Easy-RSA Advanced Reference ============================= This is a technical reference for advanced users familiar with PKI processes. If you need a more detailed description, see the `EasyRSA-Readme` or `Intro-To-PKI` docs instead. Configuration Reference ----------------------- #### Configuration Sources There are 3 possible ways to perform external configuration of Easy-RSA, selected in the following order where the first defined result wins: 1. Command-line option 2. Environmental variable 3. 'vars' file, if one is present (see `vars Autodetection` below) 4. Built-in default Note that not every possible config option can be set everywhere, although any env-var can be added to the 'vars' file even if it's not shown by default. #### vars Autodetection A 'vars' file is a file named simply `vars` (without an extension) that Easy-RSA will source for configuration. This file is specifically designed *not* to replace variables that have been set with a higher-priority method such as CLI opts or env-vars. The following locations are checked, in this order, for a vars file. Only the first one found is used: 1. The file referenced by the `--vars` CLI option 2. The file referenced by the env-var named `EASYRSA_VARS_FILE` 3. The directory referenced by the `EASYRSA_PKI` env-var 4. The default PKI directory at `$PWD/pki` 4. The directory referenced by the `EASYRSA` env-var 5. The directory containing the easyrsa program Defining the env-var `EASYRSA_NO_VARS` will override the sourcing of the vars file in all cases, including defining it subsequently as a global option. #### OpenSSL Config Easy-RSA is tightly coupled to the OpenSSL config file (.cnf) for the flexibility the script provides. It is required that this file be available, yet it is possible to use a different OpenSSL config file for a particular PKI, or even change it for a particular invocation. The OpenSSL config file is searched for in the following order: 1. The env-var `EASYRSA_SSL_CONF` 2. The 'vars' file (see `vars Autodetection` above) 3. The `EASYRSA_PKI` directory with a filename of `openssl-easyrsa.cnf` 4. The `EASYRSA` directory with a filename of `openssl-easyrsa.cnf` Advanced extension handling --------------------------- Normally the cert extensions are selected by the cert type given on the CLI during signing; this causes the matching file in the x509-types subdirectory to be processed for OpenSSL extensions to add. This can be overridden in a particular PKI by placing another x509-types dir inside the `EASYRSA_PKI` dir which will be used instead. The file named `COMMON` in the x509-types dir is appended to every cert type; this is designed for CDP usage, but can be used for any extension that should apply to every signed cert. Additionally, the contents of the env-var `EASYRSA_EXTRA_EXTS` is appended with its raw text added to the OpenSSL extensions. The contents are appended as-is to the cert extensions; invalid OpenSSL configs will usually result in failure. Environmental Variables Reference --------------------------------- A list of env-vars, any matching global option (CLI) to set/override it, and a possible terse description is shown below: * `EASYRSA` - should point to the Easy-RSA top-level dir, where the easyrsa script is located. * `EASYRSA_OPENSSL` - command to invoke openssl * `EASYRSA_SSL_CONF` - the openssl config file to use * `EASYRSA_PKI` (CLI: `--pki-dir`) - dir to use to hold all PKI-specific files, defaults to `$PWD/pki`. * `EASYRSA_DN` (CLI: `--dn-mode`) - set to the string `cn_only` or `org` to alter the fields to include in the req DN * `EASYRSA_REQ_COUNTRY` (CLI: `--req-c`) - set the DN country with org mode * `EASYRSA_REQ_PROVINCE` (CLI: `--req-st`) - set the DN state/province with org mode * `EASYRSA_REQ_CITY` (CLI: `--req-city`) - set the DN city/locality with org mode * `EASYRSA_REQ_ORG` (CLI: `--req-org`) - set the DN organization with org mode * `EASYRSA_REQ_EMAIL` (CLI: `--req-email`) - set the DN email with org mode * `EASYRSA_REQ_OU` (CLI: `--req-ou`) - set the DN organizational unit with org mode * `EASYRSA_KEY_SIZE` (CLI: `--key-size`) - set the key size in bits to generate * `EASYRSA_ALGO` (CLI: `--use-algo`) - set the crypto alg to use: rsa or ec * `EASYRSA_CURVE` (CLI: `--curve`) - define the named EC curve to use * `EASYRSA_EC_DIR` - dir to store generated ecparams * `EASYRSA_CA_EXPIRE` (CLI: `--days`) - set the CA expiration time in days * `EASYRSA_CERT_EXPIRE` (CLI: `--days`) - set the issued cert expiration time in days * `EASYRSA_CRL_DAYS` (CLI: `--days`) - set the CRL 'next publish' time in days * `EASYRSA_NS_SUPPORT` (CLI: `--ns-cert`) - string 'yes' or 'no' fields to include the deprecated Netscape extensions * `EASYRSA_NS_COMMENT` (CLI: `--ns-comment`) - string comment to include when using the deprecated Netscape extensions * `EASYRSA_TEMP_FILE` - a temp file to use when dynamically creating req/cert extensions * `EASYRSA_REQ_CN` (CLI: `--req-cn`) - default CN, necessary to set in BATCH mode * `EASYRSA_DIGEST` (CLI: `--digest`) - set a hash digest to use for req/cert signing * `EASYRSA_BATCH` (CLI: `--batch`) - enable batch (no-prompt) mode; set env-var to non-zero string to enable (CLI takes no options) * `EASYRSA_PASSIN` (CLI: `--passin`) - allows to specify a source for password using any openssl password options like pass:1234 or env:var * `EASYRSA_PASSOUT` (CLI: `--passout`) - allows to specify a source for password using any openssl password options like pass:1234 or env:var **NOTE:** the global options need to be provided before the actual commands.