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SoftHSMv2


​​ 1. Install and configure SoftHSMv2

First, we install SoftHSMv2 and configure it to store tokens in the default location /var/lib/softhsm/tokens. We also need to give the softhsm group permission to this directory as this is how the keyless user will access this directory.

$ sudo apt-get install -y softhsm2 opensc
#...
$ cat <<EOF | sudo tee /etc/softhsm/softhsm2.conf
directories.tokendir = /var/lib/softhsm/tokens
objectstore.backend = file
log.level = DEBUG
slots.removable = false
EOF
$ sudo mkdir /var/lib/softhsm/tokens
$ sudo chown root:softhsm $_
$ sudo chmod 0770 /var/lib/softhsm/tokens
$ sudo usermod -G softhsm keyless
$ sudo usermod -G softhsm $(whoami)
$ echo 'export SOFTHSM2_CONF=/etc/softhsm/softhsm2.conf' | tee -a ~/.profile
$ source ~/.profile

​​ 2. Create a token and private keys, and generate CSRs

Next, we create a token in slot 0 called test-token and secure it with a PIN of 1234. In this slot we’ll store the RSA keys for our SSL certificates for keyless-softhsm.example.com.

$ sudo -u keyless softhsm2-util --init-token --slot 0 --label test-token --pin 1234 --so-pin 4321
The token has been initialized.

Using cfssl, we generate the private keys and Certificate Signing Requests (CSRs), the latter of which will be sent to a Certificate Authority (CA) for signing.

$ cat <<EOF | tee csr.json
{
"hosts": [
"keyless-softhsm.example.com"
],
"CN": "keyless-softhsm.example.com",
"key": {
"algo": "rsa",
"size": 2048
},
"names": [{
"C": "US",
"L": "San Francisco",
"O": "TLS Fun",
"OU": "Technical Operations",
"ST": "California"
}]
}
EOF
$ cfssl genkey csr.json | cfssljson -bare certificate
2018/08/12 00:52:22 [INFO] generate received request
2018/08/12 00:52:22 [INFO] received CSR
2018/08/12 00:52:22 [INFO] generating key: rsa-2048
2018/08/12 00:52:22 [INFO] encoded CSR

​​ 3. Convert and import the key

Now that the key has been generated, it’s time to load it into the slot we created. Before doing so, we need to convert from PKCS#1 to PKCS#8 format. During import, we specify the token and PIN from token initialization and provide a unique hexadecimal ID and label to the key.

$ openssl pkcs8 -topk8 -inform PEM -outform PEM -nocrypt -in certificate-key.pem -out certificate-key.p8
$ sudo chown keyless certificate-key.p8
$ sudo -u keyless softhsm2-util --pin 1234 --import ./certificate-key.p8 --token test-token --id a000 --label rsa-privkey
Found slot 915669571 with matching token label.
The key pair has been imported.

After importing we ask pkcs11-tool to confirm the objects have been successfully stored in the token.

$ sudo -u keyless pkcs11-tool --module /usr/lib/softhsm/libsofthsm2.so -l -p 1234 --token test-token --list-objects
Public Key Object; RSA 2048 bits
label: rsa-privkey
ID: a000
Usage: verify
Private Key Object; RSA
label: rsa-privkey
ID: a000
Usage: sign

​​ 4. Modify your gokeyless config file and restart the service

With the keys in place, it’s time to build the configuration file that the key server will read on startup. The id refers to the hexadecimal ID you provided to the softhsm2-util import statement; we used a000 so it is encoded as %a0%00. The module-path will vary slightly based on the Linux distribution you are using. On Debian it should be /usr/lib/softhsm/libsofthsm2.so.

Open up /etc/keyless/gokeyless.yaml and immediately after

private_key_stores:
- dir: /etc/keyless/keys

add

- uri: pkcs11:token=test-token;id=%a0%00?module-path=/usr/lib/softhsm/libsofthsm2.so&pin-value=1234&max-sessions=1

Save the config file, restart gokeyless, and verify it started successfully.

$ sudo systemctl restart gokeyless.service
$ sudo systemctl status gokeyless.service -l