Enrollment over Secure Transport explained

The Enrollment over Secure Transport, or EST is a cryptographic protocol that describes an X.509 certificate management protocol targeting public key infrastructure (PKI) clients that need to acquire client certificates and associated certificate authority (CA) certificates. EST is described in . EST has been put forward as a replacement for SCEP, being easier to implement on devices already having an HTTPS stack. EST uses HTTPS as transport and leverages TLS for many of its security attributes. EST has described standardized URLs and uses the well-known Uniform Resource Identifiers (URIs) definition codified in .

Operations

EST has a following set of operations:

API Endpoint Operation Description
/.well-known/est/cacerts Distribution of CA Certificates The EST client can request a copy of the current CA certificates with HTTP GET operation (RFC 7030 Section 4.1).
/.well-known/est/simpleenroll Enrollment of Clients EST clients request a certificate from the EST server with an HTTPS POST operation (RFC 7030 Section 4.2).
/.well-known/est/simplereenroll Re-enrollment of Clients EST clients renew/rekey certificates with an HTTPS POST operation (RFC 7030 Section 4.2.2).
/.well-known/est/fullcmc Full CMC An EST client can request a certificate from an EST server with an HTTPS POST operation (RFC 7030 Section 4.3).
/.well-known/est/serverkeygen Server-Side Key Generation An EST client may request a private key and associated certificate from an EST server using an HTTPS POST operation (RFC 7030 Section 4.4)
/.well-known/est/csrattrs CSR Attributes CA policy may allow inclusion of client-provided attributes in certificates that it issues, and some of these attributes may describe information that is not available to the CA. In addition, a CA may desire to certify a certain type of public key and a client may not have a priori knowledge of that fact. Therefore, clients SHOULD request a list of expected attributes that are required, or desired, by the CA in an enrollment request or if dictated by local policy. (RFC 7030 Section 4.5)

Usage example

The basic functions of EST were designed to be easy to use and although not a REST API, it can be used in a REST-like manner using simple tools such as OpenSSL and cURL. A simple command to make initial enrollment with a pre-generated PKCS#10 Certificate Signing Request (stored as device.b64), using one of the authentication mechanisms (username:password) specified in EST is:

The issued certificate, returned as a Base64-encoded PKCS#7 message, is stored as device-p7.b64.

See also

References

Implementations

Notes and References

  1. Web site: EJBCA - The Java EE Certificate Authority . 2019-06-07 . https://web.archive.org/web/20190607065910/https://ejbca.org/features.html . 2019-06-07 . dead .