(PHP 4 >= 4.2.0, PHP 5, PHP 7, PHP 8)
openssl_csr_new — Generates a CSR
$distinguished_names
,&$private_key
,$options
= null
,$extra_attributes
= null
openssl_csr_new() generates a new CSR
based on the information provided by distinguished_names
.
Note: You need to have a valid openssl.cnf installed for this function to operate correctly. See the notes under the installation section for more information.
distinguished_names
The Distinguished Name or subject fields to be used in the certificate.
private_key
private_key
should be set to a private key that
was previously generated by openssl_pkey_new() (or
otherwise obtained from the other openssl_pkey family of functions), or
null
variable. If its value is null
variable, a new private key is
generated based on the supplied options
and
assigned to supplied variable. The corresponding public portion of the
key will be used to sign the CSR.
options
By default, the information in your system openssl.conf
is used to initialize the request; you can specify a configuration file
section by setting the config_section_section
key in
options
. You can also specify an alternative
OpenSSL configuration file by setting the value of the
config
key to the path of the file you want to use.
The following keys, if present in options
behave as their equivalents in the openssl.conf
, as
listed in the table below.
options key |
type | openssl.conf equivalent |
description |
---|---|---|---|
digest_alg | string | default_md | Digest method or signature hash, usually one of openssl_get_md_methods() |
x509_extensions | string | x509_extensions | Selects which extensions should be used when creating an x509 certificate |
req_extensions | string | req_extensions | Selects which extensions should be used when creating a CSR |
private_key_bits | int | default_bits | Specifies how many bits should be used to generate a private key |
private_key_type | int | none | Specifies the type of private key to create. This can be one
of OPENSSL_KEYTYPE_DSA ,
OPENSSL_KEYTYPE_DH ,
OPENSSL_KEYTYPE_RSA or
OPENSSL_KEYTYPE_EC .
The default value is OPENSSL_KEYTYPE_RSA .
|
encrypt_key | bool | encrypt_key | Should an exported key (with passphrase) be encrypted? |
encrypt_key_cipher | int | none | One of cipher constants. |
curve_name | string | none | One of openssl_get_curve_names(). |
config | string | N/A | Path to your own alternative openssl.conf file. |
extra_attributes
extra_attributes
is used to specify additional
configuration options for the CSR. Both
distinguished_names
and
extra_attributes
are associative arrays, whose keys
are converted to OIDs and applied to the relevant part of the request.
Returns the CSR on success, true
if CSR creation is
successful but signing fails or false
on failure.
Version | Description |
---|---|
8.0.0 |
On success, this function returns an OpenSSLCertificateSigningRequest instance now;
previously, a resource of type OpenSSL X.509 CSR was returned.
|
8.0.0 |
private_key accepts an OpenSSLAsymmetricKey instance now;
previously, a resource of type OpenSSL key was accepted.
|
7.1.0 |
options now also supports curve_name .
|
Example #1 Creating a self-signed certificate
<?php
// for SSL server certificates the commonName is the domain name to be secured
// for S/MIME email certificates the commonName is the owner of the email address
// location and identification fields refer to the owner of domain or email subject to be secured
$dn = array(
"countryName" => "GB",
"stateOrProvinceName" => "Somerset",
"localityName" => "Glastonbury",
"organizationName" => "The Brain Room Limited",
"organizationalUnitName" => "PHP Documentation Team",
"commonName" => "Wez Furlong",
"emailAddress" => "wez@example.com"
);
// Generate a new private (and public) key pair
$privkey = openssl_pkey_new(array(
"private_key_bits" => 2048,
"private_key_type" => OPENSSL_KEYTYPE_RSA,
));
// Generate a certificate signing request
$csr = openssl_csr_new($dn, $privkey, array('digest_alg' => 'sha256'));
// Generate a self-signed cert, valid for 365 days
$x509 = openssl_csr_sign($csr, null, $privkey, $days=365, array('digest_alg' => 'sha256'));
// Save your private key, CSR and self-signed cert for later use
openssl_csr_export($csr, $csrout) and var_dump($csrout);
openssl_x509_export($x509, $certout) and var_dump($certout);
openssl_pkey_export($privkey, $pkeyout, "mypassword") and var_dump($pkeyout);
// Show any errors that occurred here
while (($e = openssl_error_string()) !== false) {
echo $e . "\n";
}
?>
Example #2 Creating a self-signed ECC certificate (as of PHP 7.1.0)
<?php
$subject = array(
"commonName" => "docs.php.net",
);
// Generate a new private (and public) key pair
$private_key = openssl_pkey_new(array(
"private_key_type" => OPENSSL_KEYTYPE_EC,
"curve_name" => 'prime256v1',
));
// Generate a certificate signing request
$csr = openssl_csr_new($subject, $private_key, array('digest_alg' => 'sha384'));
// Generate self-signed EC cert
$x509 = openssl_csr_sign($csr, null, $private_key, $days=365, array('digest_alg' => 'sha384'));
openssl_x509_export_to_file($x509, 'ecc-cert.pem');
openssl_pkey_export_to_file($private_key, 'ecc-private.key');
?>