/* Implement the functionality of a simple CA: read in a CA certificate, the associated private key, and a PKCS #10 certificate request. Sign the request and print out the new certificate. File names are hardcoded for simplicity. cacert.pem: The CA's certificate (perhaps created by self_sig) caprivate.pem: The CA's private key req.pem: The user's PKCS #10 certificate request Written by Jack Lloyd, May 19, 2003 This file is in the public domain. */ #include #include #include using namespace Botan; #include #include int main(int argc, char* argv[]) { if(argc != 5) { std::cout << "Usage: " << argv[0] << " " << " " << std::endl; return 1; } try { const std::string arg_passphrase = argv[1]; const std::string arg_ca_cert = argv[2]; const std::string arg_ca_key = argv[3]; const std::string arg_req_file = argv[4]; AutoSeeded_RNG rng; X509_Certificate ca_cert(arg_ca_cert); std::auto_ptr privkey( PKCS8::load_key(arg_ca_key, rng, arg_passphrase) ); X509_CA ca(ca_cert, *privkey); // got a request PKCS10_Request req(arg_req_file); // you would insert checks here, and perhaps modify the request // (this example should be extended to show how) // now sign the request X509_Time start_time(system_time()); X509_Time end_time(system_time() + 365 * 60 * 60 * 24); X509_Certificate new_cert = ca.sign_request(req, rng, start_time, end_time); // send the new cert back to the requestor std::cout << new_cert.PEM_encode(); } catch(std::exception& e) { std::cout << e.what() << std::endl; return 1; } return 0; }