update-ca-trust(template) - phpMan

UPDATE-CA-TRUST(8)                                          UPDATE-CA-TRUST(8)

NAME
       update-ca-trust - manage consolidated and dynamic configuration of CA
       certificates and associated trust
SYNOPSIS
       update-ca-trust [COMMAND]
DESCRIPTION
       update-ca-trust(8) is used to manage a consolidated and dynamic
       configuration feature of Certificate Authority (CA) certificates and
       associated trust.
       The feature is available for new applications that read the
       consolidated configuration files found in the
       /etc/pki/ca-trust/extracted directory or that load the PKCS#11 module
       p11-kit-trust.so
       Parts of the new feature are also provided in a way to make it useful
       for legacy applications.
       Many legacy applications expect CA certificates and trust configuration
       in a fixed location, contained in files with particular path and name,
       or by referring to a classic PKCS#11 trust module provided by the NSS
       cryptographic library.
       The dynamic configuration feature provides functionally compatible
       replacements for classic configuration files and for the classic NSS
       trust module named libnssckbi.
       In order to enable legacy applications, that read the classic files or
       access the classic module, to make use of the new consolidated and
       dynamic configuration feature, the classic filenames have been changed
       to symbolic links. The symbolic links refer to dynamically created and
       consolidated output stored below the /etc/pki/ca-trust/extracted
       directory hierarchy.
       The output is produced using the update-ca-trust command (without
       parameters), or using the update-ca-trust extract command. In order to
       produce the output, a flexible set of source configuration is read, as
       described in section SOURCE CONFIGURATION.
       In addition, the classic PKCS#11 module is replaced with a new PKCS#11
       module (p11-kit-trust.so) that dynamically reads the same source
       configuration.
SOURCE CONFIGURATION
       The dynamic configuration feature uses several source directories that
       will be scanned for any number of source files. It is important to
       select the correct subdirectory for adding files, as the subdirectory
       defines how contained certificates will be trusted or distrusted, and
       which file formats are read.
       Files in subdirectories below the directory hierarchy
       /usr/share/pki/ca-trust-source/ contain CA certificates and trust
       settings in the PEM file format. The trust settings found here will be
       interpreted with a low priority.
       Files in subdirectories below the directory hierarchy
       /etc/pki/ca-trust/source/ contain CA certificates and trust settings in
       the PEM file format. The trust settings found here will be interpreted
       with a high priority.
       You may use the following rules of thumb to decide, whether your
       configuration files should be added to the /etc or rather to the /usr
       directory hierarchy:
       o   If you are manually adding a configuration file to a system, you
           probably want it to override any other default configuration, and
           you most likely should add it to the respective subdirectory in the
           /etc hierarchy.
       o   If you are creating a package that provides additional root CA
           certificates, that is intended for distribution to several computer
           systems, but you still want to allow the administrator to override
           your list, then your package should add your files to the
           respective subdirectory in the /usr hierarchy.
       o   If you are creating a package that is supposed to override the
           default system trust settings, that is intended for distribution to
           several computer systems, then your package should install the
           files to the respective subdirectory in the /etc hierarchy.
       QUICK HELP 1: To add a certificate in the simple PEM or DER file
       formats to the list of CAs trusted on the system:
       o   add it as a new file to directory /etc/pki/ca-trust/source/anchors/
       o   run update-ca-trust extract
       QUICK HELP 2: If your certificate is in the extended BEGIN TRUSTED file
       format (which may contain distrust/blacklist trust flags, or trust
       flags for usages other than TLS) then:
       o   add it as a new file to directory /etc/pki/ca-trust/source/
       o   run update-ca-trust extract
       In order to offer simplicity and flexibility, the way certificate files
       are treated depends on the subdirectory they are installed to.
       o   simple trust anchors subdirectory:
           /usr/share/pki/ca-trust-source/anchors/ or
           /etc/pki/ca-trust/source/anchors/
       o   simple blacklist (distrust) subdirectory:
           /usr/share/pki/ca-trust-source/blacklist/ or
           /etc/pki/ca-trust/source/blacklist/
       o   extended format directory: /usr/share/pki/ca-trust-source/ or
           /etc/pki/ca-trust/source/
       In the main directories /usr/share/pki/ca-trust-source/ or
       /etc/pki/ca-trust/source/ you may install one or multiple files in the
       following file formats:
       o   certificate files that include trust flags, in the BEGIN/END
           TRUSTED CERTIFICATE file format (any file name), which have been
           created using the openssl x509 tool and the -addreject -addtrust
           options. Bundle files with multiple certificates are supported.
       o   files in the p11-kit file format using the .p11-kit file name
           extension, which can (e.g.) be used to distrust certificates based
           on serial number and issuer name, without having the full
           certificate available. (This is currently an undocumented format,
           to be extended later. For examples of the supported formats, see
           the files shipped with the ca-certificates package.)
       o   certificate files without trust flags in either the DER file format
           or in the PEM (BEGIN/END CERTIFICATE) file format (any file name).
           Such files will be added with neutral trust, neither trusted nor
           distrusted. They will simply be known to the system, which might be
           helpful to assist cryptographic software in constructing chains of
           certificates. (If you want a CA certificate in these file formats
           to be trusted, you should remove it from this directory and move it
           to the ./anchors subdirectory instead.)
       In the anchors subdirectories /usr/share/pki/ca-trust-source/anchors/
       or /etc/pki/ca-trust/source/anchors/ you may install one or multiple
       certificates in either the DER file format or in the PEM (BEGIN/END
       CERTIFICATE) file format. Each certificate will be treated as trusted
       for all purposes.
       In the blacklist subdirectories
       /usr/share/pki/ca-trust-source/blacklist/ or
       /etc/pki/ca-trust/source/blacklist/ you may install one or multiple
       certificates in either the DER file format or in the PEM (BEGIN/END
       CERTIFICATE) file format. Each certificate will be treated as
       distrusted for all purposes.
       Please refer to the x509(1) manual page for the documentation of the
       BEGIN/END CERTIFICATE and BEGIN/END TRUSTED CERTIFICATE file formats.
       Applications that rely on a static file for a list of trusted CAs may
       load one of the files found in the /etc/pki/ca-trust/extracted
       directory. After modifying any file in the
       /usr/share/pki/ca-trust-source/ or /etc/pki/ca-trust/source/
       directories or in any of their subdirectories, or after adding a file,
       it is necessary to run the update-ca-trust extract command, in order to
       update the consolidated files in /etc/pki/ca-trust/extracted/ .
       Applications that load the classic PKCS#11 module using filename
       libnssckbi.so (which has been converted into a symbolic link pointing
       to the new module) and any application capable of loading PKCS#11
       modules and loading p11-kit-trust.so, will benefit from the dynamically
       merged set of certificates and trust information stored in the
       /usr/share/pki/ca-trust-source/ and /etc/pki/ca-trust/source/
       directories.
EXTRACTED CONFIGURATION
       The directory /etc/pki/ca-trust/extracted/ contains generated CA
       certificate bundle files which are created and updated, based on the
       SOURCE CONFIGURATION by running the update-ca-trust extract command.
       If your application isn't able to load the PKCS#11 module
       p11-kit-trust.so, then you can use these files in your application to
       load a list of global root CA certificates.
       Please never manually edit the files stored in this directory, because
       your changes will be lost and the files automatically overwritten, each
       time the update-ca-trust extract command gets executed.
       In order to install new trusted or distrusted certificates, please
       rather install them in the respective subdirectory below the
       /usr/share/pki/ca-trust-source/ or /etc/pki/ca-trust/source/
       directories, as described in the SOURCE CONFIGURATION section.
       The directory /etc/pki/ca-trust/extracted/java/ contains a CA
       certificate bundle in the java keystore file format. Distrust
       information cannot be represented in this file format, and distrusted
       certificates are missing from these files. File cacerts contains CA
       certificates trusted for TLS server authentication.
       The directory /etc/pki/ca-trust/extracted/openssl/ contains CA
       certificate bundle files in the extended BEGIN/END TRUSTED CERTIFICATE
       file format, as described in the x509(1) manual page. File
       ca-bundle.trust.crt contains the full set of all trusted or distrusted
       certificates, including the associated trust flags.
       The directory /etc/pki/ca-trust/extracted/pem/ contains CA certificate
       bundle files in the simple BEGIN/END CERTIFICATE file format, as
       described in the x509(1) manual page. Distrust information cannot be
       represented in this file format, and distrusted certificates are
       missing from these files. File tls-ca-bundle.pem contains CA
       certificates trusted for TLS server authentication. File
       email-ca-bundle.pem contains CA certificates trusted for E-Mail
       protection. File objsign-ca-bundle.pem contains CA certificates trusted
       for code signing.
COMMANDS
       (absent/empty command)
           Same as the extract command described below. (However, the command
           may print fewer warnings, as this command is being run during rpm
           package installation, where non-fatal status output is undesired.)
       extract
           Instruct update-ca-trust to scan the SOURCE CONFIGURATION and
           produce updated versions of the consolidated configuration files
           stored below the /etc/pki/ca-trust/extracted directory hierarchy.
FILES
       /etc/pki/tls/certs/ca-bundle.crt
           Classic filename, file contains a list of CA certificates trusted
           for TLS server authentication usage, in the simple BEGIN/END
           CERTIFICATE file format, without distrust information. This file is
           a symbolic link that refers to the consolidated output created by
           the update-ca-trust command.
       /etc/pki/tls/certs/ca-bundle.trust.crt
           Classic filename, file contains a list of CA certificates in the
           extended BEGIN/END TRUSTED CERTIFICATE file format, which includes
           trust (and/or distrust) flags specific to certificate usage. This
           file is a symbolic link that refers to the consolidated output
           created by the update-ca-trust command.
       /etc/pki/java/cacerts
           Classic filename, file contains a list of CA certificates trusted
           for TLS server authentication usage, in the Java keystore file
           format, without distrust information. This file is a symbolic link
           that refers to the consolidated output created by the
           update-ca-trust command.
       /usr/share/pki/ca-trust-source
           Contains multiple, low priority source configuration files as
           explained in section SOURCE CONFIGURATION. Please pay attention to
           the specific meanings of the respective subdirectories.
       /etc/pki/ca-trust/source
           Contains multiple, high priority source configuration files as
           explained in section SOURCE CONFIGURATION. Please pay attention to
           the specific meanings of the respective subdirectories.
       /etc/pki/ca-trust/extracted
           Contains consolidated and automatically generated configuration
           files for consumption by applications, which are created using the
           update-ca-trust extract command. Don't edit files in this
           directory, because they will be overwritten. See section EXTRACTED
           CONFIGURATION for additional details.
AUTHOR
       Written by Kai Engert and Stef Walter.

update-ca-trust                   01/15/2024                UPDATE-CA-TRUST(8)