1PKCS15-INITPKCS15-(1)      OpenSC ToolsOpenSC Tools      PKCS15-INITPKCS15-(1)
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NAME

6       pkcs15-init - smart card personalization utility
7

SYNOPSIS

9       pkcs15-init [OPTIONS]
10

DESCRIPTION

12       The pkcs15-init utility can be used to create a PKCS #15 structure on a
13       smart card, and add key or certificate objects. Details of the
14       structure that will be created are controlled via profiles.
15
16       The profile used by default is pkcs15. Alternative profiles can be
17       specified via the -p switch.
18

PIN USAGE

20       pkcs15-init can be used to create a PKCS #15 structure on your smart
21       card, create PINs, and install keys and certificates on the card. This
22       process is also called personalization.
23
24       An OpenSC card can have one security officer PIN, and zero or more user
25       PINs. PIN stands for Personal Identification Number, and is a secret
26       code you need to present to the card before being allowed to perform
27       certain operations, such as using one of the stored RSA keys to sign a
28       document, or modifying the card itself.
29
30       Usually, PINs are a sequence of decimal digits, but some cards will
31       accept arbitrary ASCII characters. Be aware however that using
32       characters other than digits will make the card unusable with PIN pad
33       readers, because those usually have keys for entering digits only.
34
35       The security officer (SO) PIN is special; it is used to protect meta
36       data information on the card, such as the PKCS #15 structure itself.
37       Setting the SO PIN is optional, because the worst that can usually
38       happen is that someone finding your card can mess it up. To extract any
39       of your secret keys stored on the card, an attacker will still need
40       your user PIN, at least for the default OpenSC profiles. However, it is
41       possible to create card profiles that will allow the security officer
42       to override user PINs.
43
44       For each PIN, you can specify a PUK (also called unblock PIN). The PUK
45       can be used to overwrite or unlock a PIN if too many incorrect values
46       have been entered in a row.
47
48       For some cards that use the PKCS#15 emulation, the attributes of
49       private objects are protected and cannot be parsed without
50       authentication (usually with User PIN). This authentication need to be
51       done immediately after the card binding. In such cases --verify-pin has
52       to be used.
53

MODES OF OPERATION

55   Initialization
56       This is the first step during card personalization, and will create the
57       basic files on the card. To create the initial PKCS #15 structure,
58       invoke the utility as
59
60       pkcs15-init --create-pkcs15
61
62       You will then be asked for the security officer PIN and PUK. Simply
63       pressing return at the SO PIN prompt will skip installation of an SO
64       PIN.
65
66       If the card supports it, you should erase the contents of the card with
67       pkcs15-init --erase-card before creating the PKCS#15 structure.
68
69   User PIN Installation
70       Before installing any user objects such as private keys, you need at
71       least one PIN to protect these objects. you can do this using
72
73       pkcs15-init --store-pin --id " nn
74
75       where nn is a PKCS #15 ID in hexadecimal notation. Common values are
76       01, 02, etc.
77
78       Entering the command above will ask you for the user's PIN and PUK. If
79       you do not wish to install an unblock PIN, simply press return at the
80       PUK prompt.
81
82       To set a label for this PIN object (which can be used by applications
83       to display a meaningful prompt to the user), use the --label command
84       line option.
85
86   Key generation
87       pkcs15-init lets you generate a new key and store it on the card. You
88       can do this using:
89
90       pkcs15-init --generate-key " keyspec " --auth-id " nn
91
92       where keyspec describes the algorithm and the parameters of the key to
93       be created. For example, rsa:2048 generates a RSA key with 2048-bit
94       modulus. If you are generating an EC key, the curve designation must be
95       specified, for example ec:prime256v1. For symmetric key, the length of
96       key is specified in bytes, for example AES:32 or DES3:24.
97
98       nn is the ID of a user PIN installed previously, e.g.  01.
99
100       In addition to storing the private portion of the key on the card,
101       pkcs15-init will also store the public portion of the key as a PKCS #15
102       public key object.
103
104   Private Key Upload
105       You can use a private key generated by other means and upload it to the
106       card. For instance, to upload a private key contained in a file named
107       okir.pem, which is in PEM format, you would use
108
109       pkcs15-init --store-private-key okir.pem --id 45 --auth-id 01
110
111       In addition to storing the private portion of the key on the card,
112       pkcs15-init will also store the public portion of the key as a PKCS #15
113       public key object.
114
115       Note that usage of --id option in the pkcs15-init commands to generate
116       or to import a new key is deprecated. Better practice is to let the
117       middleware to derive the identifier from the key material.
118       (SHA1(modulus) for RSA, SHA1(pub) for DSA, ...). This allows easily set
119       up relation between 'related' objects (private/public keys and
120       certificates).
121
122       In addition to the PEM key file format, pkcs15-init also supports DER
123       encoded keys, and PKCS #12 files. The latter is the file format used by
124       Netscape Navigator (among others) when exporting certificates to a
125       file. A PKCS #12 file usually contains the X.509 certificate
126       corresponding to the private key. If that is the case, pkcs15-init will
127       store the certificate instead of the public key portion.
128
129   Public Key Upload
130       You can also upload individual public keys to the card using the
131       --store-public-key option, which takes a filename as an argument. This
132       file is supposed to contain the public key. If you don't specify a key
133       file format using the --format option, pkcs15-init will assume PEM
134       format. The only other supported public key file format is DER.
135
136       Since the corresponding public keys are always uploaded automatically
137       when generating a new key, or when uploading a private key, you will
138       probably use this option only very rarely.
139
140   Certificate Upload
141       You can upload certificates to the card using the --store-certificate
142       option, which takes a filename as an argument. This file is supposed to
143       contain the PEM encoded X.509 certificate.
144
145   Uploading PKCS #12 bags
146       Most browsers nowadays use PKCS #12 format files when you ask them to
147       export your key and certificate to a file.  pkcs15-init is capable of
148       parsing these files, and storing their contents on the card in a single
149       operation. This works just like storing a private key, except that you
150       need to specify the file format:
151
152       pkcs15-init --store-private-key okir.p12 --format pkcs12 --auth-id 01
153
154       This will install the private key contained in the file okir.p12, and
155       protect it with the PIN referenced by authentication ID 01. It will
156       also store any X.509 certificates contained in the file, which is
157       usually the user certificate that goes with the key, as well as the CA
158       certificate.
159
160   Secret Key Upload
161       You can use a secret key generated by other means and upload it to the
162       card. For instance, to upload an AES-secret key generated by the system
163       random generator you would use
164
165       pkcs15-init --store-secret-key /dev/urandom --secret-key-algorithm
166       aes:256 --auth-id 01
167
168       By default a random ID is generated for the secret key. You may specify
169       an ID with the --id if needed.
170

OPTIONS

172       --version,
173           Print the OpenSC package release version.
174
175       --card-profile name, -c name
176           Tells pkcs15-init to load the specified card profile option. You
177           will rarely need this option.
178
179       --create-pkcs15, -C
180           This tells pkcs15-init to create a PKCS #15 structure on the card,
181           and initialize any PINs.
182
183       --serial SERIAL
184           Specify the serial number of the card.
185
186       --erase-card, -E
187           This will erase the card prior to creating the PKCS #15 structure,
188           if the card supports it. If the card does not support erasing,
189           pkcs15-init will fail.
190
191       --erase-application AID
192           This will erase the application with the application identifier
193           AID.
194
195       --generate-key keyspec, -G keyspec
196           Tells the card to generate new key and store it on the card.
197           keyspec consists of an algorithm name, optionally followed by a
198           colon ":", slash "/" or hyphen "-" and the parameters of the key to
199           be created. It is a good idea to specify the key ID along with this
200           command, using the id option, otherwise an intrinsic ID will be
201           calculated from the key material. Look the description of the
202           'pkcs15-id-style' attribute in the 'pkcs15.profile' for the details
203           about the algorithm used to calculate intrinsic ID. For the
204           multi-application cards the target PKCS#15 application can be
205           specified by the hexadecimal AID value of the aid option.
206
207       --pin pin, --puk puk, --so-pin sopin, --so-puk sopuk
208           These options can be used to specify the PIN/PUK values on the
209           command line. If the value is set to env:VARIABLE, the value of the
210           specified environment variable is used. By default, the code is
211           prompted on the command line if needed.
212
213           Note that on most operation systems, any user can display the
214           command line of any process on the system using utilities such as
215           ps(1). Therefore, you should prefer passing the codes via an
216           environment variable on an unsecured system.
217
218       --no-so-pin,
219           Do not install a SO PIN, and do not prompt for it.
220
221       --profile name, -p name
222           Tells pkcs15-init to load the specified general profile. Currently,
223           the only application profile defined is pkcs15, but you can write
224           your own profiles and specify them using this option.
225
226           The profile name can be combined with one or more profile options,
227           which slightly modify the profile's behavior. For instance, the
228           default OpenSC profile supports the openpin option, which installs
229           a single PIN during card initialization. This PIN is then used both
230           as the SO PIN as well as the user PIN for all keys stored on the
231           card.
232
233           Profile name and options are separated by a + character, as in
234           pkcs15+onepin.
235
236       --secret-key-algorithm keyspec,
237           keyspec describes the algorithm and length of the key to be created
238           or downloaded, such as aes:256. This will create a 256 bit AES key.
239
240       --store-certificate filename, -X filename
241           Tells pkcs15-init to store the certificate given in filename on the
242           card, creating a certificate object with the ID specified via the
243           --id option. Without supplied ID an intrinsic ID will be calculated
244           from the certificate's public key. Look the description of the
245           'pkcs15-id-style' attribute in the 'pkcs15.profile' for the details
246           about the algorithm used to calculate intrinsic ID. The file is
247           assumed to contain the PEM encoded certificate. For the
248           multi-application cards the target application can be specified by
249           the hexadecimal AID value of the aid option.
250
251       --store-pin, -P
252           Store a new PIN/PUK on the card.
253
254       --store-public-key filename
255           Tells pkcs15-init to download the specified public key to the card
256           and create a public key object with the key ID specified via the
257           --id. By default, the file is assumed to contain the key in PEM
258           format. Alternative formats can be specified using --format.
259
260       --store-private-key filename, -S filename
261           Tells pkcs15-init to download the specified private key to the
262           card. This command will also create a public key object containing
263           the public key portion. By default, the file is assumed to contain
264           the key in PEM format. Alternative formats can be specified using
265           --format. It is a good idea to specify the key ID along with this
266           command, using the --id option, otherwise an intrinsic ID will be
267           calculated from the key material. Look the description of the
268           'pkcs15-id-style' attribute in the 'pkcs15.profile' for the details
269           about the algorithm used to calculate intrinsic ID. For the
270           multi-application cards the target PKCS#15 application can be
271           specified by the hexadecimal AID value of the aid option.
272
273       --store-secret-key filename,
274           Tells pkcs15-init to download the specified secret key to the card.
275           The file is assumed to contain the raw key. They key type should be
276           specified with --secret-key-algorithm option.
277
278           You may additionally specify the key ID along with this command,
279           using the --id option, otherwise a random ID is generated. For the
280           multi-application cards the target PKCS#15 application can be
281           specified by the hexadecimal AID value of the aid option.
282
283       --store-data filename, -W filename
284           Store a data object.
285
286       --update-certificate filename, -U filename
287           Tells pkcs15-init to update the certificate object with the ID
288           specified via the --id option with the certificate in filename. The
289           file is assumed to contain a PEM encoded certificate.
290
291           Pay extra attention when updating mail decryption certificates, as
292           missing certificates can render e-mail messages unreadable!
293
294       --delete-objects arg, -D arg
295           Tells pkcs15-init to delete the specified object.  arg is
296           comma-separated list containing any of privkey, pubkey, secrkey,
297           cert, chain or data.
298
299           When data is specified, an ---application-id must also be
300           specified, in the other cases an --id must also be specified
301
302           When chain is specified, the certificate chain starting with the
303           cert with specified ID will be deleted, until there's a CA
304           certificate that certifies another cert on the card
305
306       --change-attributes arg, -A arg
307           Tells pkcs15-init to change the specified attribute.  arg is either
308           privkey, pubkey, secrkey, cert or data. You also have to specify
309           the --id of the object. For now, you can only change the --label,
310           e.g:
311
312                                                       pkcs15-init -A cert --id 45 -a 1 --label Jim
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315
316       --use-default-transport-keys, -T
317           Tells pkcs15-init to not ask for the transport keys and use default
318           keys, as known by the card driver.
319
320       --sanity-check, -T
321           Tells pkcs15-init to perform a card specific sanity check and
322           possibly update procedure.
323
324       --reader arg, -r arg
325           Number of the reader to use. By default, the first reader with a
326           present card is used. If arg is an ATR, the reader with a matching
327           card will be chosen.
328
329       --verbose, -v
330           Causes pkcs15-init to be more verbose. Specify this flag several
331           times to enable debug output in the OpenSC library.
332
333       --wait, -w
334           Causes pkcs15-init to wait for a card insertion.
335
336       --use-pinpad
337           Do not prompt the user; if no PINs supplied, pinpad will be used.
338
339       --puk-id ID
340           Specify ID of PUK to use/create
341
342       --puk-label LABEL
343           Specify label of PUK
344
345       --public-key-label LABEL
346           Specify public key label (use with --generate-key)
347
348       --cert-label LABEL
349           Specify user cert label (use with --store-private-key)
350
351       --application-name arg
352           Specify application name of data object (use with
353           --store-data-object)
354
355       --aid AID
356           Specify AID of the on-card PKCS#15 application to be binded to (in
357           hexadecimal form)
358
359       --output-file filename -o filename,
360           Output public portion of generated key to file
361
362       --passphrase PASSPHRASE
363           Specify passphrase for unlocking secret key
364
365       --authority
366           Mark certificate as a CA certificate
367
368       --key-usage arg -u arg,
369           Specifies the X.509 key usage.  arg is comma-separated list
370           containing any of digitalSignature, nonRepudiation,
371           keyEncipherment, dataEncipherment, keyAgreement, keyCertSign,
372           cRLSign. Abbreviated names are allowed if unique (e.g.  dataEnc).
373
374           The alias sign is equivalent to
375           digitalSignature,keyCertSign,cRLSign
376
377           The alias decrypt is equivalent to keyEncipherment,dataEncipherment
378
379       --finalize -F,
380           Finish initialization phase of the smart card
381
382       --update-last-update
383           Update 'lastUpdate' attribute of tokenInfo
384
385       --ignore-ca-certificates
386           When storing PKCS#12 ignore CA certificates
387
388       --update-existing
389           Store or update existing certificate
390
391       --extractable
392           Private key stored as an extractable key
393
394       --user-consent arg
395           Specify user-consent.  arg is an integer value. If > 0, the value
396           specifies how many times the object can be accessed before a new
397           authentication is required. If zero, the object does not require
398           re-authentication.
399
400       --insecure
401           Insecure mode: do not require a PIN for private key
402
403       --md-container-guid GUID
404           For a new key specify GUID for a MD container
405
406       --help -h,
407           Display help message
408

SEE ALSO

410       pkcs15-profile(5)
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AUTHORS

413       pkcs15-init was written by Olaf Kirch <okir@suse.de>.
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417openscopensc                      05/02/2022             PKCS15-INITPKCS15-(1)
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