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CPS 290.2 Computer Security

Learn to create certificates for SSH, Kerberos, and secure web servers. Understand root, intermediate, and domain certificates, with instructions on generating keys and signing. Includes SSH and Kerberos application explanations.

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CPS 290.2 Computer Security

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  1. CPS 290.2 Computer Security Tutorial on Creating Certificates SSH Kerberos CPS 290

  2. Acting as Your own Certificate Authority (CA) • 1. a. Create private root key for CA b. Create self-signed root certificate 2. a. Create private intermediate key b. Create intermediate certificate signing request (CSR) c. Sign intermediate certificate 3. a. Create private key for domain www.example.com b. Create CSR for domain c. Sign certificate for domain using intermediate private key Might do this when setting up secure web sites within a corporate intranet. CPS 290

  3. Create Files and Directories • index.txt stores database of certificates created • serial holds serial number of next certificate CPS 290

  4. Create Configuration File • Strict policy requires organization names in parent and child certificates to match, e.g., when used in intranet. CPS 290

  5. Create Root Private Key • Private key is encrypted using pass phrase as key to AES256 algorithm. CPS 290

  6. Create Root Certificate • -x509 indicates self-signed certificate • sha256 algorithm used to create message digest (hash) of certificate, which is then (self) signed CPS 290

  7. Examine the Root Certificate CPS 290

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  10. Create Private Intermediate Key CPS 290

  11. Create Intermediate CSR • sha256 digest (hash) of applicant information signed with intermediate private key – can check that it can be decoded with intermediate public key CPS 290

  12. Sign Intermediate Certificate CPS 290

  13. Examine Signed Intermediate Certificate CPS 290

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  15. CPS 290

  16. Verify Signed Certificate Using Root Certificate CPS 290

  17. Create Private Key for Domain CPS 290

  18. Create CSR for Domain www.example.com CPS 290

  19. Sign Certificate for Domain CPS 290

  20. SSH v2 • Server has a permanent “host” public-private key pair (RSA or DSA) . Public key typically NOT signed by a certificate authority. Client warns if public host key changes. • Diffie-Hellman used to exchange session key. • Server selects g and p (group size) and sends to client. • Client and server create DH private keys a and b. Client sends public DH key ga. • Server sends public DH key gb and signs hash of DH shared secret gab and 12 other values with its private “host” key. • Client verifies signed shared secret using public key. • Symmetric encryption using 3DES, Blowfish, AES, or Arcfour begins. • User can authenticate by sending password or using public-private key pair. Private key has optional passphrase. • If using keys, server sends “challenge” signed with users public key for user to decode with private key. CPS 290

  21. Why Combine RSA and Diffie-Hellman? • Why doesn’t the client just send a symmetric key to the server, encrypted with the server’s public key? • Because if the server’s private key is later compromised, previous communications encrypted with the public key can be decrypted, revealing the symmetric key. Then all communications encrypted with the symmetric key can also be decrypted! • To prevent this attack, Diffie-Hellman ensures that the symmetric key is never transmitted, even in encrypted form, and the client and server discard the symmetric key after the session is over. • SSL/TLS provides this option too: DHE_RSA key exchange CPS 290

  22. SSH Applications • Secure Shell (SSH): • Replacement for insecure telnet, rlogin, rsh, rexec, which sent plaintext passwords over the network! CPS 290

  23. SSH Applications • Port forwarding (email example): • Log in to linux.cs.duke.edu. Forward anything received locally (phoenix) on port 25 to linux.cs.duke.edu on port25. • Useful if “phoenix” is not a trusted email relayer but “linux” is. • “phoenix” email program configured to use phoenix as relayer CPS 290

  24. Kerberos • A key-serving system based on Private-Keys (DES). • Assumptions • Built on top of TCP/IP networks • Many “clients” (typically users, but perhaps software) • Many “servers” (e.g. file servers, compute servers, print servers, …) • User machines and servers are potentially insecure without compromising the whole system • A kerberos server must be secure. CPS 290

  25. Kerberos (kinit) • Kerberos • Authentication • Server • Request ticket-granting-ticket (TGT) • <TGT> • Request server-ticket (ST) • <ST> • Request service • Ticket Granting Server • (TGS) • 2 • 1 • 3 • 4 • Service Server • (S) • Client • (C) • 5 CPS 290

  26. Kerberos V Message Formats • C = client S = server K = key or session key • T = timestamp V = time range • TGS = Ticket Granting Service A = Net Address Ticket Granting Ticket: TC,TGS = TGS,{C,A,V,KC,TGS}KTGS Server Ticket: TC,S = S, {C,A,V,KC,S}KS Authenticator: AC,S = {C,T}KC,S • Client to Kerberos: C,TGS • Kerberos to Client: {KC,TGS}KC,TC,TGS • Client to TGS: TC,TGS , S,AC,TGS • TGS to Client: {KC,S}KC,TGS, TC,S • Client to Server: AC,S, TC,S • Possibly repeat CPS 290

  27. Kerberos Notes • All machines have to have synchronized clocks • Must not be able to reuse authenticators • Servers should store all previous and valid tickets • Help prevent replays • Client keys are typically a one-way hash of the password. Clients do not keep these keys. • Kerberos 5 uses CBC mode for encryption Kerberos 4 was insecure because it used a nonstandard mode. CPS 290

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