Improved description of fingerprint handling in command line wiki

Signed-off-by: Dom Rodriguez <shymega@shymega.org.uk>
albertony 2020-12-11 19:34:16 +01:00 committed by Dom Rodriguez
parent bc50122bde
commit 636a446d6f
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1 changed files with 22 additions and 21 deletions

@ -583,35 +583,36 @@ Clients must contain the following file:
### Generating certificate and fingerprint
The main UI application has built-in functionality to generate a self-signed server certificate,
and fingerprint. In a command line only ([portable](#portable)) environment you will have to create these manually,
using the OpenSSL command line utility, which is included in a Barrier installation together
with a Barrier specific OpenSSL configuration file `barrier.conf`. To create them the same
way as the UI application does, you can follow the following Windows example.
It uses `openssl.exe` and `barrier.conf` from a Barrier installed in
`C:\Program Files\Barrier`, generating configuration in `%LocalAppData%\Barrier\SSL`.
If you have the OpenSSL files in a different location and/or are planning to keep the SSL files in a
custom location specified with command line argument `--profile-dir`, you must change the paths in the example accordingly.
The main UI application has built-in functionality for handling encryption.
In server mode it will generate a self-signed server certificate and a fingerprint.
In client mode it will prompt for you to accept the server's fingerprint, and add
it to your list of trusted servers.
In a command line only ([portable](#portable)) environment you will have to handle
this manually. You can use the OpenSSL command line utility which is included in
a Barrier installation together with a Barrier specific OpenSSL configuration
file `barrier.conf`. To create them the same way as the UI application does,
you can follow the following Windows example. It uses `openssl.exe` and `barrier.conf`
from a Barrier installed in default location `C:\Program Files\Barrier`, generating
configuration in default location `%LocalAppData%\Barrier\SSL`. If you have the
OpenSSL files in a different location and/or are planning to keep the SSL files in
a custom location specified with command line argument `--profile-dir`, you must
change the paths in the example accordingly.
```
mkdir "%LocalAppData%\Barrier\SSL\Fingerprints" >NUL 2>&1
set OPENSSL_CONF=C:\Program Files\Barrier\barrier.conf
MKDIR "%LocalAppData%\Barrier\SSL\Fingerprints" >NUL 2>&1
SET OPENSSL_CONF=C:\Program Files\Barrier\barrier.conf
SET RANDFILE=%LocalAppData%\Barrier\SSL\.rnd
"C:\Program Files\Barrier\openssl.exe" req -x509 -nodes -days 365 -subj /CN=Barrier -newkey rsa:2048 -keyout "%LocalAppData%\Barrier\SSL\Barrier.pem" -out "%LocalAppData%\Barrier\SSL\Barrier.pem"
IF EXIST "%RANDFILE%" DEL "%RANDFILE%"
"C:\Program Files\Barrier\openssl.exe" x509 -fingerprint -sha1 -noout -in "%LocalAppData%\Barrier\SSL\Barrier.pem" > "%LocalAppData%\Barrier\SSL\Fingerprints\Local.txt"
FOR /F "tokens=2 delims=^=" %a in ('""C:\Program Files\Barrier\openssl.exe" x509 -fingerprint -sha1 -noout -in "%LocalAppData%\Barrier\SSL\Barrier.pem""') DO ECHO %a > "%LocalAppData%\Barrier\SSL\Fingerprints\Local.txt"
```
Now, on any clients you must manually create the `%LocalAppData%\Barrier\SSL\Fingerprints\TrustedServers.txt` file,
with the hash from the server's `%LocalAppData%\Barrier\SSL\Fingerprints\Local.txt`.
Now, on any clients you must manually ensure there is a text file
`%LocalAppData%\Barrier\SSL\Fingerprints\TrustedServers.txt`,
and append a line to it, with the hash string from the server's
`%LocalAppData%\Barrier\SSL\Fingerprints\Local.txt`,
e.g.
Given the server's Local.txt contains:
```
SHA1 Fingerprint=96:32:AB:DD:38:5C:E5:21:20:8E:52:E8:83:28:A0:2A:CC:CC:8F:A3
```
You must put the following into the client's TrustedServers.txt:
```
96:32:AB:DD:38:5C:E5:21:20:8E:52:E8:83:28:A0:2A:CC:CC:8F:A3
```