pk12util — Export and import keys and certificate to or from a PKCS #12 file and the NSS database
pk12util
[-i p12File|-l p12File|-o p12File] [-d [sql:]directory] [-h tokenname] [-P dbprefix] [-r] [-v] [-k slotPasswordFile|-K slotPassword] [-w p12filePasswordFile|-W p12filePassword]
This documentation is still work in progress. Please contribute to the initial review in Mozilla NSS bug 836477
The PKCS #12 utility, pk12util, enables sharing certificates among any server that supports PKCS#12. The tool can import certificates and keys from PKCS#12 files into security databases, export certificates, and list certificates and keys.
Options
Import keys and certificates from a PKCS#12 file into a security database.
List the keys and certificates in PKCS#12 file.
Export keys and certificates from the security database to a PKCS#12 file.
Arguments
Specify the key encryption algorithm.
Specify the key cert (overall package) encryption algorithm.
Specify the database directory into which to import to or export from certificates and keys.
pk12util supports two types of databases: the legacy security databases (cert8.db
, key3.db
, and secmod.db
) and new SQLite databases (cert9.db
, key4.db
, and pkcs11.txt
). If the prefix sql: is not used, then the tool assumes that the given databases are in the old format.
Specify the name of the token to import into or export from.
Specify the text file containing the slot's password.
Specify the slot's password.
Specify the desired length of the symmetric key to be used to encrypt the private key.
Specify the desired length of the symmetric key to be used to encrypt the certificates and other meta-data.
Specify the nickname of the cert and private key to export.
Specify the prefix used on the certificate and key databases. This option is provided as a special case. Changing the names of the certificate and key databases is not recommended.
Dumps all of the data in raw (binary) form. This must be saved as a DER file. The default is to return information in a pretty-print ASCII format, which displays the information about the certificates and public keys in the p12 file.
Enable debug logging when importing.
Specify the text file containing the pkcs #12 file password.
Specify the pkcs #12 file password.
0 - No error
1 - User Cancelled
2 - Usage error
6 - NLS init error
8 - Certificate DB open error
9 - Key DB open error
10 - File initialization error
11 - Unicode conversion error
12 - Temporary file creation error
13 - PKCS11 get slot error
14 - PKCS12 decoder start error
15 - error read from import file
16 - pkcs12 decode error
17 - pkcs12 decoder verify error
18 - pkcs12 decoder validate bags error
19 - pkcs12 decoder import bags error
20 - key db conversion version 3 to version 2 error
21 - cert db conversion version 7 to version 5 error
22 - cert and key dbs patch error
23 - get default cert db error
24 - find cert by nickname error
25 - create export context error
26 - PKCS12 add password itegrity error
27 - cert and key Safes creation error
28 - PKCS12 add cert and key error
29 - PKCS12 encode error
Importing Keys and Certificates
The most basic usage of pk12util for importing a certificate or key is the PKCS#12 input file (-i
) and some way to specify the security database being accessed (either -d
for a directory or -h
for a token).
pk12util -i p12File [-h tokenname] [-v] [-d [sql:]directory] [-P dbprefix] [-k slotPasswordFile|-K slotPassword] [-w p12filePasswordFile|-W p12filePassword]
For example:
# pk12util -i /tmp/cert-files/users.p12 -d sql:/home/my/sharednssdb Enter a password which will be used to encrypt your keys. The password should be at least 8 characters long, and should contain at least one non-alphabetic character. Enter new password: Re-enter password: Enter password for PKCS12 file: pk12util: PKCS12 IMPORT SUCCESSFUL
Exporting Keys and Certificates
Using the pk12util command to export certificates and keys requires both the name of the certificate to extract from the database (-n
) and the PKCS#12-formatted output file to write to. There are optional parameters that can be used to encrypt the file to protect the certificate material.
pk12util -o p12File -n certname [-c keyCipher] [-C certCipher] [-m|--key_len keyLen] [-n|--cert_key_len certKeyLen] [-d [sql:]directory] [-P dbprefix] [-k slotPasswordFile|-K slotPassword] [-w p12filePasswordFile|-W p12filePassword]
For example:
# pk12util -o certs.p12 -n Server-Cert -d sql:/home/my/sharednssdb Enter password for PKCS12 file: Re-enter password:
Listing Keys and Certificates
The information in a .p12
file are not human-readable. The certificates and keys in the file can be printed (listed) in a human-readable pretty-print format that shows information for every certificate and any public keys in the .p12
file.
pk12util -l p12File [-h tokenname] [-r] [-d [sql:]directory] [-P dbprefix] [-k slotPasswordFile|-K slotPassword] [-w p12filePasswordFile|-W p12filePassword]
For example, this prints the default ASCII output:
# pk12util -l certs.p12 Enter password for PKCS12 file: Key(shrouded): Friendly Name: Thawte Freemail Member's Thawte Consulting (Pty) Ltd. ID Encryption algorithm: PKCS #12 V2 PBE With SHA-1 And 3KEY Triple DES-CBC Parameters: Salt: 45:2e:6a:a0:03:4d:7b:a1:63:3c:15:ea:67:37:62:1f Iteration Count: 1 (0x1) Certificate: Data: Version: 3 (0x2) Serial Number: 13 (0xd) Signature Algorithm: PKCS #1 SHA-1 With RSA Encryption Issuer: "E=personal-freemail@thawte.com,CN=Thawte Personal Freemail C A,OU=Certification Services Division,O=Thawte Consulting,L=Cape T own,ST=Western Cape,C=ZA"
Alternatively, the -r
prints the certificates and then exports them into separate DER binary files. This allows the certificates to be fed to another application that supports .p12
files. Each certificate is written to a sequentially-number file, beginning with file0001.der
and continuing through file000N.der
, incrementing the number for every certificate:
pk12util -l test.p12 -r Enter password for PKCS12 file: Key(shrouded): Friendly Name: Thawte Freemail Member's Thawte Consulting (Pty) Ltd. ID Encryption algorithm: PKCS #12 V2 PBE With SHA-1 And 3KEY Triple DES-CBC Parameters: Salt: 45:2e:6a:a0:03:4d:7b:a1:63:3c:15:ea:67:37:62:1f Iteration Count: 1 (0x1) Certificate Friendly Name: Thawte Personal Freemail Issuing CA - Thawte Consulting Certificate Friendly Name: Thawte Freemail Member's Thawte Consulting (Pty) Ltd. ID
PKCS#12 provides for not only the protection of the private keys but also the certificate and meta-data associated with the keys. Password-based encryption is used to protect private keys on export to a PKCS#12 file and, optionally, the entire package. If no algorithm is specified, the tool defaults to using PKCS12 V2 PBE with SHA1 and 3KEY Triple DES-cbc for private key encryption. PKCS12 V2 PBE with SHA1 and 40 Bit RC4 is the default for the overall package encryption when not in FIPS mode. When in FIPS mode, there is no package encryption.
The private key is always protected with strong encryption by default.
Several types of ciphers are supported.
DES-CBC
RC2-CBC
RC5-CBCPad
DES-EDE3-CBC (the default for key encryption)
AES-128-CBC
AES-192-CBC
AES-256-CBC
CAMELLIA-128-CBC
CAMELLIA-192-CBC
CAMELLIA-256-CBC
PKCS #12 PBE with Sha1 and 128 Bit RC4
PKCS #12 PBE with Sha1 and 40 Bit RC4
PKCS #12 PBE with Sha1 and Triple DES CBC
PKCS #12 PBE with Sha1 and 128 Bit RC2 CBC
PKCS #12 PBE with Sha1 and 40 Bit RC2 CBC
PKCS12 V2 PBE with SHA1 and 128 Bit RC4
PKCS12 V2 PBE with SHA1 and 40 Bit RC4 (the default for non-FIPS mode)
PKCS12 V2 PBE with SHA1 and 3KEY Triple DES-cbc
PKCS12 V2 PBE with SHA1 and 2KEY Triple DES-cbc
PKCS12 V2 PBE with SHA1 and 128 Bit RC2 CBC
PKCS12 V2 PBE with SHA1 and 40 Bit RC2 CBC
PKCS #5 Password Based Encryption with MD2 and DES CBC
PKCS #5 Password Based Encryption with MD5 and DES CBC
PKCS #5 Password Based Encryption with SHA1 and DES CBC
With PKCS#12, the crypto provider may be the soft token module or an external hardware module. If the cryptographic module does not support the requested algorithm, then the next best fit will be selected (usually the default). If no suitable replacement for the desired algorithm can be found, the tool returns the error no security module can perform the requested operation.
NSS originally used BerkeleyDB databases to store security information. The last versions of these legacy databases are:
cert8.db for certificates
key3.db for keys
secmod.db for PKCS #11 module information
BerkeleyDB has performance limitations, though, which prevent it from being easily used by multiple applications simultaneously. NSS has some flexibility that allows applications to use their own, independent database engine while keeping a shared database and working around the access issues. Still, NSS requires more flexibility to provide a truly shared security database.
In 2009, NSS introduced a new set of databases that are SQLite databases rather than BerkleyDB. These new databases provide more accessibility and performance:
cert9.db for certificates
key4.db for keys
pkcs11.txt, which is listing of all of the PKCS #11 modules contained in a new subdirectory in the security databases directory
Because the SQLite databases are designed to be shared, these are the shared database type. The shared database type is preferred; the legacy format is included for backward compatibility.
By default, the tools (certutil, pk12util, modutil) assume that the given security databases follow the more common legacy type. Using the SQLite databases must be manually specified by using the sql: prefix with the given security directory. For example:
# pk12util -i /tmp/cert-files/users.p12 -d sql:/home/my/sharednssdb
To set the shared database type as the default type for the tools, set the NSS_DEFAULT_DB_TYPE
environment variable to sql
:
export NSS_DEFAULT_DB_TYPE="sql"
This line can be set added to the ~/.bashrc
file to make the change permanent.
Most applications do not use the shared database by default, but they can be configured to use them. For example, this how-to article covers how to configure Firefox and Thunderbird to use the new shared NSS databases:
https://wiki.mozilla.org/NSS_Shared_DB_Howto
For an engineering draft on the changes in the shared NSS databases, see the NSS project wiki:
https://wiki.mozilla.org/NSS_Shared_DB
certutil (1)
modutil (1)
The NSS wiki has information on the new database design and how to configure applications to use it.
https://wiki.mozilla.org/NSS_Shared_DB_Howto
https://wiki.mozilla.org/NSS_Shared_DB
For information about NSS and other tools related to NSS (like JSS), check out the NSS project wiki at http://www.mozilla.org/projects/security/pki/nss/. The NSS site relates directly to NSS code changes and releases.
Mailing lists: https://lists.mozilla.org/listinfo/dev-tech-crypto
IRC: Freenode at #dogtag-pki