How can I create a PEM file from an SSL certificate?
These are the files that I have available:
.crt
server.csr
server.key
Your keys may already be in PEM format, but just named with .crt or .key.
If the file's content begins with -----BEGIN
and you can read it in a text editor:
The file uses base64, which is readable in ASCII, not binary format. The certificate is already in PEM format. Just change the extension to .pem.
If the file is in binary:
For the server.crt, you would use
openssl x509 -inform DER -outform PEM -in server.crt -out server.crt.pem
For server.key, use openssl rsa
in place of openssl x509
.
The server.key is likely your private key, and the .crt file is the returned, signed, x509 certificate.
If this is for a Web server and you cannot specify loading a separate private and public key:
You may need to concatenate the two files. For this use:
cat server.crt server.key > server.includesprivatekey.pem
I would recommend naming files with "includesprivatekey" to help you manage the permissions you keep with this file.
cat server.crt server.key > server.pem
won't place the open comment on its own line, which seems to be a requirement. Courier mail gave me hell and it took me hours to figure out what was going wrong.
Feb 12, 2014 at 1:36
server.crt server.key > server.includesprivatekey.pem
is useful for SSL with haproxy 1.5.
I needed to do this for an AWS ELB. After getting beaten up by the dialog many times, finally this is what worked for me:
openssl rsa -in server.key -text > private.pem
openssl x509 -inform PEM -in server.crt > public.pem
Thanks NCZ
Edit: As @floatingrock says
With AWS, don't forget to prepend the filename with file://
. So it'll look like:
aws iam upload-server-certificate --server-certificate-name blah --certificate-body file://path/to/server.crt --private-key file://path/to/private.key --path /cloudfront/static/
http://docs.aws.amazon.com/cli/latest/reference/iam/upload-server-certificate.html
file://
. So it'll look like: aws iam upload-server-certificate --server-certificate-name blah --certificate-body file://~/Desktop/server.crt --private-key file://~/Desktop/private.key --path /cloudfront/static/
Nov 6, 2014 at 4:03
A pem
file contains the certificate and the private key. It depends on the format your certificate/key are in, but probably it's as simple as this:
cat server.crt server.key > server.pem
Additionally, if you don't want it to ask for a passphrase, then need to run the following command:
openssl rsa -in server.key -out server.key
-----BEGIN RSA PRIVATE KEY-----
and have one that starts with -----BEGIN ENCRYPTED PRIVATE KEY-----
, this is the command you want to use.
Feb 16, 2013 at 12:50
this is the best option to create .pem file
openssl pkcs12 -in MyPushApp.p12 -out MyPushApp.pem -nodes -clcerts
All of the files (*.crt, server.csr, server.key) may already be in PEM format, what to do next with these files depends on how you want to use them, or what tool is using them and in which format it requires.
I'll go a bit further here to explain what are the different formats used to store cryptography materials and how to recognise them as well as convert one to/from another.
Standards | Content format | File encoding | Possible content |
---|---|---|---|
X509 | X | Certificates | |
PKCS#1 | X | RSA keys (public/private) | |
PKCS#7 | X | Certificates, CRLs | |
PKCS#8 | X | Private keys, encrypted private keys | |
PKCS#12 | X | Certificates, CRLs, private keys | |
JKS | X | Certificates, private keys | |
PEM | X | ||
DER | X |
Content \ Encoding | PEM (*) | DER (**) | Binary |
---|---|---|---|
X509 | X | X | |
PKCS#1 | X | X | |
PKCS#7 (***) | X | X | |
PKCS#8 | X | X | |
PKCS#12 (***) | X | ||
JKS (***) | X |
This is a gist explains the same thing + commands for conversion/verification/inspection.
In conclusion, typical steps to work with cryptography/PKI materials:
I was trying to go from godaddy to app engine. What did the trick was using this line:
openssl req -new -newkey rsa:2048 -nodes -keyout name.unencrypted.priv.key -out name.csr
Exactly as is, but replacing name with my domain name (not that it really even mattered)
And I answered all the questions pertaining to common name / organization as www.name.com
Then I opened the csr, copied it, pasted it in go daddy, then downloaded it, unzipped it, navigated to the unzipped folder with the terminal and entered:
cat otherfilegodaddygivesyou.crt gd_bundle-g2-g1.crt > name.crt
Then I used these instructions from Trouble with Google Apps Custom Domain SSL, which were:
openssl rsa -in privateKey.key -text > private.pem
openssl x509 -inform PEM -in www_mydomain_com.crt > public.pem
exactly as is, except instead of privateKey.key I used name.unencrypted.priv.key, and instead of www_mydomain_com.crt, I used name.crt
Then I uploaded the public.pem to the admin console for the "PEM encoded X.509 certificate", and uploaded the private.pem for the "Unencrypted PEM encoded RSA private key"..
.. And that finally worked.
On Windows, you can use the certutil
tool:
certutil -encode server.crt cert.pem
certutil -encode server.key key.pem
You can combine both files to one in PowerShell like this:
Get-Content cert.pem, key.pem | Set-Content cert-and-key.pem
And in CMD like this:
copy cert.pem+key.pem cert-and-key.pem /b
What I have observed is: if you use openssl to generate certificates, it captures both the text part and the base64 certificate part in the crt file. The strict pem format says (wiki definition) that the file should start and end with BEGIN and END.
.pem – (Privacy Enhanced Mail) Base64 encoded DER certificate, enclosed between "-----BEGIN CERTIFICATE-----" and "-----END CERTIFICATE-----"
So for some libraries (I encountered this in java) that expect strict pem format, the generated crt would fail the validation as an 'invalid pem format'.
Even if you copy or grep the lines with BEGIN/END CERTIFICATE, and paste it in a cert.pem file, it should work.
Here is what I do, not very clean, but works for me, basically it filters the text starting from BEGIN line:
grep -A 1000 BEGIN cert.crt > cert.pem
openssl x509
. It will output a valid PEM certificate: cat certificate.crt | openssl x509 > certificate.pem
Jul 17, 2013 at 15:47
sed -n '/--BEGIN/,$p' cert.crt
in this case. To explain that: the "-n" tells sed to not print anything by default, and then the range expression /--BEGIN/,$
makes the p
command (print) apply to lines between the first line which contains --BEGIN
and the end of the file ($
).
Apr 24, 2017 at 17:13
Trying to upload a GoDaddy certificate to AWS I failed several times, but in the end it was pretty simple. No need to convert anything to .pem. You just have to be sure to include the GoDaddy bundle certificate in the chain parameter, e.g.
aws iam upload-server-certificate
--server-certificate-name mycert
--certificate-body file://try2/40271b1b25236fd1.crt
--private-key file://server.key
--path /cloudfront/production/
--certificate-chain file://try2/gdig2_bundle.crt
And to delete your previous failed upload you can do
aws iam delete-server-certificate --server-certificate-name mypreviouscert
An error occurred (MalformedCertificate) when calling the UploadServerCertificate operation: Unable to parse certificate. Please ensure the certificate is in PEM format.
Sep 1, 2018 at 20:19
Run below commands:
a) openssl pkcs12 -in Certificates.p12 -out CertificateName.pem -nodes
,
b) openssl pkcs12 -in Certificates.p12 -out pushcert.pem -nodes -clcerts
openssl pkcs12 -in YOUR_CERTIFICATE.p12 -out YOUR_CERTIFICATE.pem -nodes -clcerts
.pem
to.crt
and.key
.