vtl createCert

Creates the client's certificate and private key that are used by NTLS. Re-creates the key and certificate if they already exist.

CAUTION!   If the key and certificate are re-created, the client will need to be removed and re-registered on each of the HSM servers with which it was registered.

NOTE   The client hostname/IP (-n) is the only mandatory field for certificate creation. All other fields of the certificate are used simply for display and visual confirmation purposes. The NTLA never displays certificate data fields to the user, so the content in these fields is irrelevant.

Syntax

vtl createCert -n <IP/hostname> [-c <country_code>] [-s <state>] [-l <locality>] [-o <organization>] [-u <organization_unit>] [-e <email_address>] [-P <private_key_filename>] [-C <cert_filename>] [-d <certificate_validity_period>] [-v]

Argument(s) Description
-c <country> The country where the client computer resides.
-C <filename>

The specified filename (*.pem) for the certificate.

Default: <IP/hostname>.pem

NOTE   Thales recommends using the default filename to avoid losing track of keys and certificates.

-d <validity_period>

Specifies the validity period for the client certificate, in days.

Default: 3650 (10 years)

-e <email_adress> An email address to contact the certificate creator.
-l <locality> The locality where the client computer resides.
-n <IP/hostname> The client hostname or IP address. This becomes the certificate Common Name (CN).
-o <organization> The name of the organization that owns the client computer.
-P <filename>

The specified filename (*Key.pem) for the private key.

Default: <IP/hostname>Key.pem

NOTE   Thales recommends using the default filename to avoid losing track of keys and certificates.

-s <state> The state where the client computer resides.
-u <unit> The business unit or department that owns the client computer.
-v Verbose mode. Output extra information while creating the certificate and private key.
-x Deprecated option to encrypt the private key -- the private key is always encrypted by default.

Example

Windows
vtl createCert -n test
Private Key created and written to: E:\temp\clientCerts\testKey.pem
Certificate created and written to: E:\temp\clientCerts\test.pem 

vtl createCert -n test -v
Using configuration from C:\Program Files\SafeNet\LunaClient\openssl.cnf
It needs to be at least 1024
Writing new private key to stdout E:\temp\clientCerts\testKey.pem'
CA [CA]:CA
Ontario [Ontario]:Ontario
Ottawa [Ottawa]:Ottawa
My company [My company]:My company
 []:
test [test]:test
 []:
Private Key created and written to: E:\temp\clientCerts\testKey.pem
Certificate created and written to: E:\temp\clientCerts\test.pem
UNIX
vtl createCert -n test 
Private Key created and written to: /usr/safenet/lunaclient/cert/client/testKey.pem
Certificate created and written to: /usr/safenet/lunaclient/cert/client/test.pem