#!/bin/sh #set -vx # At this time, while this script is trivial, we ignore any parameters given. # However, for backwards compatibility reasons, future versions of this script must # support the syntax "update-ca-trust extract" trigger the generation of output # files in $DEST. DEST=/etc/pki/ca-trust/extracted # Prevent p11-kit from reading user configuration files. export P11_KIT_NO_USER_CONFIG=1 # OpenSSL PEM bundle that includes trust flags # (BEGIN TRUSTED CERTIFICATE) /usr/bin/p11-kit extract --format=openssl-bundle --filter=certificates --overwrite --comment $DEST/openssl/ca-bundle.trust.crt /usr/bin/p11-kit extract --format=pem-bundle --filter=ca-anchors --overwrite --comment --purpose server-auth $DEST/pem/tls-ca-bundle.pem /usr/bin/p11-kit extract --format=pem-bundle --filter=ca-anchors --overwrite --comment --purpose email $DEST/pem/email-ca-bundle.pem /usr/bin/p11-kit extract --format=pem-bundle --filter=ca-anchors --overwrite --comment --purpose code-signing $DEST/pem/objsign-ca-bundle.pem /usr/bin/p11-kit extract --format=java-cacerts --filter=ca-anchors --overwrite --purpose server-auth $DEST/java/cacerts /usr/bin/p11-kit extract --format=edk2-cacerts --filter=ca-anchors --overwrite --purpose=server-auth $DEST/edk2/cacerts.bin # Hashed directory of BEGIN TRUSTED-style certs (usable as OpenSSL CApath and # by GnuTLS) /usr/bin/p11-kit extract --format=pem-directory-hash --filter=ca-anchors --overwrite --purpose server-auth $DEST/pem/directory-hash # Debian compatibility: their /etc/ssl/certs has this bundle /usr/bin/ln -s ../tls-ca-bundle.pem $DEST/pem/directory-hash/ca-certificates.crt # Backwards compatibility: RHEL/Fedora provided a /etc/ssl/certs/ca-bundle.crt # since https://bugzilla.redhat.com/show_bug.cgi?id=572725 /usr/bin/ln -s ../tls-ca-bundle.pem $DEST/pem/directory-hash/ca-bundle.crt