community.crypto.openssl_csr module – Generate OpenSSL Certificate Signing Request (CSR)

Note

This module is part of the community.crypto collection (version 2.3.4).

You might already have this collection installed if you are using the ansible package. It is not included in ansible-core. To check whether it is installed, run ansible-galaxy collection list.

To install it, use: ansible-galaxy collection install community.crypto.

To use it in a playbook, specify: community.crypto.openssl_csr.

Synopsis

  • Please note that the module regenerates an existing CSR if it does not match the module’s options, or if it seems to be corrupt. If you are concerned that this could overwrite your existing CSR, consider using the backup option.

  • This module allows one to (re)generate OpenSSL certificate signing requests.

  • This module supports the subjectAltName, keyUsage, extendedKeyUsage, basicConstraints and OCSP Must Staple extensions.

Requirements

The below requirements are needed on the host that executes this module.

  • cryptography >= 1.3

Parameters

Parameter

Comments

attributes

aliases: attr

string

added in 2.3 of ansible.builtin

The attributes the resulting filesystem object should have.

To get supported flags look at the man page for chattr on the target system.

This string should contain the attributes in the same order as the one displayed by lsattr.

The = operator is assumed as default, otherwise + or - operators need to be included in the string.

authority_cert_issuer

list / elements=string

Names that will be present in the authority cert issuer field of the certificate signing request.

Values must be prefixed by their options. (i.e., email, URI, DNS, RID, IP, dirName, otherName and the ones specific to your CA)

Example: DNS:ca.example.org

If specified, authority_cert_serial_number must also be specified.

Please note that commercial CAs ignore this value, respectively use a value of their own choice. Specifying this option is mostly useful for self-signed certificates or for own CAs.

Note that this is only supported if the cryptography backend is used!

The AuthorityKeyIdentifier extension will only be added if at least one of authority_key_identifier, authority_cert_issuer and authority_cert_serial_number is specified.

authority_cert_serial_number

integer

The authority cert serial number.

If specified, authority_cert_issuer must also be specified.

Note that this is only supported if the cryptography backend is used!

Please note that commercial CAs ignore this value, respectively use a value of their own choice. Specifying this option is mostly useful for self-signed certificates or for own CAs.

The AuthorityKeyIdentifier extension will only be added if at least one of authority_key_identifier, authority_cert_issuer and authority_cert_serial_number is specified.

authority_key_identifier

string

The authority key identifier as a hex string, where two bytes are separated by colons.

Example: 00:11:22:33:44:55:66:77:88:99:aa:bb:cc:dd:ee:ff:00:11:22:33

Please note that commercial CAs ignore this value, respectively use a value of their own choice. Specifying this option is mostly useful for self-signed certificates or for own CAs.

Note that this is only supported if the cryptography backend is used!

The AuthorityKeyIdentifier extension will only be added if at least one of authority_key_identifier, authority_cert_issuer and authority_cert_serial_number is specified.

backup

boolean

Create a backup file including a timestamp so you can get the original CSR back if you overwrote it with a new one by accident.

Choices:

  • no ← (default)

  • yes

basic_constraints

aliases: basicConstraints

list / elements=string

Indicates basic constraints, such as if the certificate is a CA.

basic_constraints_critical

aliases: basicConstraints_critical

boolean

Should the basicConstraints extension be considered as critical.

Choices:

  • no ← (default)

  • yes

common_name

aliases: CN, commonName

string

The commonName field of the certificate signing request subject.

country_name

aliases: C, countryName

string

The countryName field of the certificate signing request subject.

create_subject_key_identifier

boolean

Create the Subject Key Identifier from the public key.

Please note that commercial CAs can ignore the value, respectively use a value of their own choice instead. Specifying this option is mostly useful for self-signed certificates or for own CAs.

Note that this is only supported if the cryptography backend is used!

Choices:

  • no ← (default)

  • yes

crl_distribution_points

list / elements=dictionary

added in 1.4.0 of community.crypto

Allows to specify one or multiple CRL distribution points.

Only supported by the cryptography backend.

crl_issuer

list / elements=string

Information about the issuer of the CRL.

full_name

list / elements=string

Describes how the CRL can be retrieved.

Mutually exclusive with relative_name.

Example: URI:https://ca.example.com/revocations.crl.

reasons

list / elements=string

List of reasons that this distribution point can be used for when performing revocation checks.

Choices:

  • key_compromise

  • ca_compromise

  • affiliation_changed

  • superseded

  • cessation_of_operation

  • certificate_hold

  • privilege_withdrawn

  • aa_compromise

relative_name

list / elements=string

Describes how the CRL can be retrieved relative to the CRL issuer.

Mutually exclusive with full_name.

Example: /CN=example.com.

Can only be used when cryptography >= 1.6 is installed.

digest

string

The digest used when signing the certificate signing request with the private key.

Default: “sha256”

email_address

aliases: E, emailAddress

string

The emailAddress field of the certificate signing request subject.

extended_key_usage

aliases: extKeyUsage, extendedKeyUsage

list / elements=string

Additional restrictions (for example client authentication, server authentication) on the allowed purposes for which the public key may be used.

extended_key_usage_critical

aliases: extKeyUsage_critical, extendedKeyUsage_critical

boolean

Should the extkeyUsage extension be considered as critical.

Choices:

  • no ← (default)

  • yes

force

boolean

Should the certificate signing request be forced regenerated by this ansible module.

Choices:

  • no ← (default)

  • yes

group

string

Name of the group that should own the filesystem object, as would be fed to chown.

key_usage

aliases: keyUsage

list / elements=string

This defines the purpose (for example encipherment, signature, certificate signing) of the key contained in the certificate.

key_usage_critical

aliases: keyUsage_critical

boolean

Should the keyUsage extension be considered as critical.

Choices:

  • no ← (default)

  • yes

locality_name

aliases: L, localityName

string

The localityName field of the certificate signing request subject.

mode

raw

The permissions the resulting filesystem object should have.

For those used to /usr/bin/chmod remember that modes are actually octal numbers. You must either add a leading zero so that Ansible’s YAML parser knows it is an octal number (like 0644 or 01777) or quote it (like '644' or '1777') so Ansible receives a string and can do its own conversion from string into number.

Giving Ansible a number without following one of these rules will end up with a decimal number which will have unexpected results.

As of Ansible 1.8, the mode may be specified as a symbolic mode (for example, u+rwx or u=rw,g=r,o=r).

If mode is not specified and the destination filesystem object does not exist, the default umask on the system will be used when setting the mode for the newly created filesystem object.

If mode is not specified and the destination filesystem object does exist, the mode of the existing filesystem object will be used.

Specifying mode is the best way to ensure filesystem objects are created with the correct permissions. See CVE-2020-1736 for further details.

name_constraints_critical

boolean

added in 1.1.0 of community.crypto

Should the Name Constraints extension be considered as critical.

Choices:

  • no ← (default)

  • yes

name_constraints_excluded

list / elements=string

added in 1.1.0 of community.crypto

For CA certificates, this specifies a list of identifiers which describe subtrees of names that this CA is not allowed to issue certificates for.

Values must be prefixed by their options. (i.e., email, URI, DNS, RID, IP, dirName, otherName and the ones specific to your CA).

name_constraints_permitted

list / elements=string

added in 1.1.0 of community.crypto

For CA certificates, this specifies a list of identifiers which describe subtrees of names that this CA is allowed to issue certificates for.

Values must be prefixed by their options. (i.e., email, URI, DNS, RID, IP, dirName, otherName and the ones specific to your CA).

ocsp_must_staple

aliases: ocspMustStaple

boolean

Indicates that the certificate should contain the OCSP Must Staple extension (https://tools.ietf.org/html/rfc7633).

Choices:

  • no ← (default)

  • yes

ocsp_must_staple_critical

aliases: ocspMustStaple_critical

boolean

Should the OCSP Must Staple extension be considered as critical.

Note that according to the RFC, this extension should not be marked as critical, as old clients not knowing about OCSP Must Staple are required to reject such certificates (see https://tools.ietf.org/html/rfc7633#section-4).

Choices:

  • no ← (default)

  • yes

organization_name

aliases: O, organizationName

string

The organizationName field of the certificate signing request subject.

organizational_unit_name

aliases: OU, organizationalUnitName

string

The organizationalUnitName field of the certificate signing request subject.

owner

string

Name of the user that should own the filesystem object, as would be fed to chown.

path

path / required

The name of the file into which the generated OpenSSL certificate signing request will be written.

privatekey_content

string

added in 1.0.0 of community.crypto

The content of the private key to use when signing the certificate signing request.

Either privatekey_path or privatekey_content must be specified if state is present, but not both.

privatekey_passphrase

string

The passphrase for the private key.

This is required if the private key is password protected.

privatekey_path

path

The path to the private key to use when signing the certificate signing request.

Either privatekey_path or privatekey_content must be specified if state is present, but not both.

return_content

boolean

added in 1.0.0 of community.crypto

If set to yes, will return the (current or generated) CSR’s content as csr.

Choices:

  • no ← (default)

  • yes

select_crypto_backend

string

Determines which crypto backend to use.

The default choice is auto, which tries to use cryptography if available.

If set to cryptography, will try to use the cryptography library.

Choices:

  • auto ← (default)

  • cryptography

selevel

string

The level part of the SELinux filesystem object context.

This is the MLS/MCS attribute, sometimes known as the range.

When set to _default, it will use the level portion of the policy if available.

serole

string

The role part of the SELinux filesystem object context.

When set to _default, it will use the role portion of the policy if available.

setype

string

The type part of the SELinux filesystem object context.

When set to _default, it will use the type portion of the policy if available.

seuser

string

The user part of the SELinux filesystem object context.

By default it uses the system policy, where applicable.

When set to _default, it will use the user portion of the policy if available.

state

string

Whether the certificate signing request should exist or not, taking action if the state is different from what is stated.

Choices:

  • absent

  • present ← (default)

state_or_province_name

aliases: ST, stateOrProvinceName

string

The stateOrProvinceName field of the certificate signing request subject.

subject

dictionary

Key/value pairs that will be present in the subject name field of the certificate signing request.

If you need to specify more than one value with the same key, use a list as value.

If the order of the components is important, use subject_ordered.

Mutually exclusive with subject_ordered.

subject_alt_name

aliases: subjectAltName

list / elements=string

Subject Alternative Name (SAN) extension to attach to the certificate signing request.

Values must be prefixed by their options. (These are email, URI, DNS, RID, IP, dirName, otherName, and the ones specific to your CA).

Note that if no SAN is specified, but a common name, the common name will be added as a SAN except if useCommonNameForSAN is set to false.

More at https://tools.ietf.org/html/rfc5280#section-4.2.1.6.

subject_alt_name_critical

aliases: subjectAltName_critical

boolean

Should the subjectAltName extension be considered as critical.

Choices:

  • no ← (default)

  • yes

subject_key_identifier

string

The subject key identifier as a hex string, where two bytes are separated by colons.

Example: 00:11:22:33:44:55:66:77:88:99:aa:bb:cc:dd:ee:ff:00:11:22:33

Please note that commercial CAs ignore this value, respectively use a value of their own choice. Specifying this option is mostly useful for self-signed certificates or for own CAs.

Note that this option can only be used if create_subject_key_identifier is no.

Note that this is only supported if the cryptography backend is used!

subject_ordered

list / elements=dictionary

added in 2.0.0 of community.crypto

A list of dictionaries, where every dictionary must contain one key/value pair. This key/value pair will be present in the subject name field of the certificate signing request.

If you want to specify more than one value with the same key in a row, you can use a list as value.

Mutually exclusive with subject, and any other subject field option, such as country_name, state_or_province_name, locality_name, organization_name, organizational_unit_name, common_name, or email_address.

unsafe_writes

boolean

added in 2.2 of ansible.builtin

Influence when to use atomic operation to prevent data corruption or inconsistent reads from the target filesystem object.

By default this module uses atomic operations to prevent data corruption or inconsistent reads from the target filesystem objecs, but sometimes systems are configured or just broken in ways that prevent this. One example is docker mounted filesystem objects, which cannot be updated atomically from inside the container and can only be written in an unsafe manner.

This option allows Ansible to fall back to unsafe methods of updating filesystem objects when atomic operations fail (however, it doesn’t force Ansible to perform unsafe writes).

IMPORTANT! Unsafe writes are subject to race conditions and can lead to data corruption.

Choices:

  • no ← (default)

  • yes

use_common_name_for_san

aliases: useCommonNameForSAN

boolean

If set to yes, the module will fill the common name in for subject_alt_name with DNS: prefix if no SAN is specified.

Choices:

  • no

  • yes ← (default)

version

integer

The version of the certificate signing request.

The only allowed value according to RFC 2986 is 1.

This option no longer accepts unsupported values since community.crypto 2.0.0.

Choices:

  • 1

Default: 1

Notes

Note

  • If the certificate signing request already exists it will be checked whether subjectAltName, keyUsage, extendedKeyUsage and basicConstraints only contain the requested values, whether OCSP Must Staple is as requested, and if the request was signed by the given private key.

See Also

See also

community.crypto.openssl_csr_pipe

The official documentation on the community.crypto.openssl_csr_pipe module.

community.crypto.x509_certificate

The official documentation on the community.crypto.x509_certificate module.

community.crypto.x509_certificate_pipe

The official documentation on the community.crypto.x509_certificate_pipe module.

community.crypto.openssl_dhparam

The official documentation on the community.crypto.openssl_dhparam module.

community.crypto.openssl_pkcs12

The official documentation on the community.crypto.openssl_pkcs12 module.

community.crypto.openssl_privatekey

The official documentation on the community.crypto.openssl_privatekey module.

community.crypto.openssl_privatekey_pipe

The official documentation on the community.crypto.openssl_privatekey_pipe module.

community.crypto.openssl_publickey

The official documentation on the community.crypto.openssl_publickey module.

community.crypto.openssl_csr_info

The official documentation on the community.crypto.openssl_csr_info module.

Examples

- name: Generate an OpenSSL Certificate Signing Request
  community.crypto.openssl_csr:
    path: /etc/ssl/csr/www.ansible.com.csr
    privatekey_path: /etc/ssl/private/ansible.com.pem
    common_name: www.ansible.com

- name: Generate an OpenSSL Certificate Signing Request with an inline key
  community.crypto.openssl_csr:
    path: /etc/ssl/csr/www.ansible.com.csr
    privatekey_content: "{{ private_key_content }}"
    common_name: www.ansible.com

- name: Generate an OpenSSL Certificate Signing Request with a passphrase protected private key
  community.crypto.openssl_csr:
    path: /etc/ssl/csr/www.ansible.com.csr
    privatekey_path: /etc/ssl/private/ansible.com.pem
    privatekey_passphrase: ansible
    common_name: www.ansible.com

- name: Generate an OpenSSL Certificate Signing Request with Subject information
  community.crypto.openssl_csr:
    path: /etc/ssl/csr/www.ansible.com.csr
    privatekey_path: /etc/ssl/private/ansible.com.pem
    country_name: FR
    organization_name: Ansible
    email_address: [email protected]
    common_name: www.ansible.com

- name: Generate an OpenSSL Certificate Signing Request with subjectAltName extension
  community.crypto.openssl_csr:
    path: /etc/ssl/csr/www.ansible.com.csr
    privatekey_path: /etc/ssl/private/ansible.com.pem
    subject_alt_name: 'DNS:www.ansible.com,DNS:m.ansible.com'

- name: Generate an OpenSSL CSR with subjectAltName extension with dynamic list
  community.crypto.openssl_csr:
    path: /etc/ssl/csr/www.ansible.com.csr
    privatekey_path: /etc/ssl/private/ansible.com.pem
    subject_alt_name: "{{ item.value | map('regex_replace', '^', 'DNS:') | list }}"
  with_dict:
    dns_server:
    - www.ansible.com
    - m.ansible.com

- name: Force regenerate an OpenSSL Certificate Signing Request
  community.crypto.openssl_csr:
    path: /etc/ssl/csr/www.ansible.com.csr
    privatekey_path: /etc/ssl/private/ansible.com.pem
    force: yes
    common_name: www.ansible.com

- name: Generate an OpenSSL Certificate Signing Request with special key usages
  community.crypto.openssl_csr:
    path: /etc/ssl/csr/www.ansible.com.csr
    privatekey_path: /etc/ssl/private/ansible.com.pem
    common_name: www.ansible.com
    key_usage:
      - digitalSignature
      - keyAgreement
    extended_key_usage:
      - clientAuth

- name: Generate an OpenSSL Certificate Signing Request with OCSP Must Staple
  community.crypto.openssl_csr:
    path: /etc/ssl/csr/www.ansible.com.csr
    privatekey_path: /etc/ssl/private/ansible.com.pem
    common_name: www.ansible.com
    ocsp_must_staple: yes

- name: Generate an OpenSSL Certificate Signing Request for WinRM Certificate authentication
  community.crypto.openssl_csr:
    path: /etc/ssl/csr/winrm.auth.csr
    privatekey_path: /etc/ssl/private/winrm.auth.pem
    common_name: username
    extended_key_usage:
    - clientAuth
    subject_alt_name: otherName:1.3.6.1.4.1.311.20.2.3;UTF8:username@localhost

- name: Generate an OpenSSL Certificate Signing Request with a CRL distribution point
  community.crypto.openssl_csr:
    path: /etc/ssl/csr/www.ansible.com.csr
    privatekey_path: /etc/ssl/private/ansible.com.pem
    common_name: www.ansible.com
    crl_distribution_points:
      - full_name:
          - "URI:https://ca.example.com/revocations.crl"
        crl_issuer:
          - "URI:https://ca.example.com/"
        reasons:
          - key_compromise
          - ca_compromise
          - cessation_of_operation

Return Values

Common return values are documented here, the following are the fields unique to this module:

Key

Description

backup_file

string

Name of backup file created.

Returned: changed and if backup is yes

Sample:/path/to/www.ansible.com.csr.2019-03-09@11:22~”

basicConstraints

list / elements=string

Indicates if the certificate belongs to a CA

Returned: changed or success

Sample: [“CA:TRUE”, “pathLenConstraint:0”]

csr

string

added in 1.0.0 of community.crypto

The (current or generated) CSR’s content.

Returned: if state is present and return_content is yes

extendedKeyUsage

list / elements=string

Additional restriction on the public key purposes

Returned: changed or success

Sample: [“clientAuth”]

filename

string

Path to the generated Certificate Signing Request

Returned: changed or success

Sample: “/etc/ssl/csr/www.ansible.com.csr”

keyUsage

list / elements=string

Purpose for which the public key may be used

Returned: changed or success

Sample: [“digitalSignature”, “keyAgreement”]

name_constraints_excluded

list / elements=string

added in 1.1.0 of community.crypto

List of excluded subtrees the CA cannot sign certificates for.

Returned: changed or success

Sample: [“email:.com”]

name_constraints_permitted

list / elements=string

added in 1.1.0 of community.crypto

List of permitted subtrees to sign certificates for.

Returned: changed or success

Sample: [“email:.somedomain.com”]

ocsp_must_staple

boolean

Indicates whether the certificate has the OCSP Must Staple feature enabled

Returned: changed or success

Sample: false

privatekey

string

Path to the TLS/SSL private key the CSR was generated for

Will be none if the private key has been provided in privatekey_content.

Returned: changed or success

Sample: “/etc/ssl/private/ansible.com.pem”

subject

list / elements=list

A list of the subject tuples attached to the CSR

Returned: changed or success

Sample: “[(\u0027CN\u0027, \u0027www.ansible.com\u0027), (\u0027O\u0027, \u0027Ansible\u0027)]”

subjectAltName

list / elements=string

The alternative names this CSR is valid for

Returned: changed or success

Sample: [“DNS:www.ansible.com”, “DNS:m.ansible.com”]

Authors

  • Yanis Guenane (@Spredzy)

  • Felix Fontein (@felixfontein)