openssl Cookbook ================ This cookbook provides a library method to generate secure random passwords in recipes using the Ruby OpenSSL library. It also provides an attribute-driven recipe for upgrading OpenSSL packages. Requirements ------------ The `secure_password` works on any platform with OpenSSL Ruby bindings installed, which are a requirement for Chef anyway. The upgrade recipe works on the following tested platforms: * Ubuntu 12.04, 14.04 * Debian 7.4 * CentOS 6.5 It may work on other platforms or versions of the above platforms with or without modification. [Chef Sugar](https://github.com/sethvargo/chef-sugar) was introduced as a dependency to provide helpers that make the default attribute settings (see Attributes) easier to reason about. Attributes ---------- * `node['openssl']['packages']` - An array of packages of openssl. The default attributes attempt to be smart about which packages are the default, but this may need to be changed by users of the `openssl::upgrade` recipe. * `node['openssl']['restart_services']` - An array of service resources that use the `node['openssl']['packages']`. This is empty by default as Chef has no reliably reasonable way to detect which applications or services are compiled against these packages. *Note* These each need to be "`service`" resources specified somewhere in the recipes in the node's run list. Recipes ------- ### upgrade The upgrade recipe iterates over the list of packages in the `node['openssl']['packages']` attribute and manages them with the `:upgrade` action. Each package will send `:restart` notification to service resources named by the `node['openssl']['restart_services']` attribute. Usage ----- Most often this will be used to generate a secure password for an attribute. In a recipe: ```ruby ::Chef::Recipe.send(:include, Opscode::OpenSSL::Password) node.default_unless[:my_password] = secure_password ``` To use the `openssl::upgrade` recipe, set the attributes as mentioned above. For example, we have a "stats_collector" service that uses openssl. It has a recipe that looks like this: LWRP ==== This cookbook includes an LWRP for generating Self Signed Certificates ## openssl_x509 generate a pem formatted x509 cert + key ### Attributes `common_name` A String representing the `CN` ssl field `org` A String representing the `O` ssl field `org_unit` A String representing the `OU` ssl field `country` A String representing the `C` ssl field `expire` A Fixnum reprenting the number of days from _now_ to expire the cert `key_file` Optional A string to the key file to use. If no key is present it will generate and store one. `key_pass` A String that is the key's passphrase `key_length` A Fixnum reprenting your desired Bit Length _Default: 2048_ `owner` The owner of the files _Default: "root"_ `group` The group of the files _Default: "root"_ `mode` The mode to store the files in _Default: "0400"_ ### Example usage openssl_x509 "/tmp/mycert.pem" do common_name "www.f00bar.com" org "Foo Bar" org_unit "Lab" country "US" end License and Author ================== Author:: Jesse Nelson () Author:: Joshua Timberman () ======= ```ruby node.default['openssl']['restart_services'] = ['stats_collector'] # other recipe code here... service 'stats_collector' do action [:enable, :start] end include_recipe 'openssl::upgrade' ``` This will ensure that openssl is upgraded to the latest version so the `stats_collector` service won't be exploited (hopefully!). ```text Copyright:: 2009-2011, Opscode, Inc Copyright:: 2014, Chef Software, Inc Licensed under the Apache License, Version 2.0 (the "License"); you may not use this file except in compliance with the License. You may obtain a copy of the License at http://www.apache.org/licenses/LICENSE-2.0 Unless required by applicable law or agreed to in writing, software distributed under the License is distributed on an "AS IS" BASIS, WITHOUT WARRANTIES OR CONDITIONS OF ANY KIND, either express or implied. See the License for the specific language governing permissions and limitations under the License. ```