If SWTPM_PKCS11_PIN is not set then the default PIN
'swtpm-tpmca' will be used. SWTPM_PKCS11_SO_PIN is needed for creating the
token and must be explicitly set as an environment variable.
=item B<--pid pimary-object-id>
The primary object id that the tpm2_ptool returns upon 'init'.
=item B<-help, -h, -?>
Display the help screen and exit.
=back
=head1 EXAMPLE
The following example creates an intermediate TPM CA and writes the keys
into /var/lib/swtpm-localca and the swtpm_localca configuration to
/etc/swtpm-localca.conf. It can then be used for signing certificates of
newly created B<swtpm> TPMs.
If the host's TPM is a TPM 1.2, we need to start the tcsd first and can
then create the TPM key and TPM CA certificate:
#> sudo systemctl start tcsd
#> sudo /usr/share/swtpm/swtpm-create-tpmca \
--dir /var/lib/swtpm-localca \
--overwrite \
--outfile /etc/swtpm-localca.conf \
--srk-password password \
--key-password password \
--group tss
statedir = /var/lib/swtpm-localca
signingkey = tpmkey:file=/var/lib/swtpm-localca/swtpm-localca-tpmca-privkey.pem
issuercert = /var/lib/swtpm-localca/swtpm-localca-tpmca-cert.pem
certserial = /var/lib/swtpm-localca/certserial
TSS_TCSD_HOSTNAME = localhost
TSS_TCSD_PORT = 30003
signingkey_password = password
parentkey_password = password
Alternatively, if the host's TPM is a TPM 2 and Intel's TPM 2 stack is
installed, we need to start tpm2-abrmd first and can then create the TPM key
and TPM CA certificate:
#> sudo systemctl start tpm2-abrmd
#> tpm2_ptool init
action: Created
id: 1 # this is the --pid parameter below
#> sudo SWTPM_PKCS11_PIN="mypin 123" SWTPM_PKCS11_SO_PIN=123 /usr/share/swtpm/swtpm-create-tpmca \
--dir /var/lib/swtpm-localca \
--overwrite \
--outfile /etc/swtpm-localca.conf \
--group tss \
--tpm2 \
--pid 1
statedir = /var/lib/swtpm-localca
signingkey = pkcs11:model=SW%20%20%20TPM\;manufacturer=IBM\;serial=0000000000000000\;token=swtpm-tpmca-1\;id=%31\;object=swtpm-tpmca-key\;type=private
issuercert = /var/lib/swtpm-localca/swtpm-localca-tpmca-cert.pem
certserial = /var/lib/swtpm-localca/certserial
SWTPM_PKCS11_PIN = mypin 123
Note: This also works for non-root users by adapting the --dir and --outfile
parameters here and below by changing the --dir parameter and adding a --config
parameter.
To test either one of the above TPM CAs, run the following command:
#> swtpm_localca \
--type ek --ek x=11,y=13 \
--dir /tmp --vmid test --tpm2 \
--tpm-spec-family 2.0 --tpm-spec-revision 146 --tpm-spec-level 00 \
--tpm-model swtpm --tpm-version 20170101 --tpm-manufacturer IBM
The --tpm2 in this command indicates that the TPM for which the certificate
is created is a TPM 2.
=head1 KNOWN ISSUES
The interaction of GnuTLS certtool with the TPM TCSD daemon may cause so
many TPM (key) authentication failures that the TPM refuses to accept any
more authenticated commands until the TPM's owner sends it the
TPM_ORD_ResetLockValue command. The reason for this is that certtool first
tries to use 20 zero bytes for the SRK password and only then prompts for
and uses the required SRK password. The GnuTLS tpmtool does not support 20
zero bytes for the SRK password, so forces the usage of a 'real' password.
The effect of the authentication failures may be that the TPM CA cannot sign
certificates since the TPM does not accept authenticated commands.
=head1 SEE ALSO
B<swtpm_localca>, B<swtpm-localca.conf>, B<tcsd>
=head1 REPORTING BUGS
Report bugs to Stefan Berger <stefanb@linux.ibm.com>