view tests/sslcerts/README @ 37533:df4985497986

wireproto: implement capabilities for wire protocol v2 The capabilities mechanism for wire protocol version 2 represents a clean break from version 1. Instead of effectively exchanging a set of capabilities, we're exchanging a rich data structure. This data structure currently contains information about every available command, including its accepted arguments. It also contains information about supported compression formats. Exposing information about supported commands will allow clients to automatically generate bindings to the server. Clients will be able to do things like detect when they are attempting to run a command that isn't known to the server. Exposing the required permissions to run a command can be used by clients to determine if they have privileges to call a command before actually calling it. We could potentially even have clients send credentials preemptively without waiting for the server to deny the command request. Lots of potential here. The data returned by this command will likely evolve heavily. So we shouldn't bikeshed the implementation just yet. Differential Revision: https://phab.mercurial-scm.org/D3200
author Gregory Szorc <gregory.szorc@gmail.com>
date Mon, 09 Apr 2018 11:52:31 -0700
parents 43f3c0df2fab
children
line wrap: on
line source

Generate a private key (priv.pem):

  $ openssl genrsa -out priv.pem 2048

Generate 2 self-signed certificates from this key (pub.pem, pub-other.pem):

  $ openssl req -new -x509 -key priv.pem -nodes -sha256 -days 9000 \
    -out pub.pem -batch -subj '/CN=localhost/emailAddress=hg@localhost/'
  $ openssl req -new -x509 -key priv.pem -nodes -sha256 -days 9000 \
    -out pub-other.pem -batch -subj '/CN=localhost/emailAddress=hg@localhost/'

Now generate an expired certificate by turning back the system time:

  $ faketime 2016-01-01T00:00:00Z \
    openssl req -new -x509 -key priv.pem -nodes -sha256 -days 1 \
    -out pub-expired.pem -batch -subj '/CN=localhost/emailAddress=hg@localhost/'

Generate a certificate not yet active by advancing the system time:

  $ faketime 2030-01-1T00:00:00Z \
    openssl req -new -x509 -key priv.pem -nodes -sha256 -days 1 \
    -out pub-not-yet.pem -batch -subj '/CN=localhost/emailAddress=hg@localhost/'

Generate a passphrase protected client certificate private key:

  $ openssl genrsa -aes256 -passout pass:1234 -out client-key.pem 2048

Create a copy of the private key without a passphrase:

  $ openssl rsa -in client-key.pem -passin pass:1234 -out client-key-decrypted.pem

Create a CSR and sign the key using the server keypair:

  $ printf '.\n.\n.\n.\n.\n.\nhg-client@localhost\n.\n.\n' | \
    openssl req -new -key client-key.pem -passin pass:1234 -out client-csr.pem
  $ openssl x509 -req -days 9000 -in client-csr.pem -CA pub.pem -CAkey priv.pem \
    -set_serial 01 -out client-cert.pem

When replacing the certificates, references to certificate fingerprints will
need to be updated in test files.

Fingerprints for certs can be obtained by running:

  $ openssl x509 -in pub.pem -noout -sha1 -fingerprint
  $ openssl x509 -in pub.pem -noout -sha256 -fingerprint