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Prerequisites

Create the following directory tree and empty index.txt. Place *-openssl.cnf files in their corresponding directories and modify them to match your organisation’s information. Your keystores and truststores will be output to a directory named keystores one level above your working directory.

mkdir -p certs crl intermediate intermediate/certs intermediate/csr intermediate/newcerts intermediate/private private newcerts ../keystores;
touch index.txt intermediate/index.txt;
echo 1001 | tee serial intermediate/serial;


In each openssl.cnf modify dir to match their respective absolute paths (pwd will show your current working directory).

Root CA

First we want to create a private key and root CA

openssl genrsa -aes256 -out private/ca.key.pem 4096;
chmod 400 private/ca.key.pem;

openssl req -config ca-openssl.cnf \
    -key private/ca.key.pem \
	-new -x509 -days 7300 -sha256 -extensions v3_ca \
	-out certs/ca.cert.pem;
chmod 444 certs/ca.cert.pem;

Intermediate CA

We need to generate an intermediate CA

openssl genrsa -aes256 \
	-out intermediate/private/intermediate.key.pem 4096;
chmod 400 intermediate/private/intermediate.key.pem;

Since we want to sign our fresh key with the root CA, we need a CSR…

openssl req -config intermediate/int-openssl.cnf -new -sha256 \
      -key intermediate/private/intermediate.key.pem \
      -out intermediate/csr/intermediate.csr.pem;

…which we can now sign.

openssl ca -config ca-openssl.cnf -extensions v3_intermediate_ca \
    -days 3650 -notext -md sha256 \
    -in intermediate/csr/intermediate.csr.pem \
    -out intermediate/certs/intermediate.cert.pem; 
chmod 444 intermediate/certs/intermediate.cert.pem;


You can verify that CA index contains the certificate by inspecting index.txt
and the certificate chain with the following command

openssl verify -CAfile certs/ca.cert.pem \
      intermediate/certs/intermediate.cert.pem;


Should both be OK, it is time to create the certificate chain

cat intermediate/certs/intermediate.cert.pem \
      certs/ca.cert.pem > intermediate/certs/ca-chain.cert.pem;

chmod 444 intermediate/certs/ca-chain.cert.pem;

Sever Certificate

Next we will be creating a certificate and key for our server, sign it and generate the keystore to be used by HiveMQ. In the following examples, you will need to replace broker.hivemq.local with the FQDN of the individual nodes you are creating these for.


Generate the server’s private key

openssl genrsa -aes256 \
      -out intermediate/private/broker.hivemq.local.key.pem 2048;

chmod 400 intermediate/private/broker.hivemq.local.key.pem;

Create a signing request

openssl req -config intermediate/int-openssl.cnf \
      -key intermediate/private/broker.hivemq.local.key.pem \
      -new -sha256 -out intermediate/csr/broker.hivemq.local.csr.pem;

Sign the server’s key and generate its certificate

openssl ca -config intermediate/int-openssl.cnf \
      -extensions server_cert -days 375 -notext -md sha256 \
      -in intermediate/csr/broker.hivemq.local.csr.pem \
      -out intermediate/certs/broker.hivemq.local.cert.pem;

chmod 444 intermediate/certs/broker.hivemq.local.cert.pem;


We now have all necessary parts to produce a keystore

cat certs/ca.cert.pem intermediate/certs/intermediate.cert.pem intermediate/certs/broker.hivemq.local.cert.pem > ../keystores/broker.hivemq.local.chain.pem;

openssl pkcs12 -export -in ../keystores/broker.hivemq.local.chain.pem -inkey intermediate/private/broker.hivemq.local.key.pem > ../keystores/broker.hivemq.local.p12;

keytool -importkeystore -trustcacerts -srckeystore ../keystores/broker.hivemq.local.p12 -destkeystore ../keystores/broker.hivemq.local-keystore.jks -srcstoretype pkcs12 -destalias broker.hivemq.local -alias 1;

rm -f ../keystores/broker.hivemq.local.p12 ../keystores/broker.hivemq.local.chain.pem;

… and truststore

keytool -import -trustcacerts -alias 'Root CA' -file certs/ca.cert.pem -keystore ../keystores/broker.hivemq.local-truststore.jks;

Client certificates

Now we can start creating certificates which our clients can present to the server while establishing a connection. You may replace client1 with any desired name.

As before, our starting point is to generate a key…

openssl genrsa -aes256 \
      -out intermediate/private/client1.key.pem 2048;

chmod 400 intermediate/private/client1.key.pem;

…create a signing request for it

openssl req -config intermediate/int-openssl.cnf \
      -key intermediate/private/client1.key.pem \
      -new -sha256 -out intermediate/csr/client1.csr.pem;

… and sign it/generate a certificate

openssl ca -config intermediate/int-openssl.cnf \
      -extensions usr_cert -days 375 -notext -md sha256 \
      -in intermediate/csr/client1.csr.pem \
      -out intermediate/certs/client1.cert.pem;

Now it is time to generate the client’s keystore…

cat certs/ca.cert.pem intermediate/certs/intermediate.cert.pem intermediate/certs/client1.cert.pem > ../keystores/client1.chain.pem;

openssl pkcs12 -export -in ../keystores/client1.chain.pem -inkey intermediate/private/client1.key.pem > ../keystores/client1.p12;

keytool -importkeystore -trustcacerts -srckeystore ../keystores/client1.p12 -destkeystore ../keystores/client1-keystore.jks -srcstoretype pkcs12 -destalias client1 -alias 1;

rm -f ../keystores/client1.p12 ../keystores/client1.chain.pem;

…and truststore

keytool -import -trustcacerts -alias 'Root CA' -file certs/ca.cert.pem -keystore ../keystores/client1-truststore.jks;
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