traefik/contrib/scripts/dumpcerts.sh
2019-01-08 14:32:04 +01:00

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#!/usr/bin/env bash
# Copyright (c) 2017 Brian 'redbeard' Harrington <redbeard@dead-city.org>
#
# dumpcerts.sh - A simple utility to explode a Traefik acme.json file into a
# directory of certificates and a private key
#
# Usage - dumpcerts.sh /etc/traefik/acme.json /etc/ssl/
#
# Dependencies -
# util-linux
# openssl
# jq
# The MIT License (MIT)
#
# Permission is hereby granted, free of charge, to any person obtaining a copy
# of this software and associated documentation files (the "Software"), to deal
# in the Software without restriction, including without limitation the rights
# to use, copy, modify, merge, publish, distribute, sublicense, and/or sell
# copies of the Software, and to permit persons to whom the Software is
# furnished to do so, subject to the following conditions:
#
# The above copyright notice and this permission notice shall be included in
# all copies or substantial portions of the Software.
#
# THE SOFTWARE IS PROVIDED "AS IS", WITHOUT WARRANTY OF ANY KIND, EXPRESS OR
# IMPLIED, INCLUDING BUT NOT LIMITED TO THE WARRANTIES OF MERCHANTABILITY,
# FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE AND NONINFRINGEMENT. IN NO EVENT SHALL THE
# AUTHORS OR COPYRIGHT HOLDERS BE LIABLE FOR ANY CLAIM, DAMAGES OR OTHER
# LIABILITY, WHETHER IN AN ACTION OF CONTRACT, TORT OR OTHERWISE, ARISING FROM,
# OUT OF OR IN CONNECTION WITH THE SOFTWARE OR THE USE OR OTHER DEALINGS IN
# THE SOFTWARE.
# Exit codes:
# 1 - A component is missing or could not be read
# 2 - There was a problem reading acme.json
# 4 - The destination certificate directory does not exist
# 8 - Missing private key
set -o errexit
set -o pipefail
set -o nounset
USAGE="$(basename "$0") <path to acme> <destination cert directory>"
# Platform variations
case "$(uname)" in
'Linux')
# On Linux, -d should always work. --decode does not work with Alpine's busybox-binary
CMD_DECODE_BASE64="base64 -d"
;;
*)
# Max OS-X supports --decode and -D, but --decode may be supported by other platforms as well.
CMD_DECODE_BASE64="base64 --decode"
;;
esac
# Allow us to exit on a missing jq binary
exit_jq() {
echo "
You must have the binary 'jq' to use this.
jq is available at: https://stedolan.github.io/jq/download/
${USAGE}" >&2
exit 1
}
bad_acme() {
echo "
There was a problem parsing your acme.json file.
${USAGE}" >&2
exit 2
}
if [ $# -ne 2 ]; then
echo "
Insufficient number of parameters.
${USAGE}" >&2
exit 1
fi
readonly acmefile="${1}"
readonly certdir="${2%/}"
if [ ! -r "${acmefile}" ]; then
echo "
There was a problem reading from '${acmefile}'
We need to read this file to explode the JSON bundle... exiting.
${USAGE}" >&2
exit 2
fi
if [ ! -d "${certdir}" ]; then
echo "
Path ${certdir} does not seem to be a directory
We need a directory in which to explode the JSON bundle... exiting.
${USAGE}" >&2
exit 4
fi
jq=$(command -v jq) || exit_jq
priv=$(${jq} -e -r '.Account.PrivateKey' "${acmefile}") || bad_acme
if [ ! -n "${priv}" ]; then
echo "
There didn't seem to be a private key in ${acmefile}.
Please ensure that there is a key in this file and try again." >&2
exit 8
fi
# If they do not exist, create the needed subdirectories for our assets
# and place each in a variable for later use, normalizing the path
mkdir -p "${certdir}"/{certs,private}
pdir="${certdir}/private/"
cdir="${certdir}/certs/"
# Save the existing umask, change the default mode to 600, then
# after writing the private key switch it back to the default
oldumask=$(umask)
umask 177
trap 'umask ${oldumask}' EXIT
# traefik stores the private key in stripped base64 format but the certificates
# bundled as a base64 object without stripping headers. This normalizes the
# headers and formatting.
#
# In testing this out it was a balance between the following mechanisms:
# gawk:
# echo ${priv} | awk 'BEGIN {print "-----BEGIN RSA PRIVATE KEY-----"}
# {gsub(/.{64}/,"&\n")}1
# END {print "-----END RSA PRIVATE KEY-----"}' > "${pdir}/letsencrypt.key"
#
# openssl:
# echo -e "-----BEGIN RSA PRIVATE KEY-----\n${priv}\n-----END RSA PRIVATE KEY-----" \
# | openssl rsa -inform pem -out "${pdir}/letsencrypt.key"
#
# and sed:
# echo "-----BEGIN RSA PRIVATE KEY-----" > "${pdir}/letsencrypt.key"
# echo ${priv} | sed -E 's/(.{64})/\1\n/g' >> "${pdir}/letsencrypt.key"
# sed -i '$ d' "${pdir}/letsencrypt.key"
# echo "-----END RSA PRIVATE KEY-----" >> "${pdir}/letsencrypt.key"
# openssl rsa -noout -in "${pdir}/letsencrypt.key" -check # To check if the key is valid
# In the end, openssl was chosen because most users will need this script
# *because* of openssl combined with the fact that it will refuse to write the
# key if it does not parse out correctly. The other mechanisms were left as
# comments so that the user can choose the mechanism most appropriate to them.
echo -e "-----BEGIN RSA PRIVATE KEY-----\n${priv}\n-----END RSA PRIVATE KEY-----" \
| openssl rsa -inform pem -out "${pdir}/letsencrypt.key"
# Process the certificates for each of the domains in acme.json
domains=$(jq -r '.Certificates[].Domain.Main' ${acmefile}) || bad_acme
for domain in $domains; do
# Traefik stores a cert bundle for each domain. Within this cert
# bundle there is both proper the certificate and the Let's Encrypt CA
echo "Extracting cert bundle for ${domain}"
cert=$(jq -e -r --arg domain "$domain" '.Certificates[] |
select (.Domain.Main == $domain )| .Certificate' ${acmefile}) || bad_acme
echo "${cert}" | ${CMD_DECODE_BASE64} > "${cdir}/${domain}.crt"
echo "Extracting private key for ${domain}"
key=$(jq -e -r --arg domain "$domain" '.Certificates[] |
select (.Domain.Main == $domain )| .Key' ${acmefile}) || bad_acme
echo "${key}" | ${CMD_DECODE_BASE64} > "${pdir}/${domain}.key"
done