Freitag, 27. März 2015

Microsoft Windows based PKI DOs and DON'Ts


DON’T install a Public Key Infrastructure without having a detailed plan. Plan the required PKI roles. Consider availability requirements.

DO use a CAPolicy.inf file for initial configuration during installation. You can use it to define attributes such as basic constraints extension, renewal key length and period, CRLs period, etc.

DO use a standardized naming convention which additionally includes naming of GPOs, templates and accounts related to PKI. Naming conventions should include the CAs Common Name.

DON’T change CA server name after ADCS role installation. Already enrolled certificates will stop working.

DON’T use Root CA to issue certificates directly to end entities.

DON’T install any PKI component on a domain controller. It is technically possible, but not recommended due to security and delegation considerations.

DO install the CA on failover clustering. Microsoft ADCS role can act as active-passive using failover feature of Microsoft Windows operating system.

DO create CPS (Certificate Practice Statement) and CP (Certificate Policy) documents to improve the trust to your PKI. Documents should be based on RFC 3647 recommendations.

DO create at least a 2-tiers architecture. For huge organizations, depending on Active Directory structure and amount of forests and domains, you can extend the architecture to a 3rd-tier.

DON’T join the Root CA to your Active Directory Domain. Building an “offline” Root CA really means offline with no network connection.

DO protect your offline Root CAs hard drives or virtual disk files and place them in a secure vault until a CA certificate needs to be issued or a new CRL needs to be issued and published.

DO use a HSM to protect the keys of your CAs. I can recommend Gemalto formerly Safenet.

DO consider all operational and security related procedures when implementing a HSM.

DO use at least 4096b keylength for Root CA.

DO change default system accounts. The Local administrator account name should be changed. Domain Admins group should be deleted from the local administrators group on all systems belonging to the PKI.

DO use long and complex password and DO make sure it is kept in safe place.

DON’T leave default AIA (Authority Information Access) URLs with the CA hostname in issued certificates.

DON’T leave default CDP (CRL Distribution Point) URLs with the CA hostname in issued certificates.

If implementing in large organizations, DO use templates OID to differentiate company’s policy objects from default Microsoft policy objects tree. You can request PEN (Private Enterprise Number) from IANA organization (Internet Assigned Numbers Authority).

DO ony use customized templates, DON’T use default ones. Use organization name prefix for templates names.

DO use following commands to publish Roo CA CRLs and .crts to the Active Directory:
certutil -dspublish -f "name_of_root_ca_cert.CRT"  RootCA
certutil -dspublish -f "name_of_ca_crl.CRL"

DO make CDP (CRL Distribution Point) redundant. Include in CDP and publish CRLs to HTTP. Highly consider using split-brain DNS scenario to publish the CRLs.

Microsoft ADCS default repository is C:\Windows\System32\certsrv\CertEnroll. CRLs and CAs certificates are published to this folder. DON’T publish CertEnroll folder directly to the Internet. Instead create a mechanism which copies *.crt and *.crl to another machine and folder. Publish this other machine to the Internet with a reverse proxy.

DO use role separation. In simple scenario these should be: PKIBackupOperators, PKITemplateAdmins, PKIAuditors, PKICertAdmins, PKICAAdmins.

DO enable key archival for private keys if you are using certificates for email or file encryption. Otherwise you’ll not be able to recover old keys used to secure data in the past.

DON’T write down your user’s certificate password/PIN and stick it to monitor or hide under the keyboard.

DO use tokens or smartcards for users and special purpose accounts (Enrollment Agents, etc) if possible.

DO make sure that system time on CAs machines is set correctly.

DO renew the CA certificate with a supply of time so that certificates issued by the CA have shorter life time than the remaining life time of the CA certificate.

DO enable all auditing events for the CA.
certutil -setreg CA\AuditFilter 127

DO perform health checks on your PKI infrastructure using PKIView and check the eventlog on a regular basis.

DO create a CA backup, including private key, CA certificate, certificate database and certificate database log, CAPolicy.inf file, CA configuration from the registry and exported CA templates.

DO make sure that system backup is done regularly. Backups should be protected with password and kept in safe place.


DON’T consider internally issued certificates as a qualified certificate. Consider certificate usage to make sure the certificate is issued by the corresponding internal or external CA.

Donnerstag, 20. November 2014

Microsoft Identity Manager Public Preview is now available

Hi folks,

Microsoft recently announced the first public preview of the FIM 2010 R2 successor MIM (Microsoft Identity Manager).
For those of you who doesn't know FIM 2010 R2 let me quickly explain what MIM will be in the future. :-)


  • MIM can synchronize identities between different types of systems. Identities in this case doesen't limit MIM to users or groups. I've been working in projects where we synchronized different other things like computer objects, GPOs, organization objects and so on. Synchronization of identities includes provisioning and deprovisioning of identities in connected systems.
  • MIM can connect to on premises services as well as cloud 
  • MIM provides easy to configure workflows for all those synchronization steps. Again, these workflows can be IAM (identity and access management) related or not. Workflows can be extended by public available workflow modules e.g. Powershell.
  • MIM can provide a management solution for role based access control (RBAC) based on a web portal and business rules.
  • MIM includes a self-service-portal for password reset, account unlock, group management, JIT (just in time) privileges.
  • last but not least MIM can provide a management solution for certificate management.

and download the preview of MIM here: https://connect.microsoft.com/site433/Downloads

Have fun and happy synchronization :-)
Chris

Sonntag, 5. Oktober 2014

Videos and books about FIM 2010

Hi folks,

it has been quite a while since my last post but I'm currently busy with some nice identity management project and of course FIM 2010 R2 or hopefully MIM in the future.

Doing all that stuff with FIM I was always looking for a good book about the product it self. I like to read books in my spare time (which I always don't have enough :-)) therefore I would like to write a short blog post about available books and videos about FIM 2010 R2.

Let's start with a video that is available from Kent Nordström (konab.com). The video is based on Kents book "Microsoft Forefront Identity Manager 2010 R2 Handbook"
https://www.packtpub.com/application-development/enterprise-identity-management-microsoft-forefront-identity-management-video

The video as well as the book has got the following chapters and to me is the best book available for the topic.
  • Installing FIM 2010 R2 on Windows Server 2012 
  • Basic Configuration of FIM Synchronization and FIM Service
  • User Management
  • Group Management
  • Configuring FIM for Self-service
  • Customizing FIM
  • Reporting
  • Issuing Smart Cards Using FIM CM
I realy recommend this to everybody if you're interessted in FIM. There is also a ebook version availabl for your tablet or Kindle. To order the book your can use Kents link http://aka.ms/FIMR2Book.

The second FIM book available.
It's called "FIM R2 Best Practices Volume 1: Introduction, Architecture and Installation of Forefront Identity Manager 2010 R2" from David Lundell and Brad Turner


I haven't finisched it yet but it is slightly different from Kents book. I contains more backgroud information on the product, its architecture and the topic identity management itself.

It's realy worth reading it.

At the moment these are the only two books I know about.
Please leave a comment if you know about any other books or videos and I'll include them into my post.

Have fun reading the books.
Chris

Donnerstag, 24. April 2014

Forefront Identity Manager vNext is now known as Microsoft Identity Manager (MIM)

Yesterday, Wednesday April 23rd 2014, Microsoft announced the roadmap for Forefront Identity Manager 2010, known as FIM 2010.  The new product will be called Microsoft Identity Manager (MIM) and will be availabl in H1CY15.  The official announcement was posted to the Server & Cloud Blog: http://blogs.technet.com/b/server-cloud/archive/2014/04/23/forefront-identity-manager-vnext-roadmap-now-microsoft-identity-manager.aspx

The product is used to be renamed and was formerly known as MMS, MIIS, ILM, (ILM V2), FIM.
With the new name Microsoft shifts the product to a new central strategy and deliveres some nice features.

Even though I'm not to keen on the new name I'm confident that I have backed on the right horse.

Cheers!
Chris

Mittwoch, 23. Oktober 2013

View certificate properties via Powershell (and some RDP stuff)

Hi all,

we've implemented Windows Remote Desktop Services at a customer and were facing those ugly security popus asking if we trust the publisher even though the certificate was issued by the customers PKI and was valid and trusted by the client (certificate chain was installed on the client, CLR was reachable and so on).


It's not a bug...its a feature according to Microsoft. :-)
You can get rid of these popups configuring a GPO that specifies valid publishers.
http://technet.microsoft.com/de-de/library/cc771261(v=ws.10).aspx
The GPO requires the SHA1 thumbprint of the certificate. We fiddled around copying the thumbprint from the certificate UI, the GPO was applied but we were still seeing the popup.

This was caused by a none-printable character which we copied from the certificate UI into the GPO. Very ugly. :-)
Therefore I created this simple Powershell script to get the thumbprint in the right format (no spaces, upper case and most important no none-printable characters).

$cert1 = New-Object System.Security.Cryptography.X509Certificates.X509Certificate „my certificate.cer“
$cert1.GetCertHashString()

The last line returns the thumbprint of the certificate e.g. BCE26899803C4806911B01F969FF7721562E07D6

You can find more methods here:
http://msdn.microsoft.com/en-us/library/system.security.cryptography.x509certificates.x509certificate.aspx

more information can be founde here:
https://blogs.technet.microsoft.com/askpfeplat/2017/12/18/remote-desktop-connection-rdp-certificate-warnings/

Happy coding
Chris

Freitag, 18. Oktober 2013

Enable FIM and PCNS logging

FIM 2010 and the PCNS service can make use of the Application log to record events. In order to get more details on password synchronisation we can set the logging level to high and check the Application log during the initial configuration an deployment of PCNS.

For FIM 2010, there are four different logging levels that are controlled by adding the FeaturePwdSyncLogLevel (REG_DWORD) entry to the following registry subkey:

      HKEY_LOCAL_MACHINE\System\CurrentControlSet\Services\FIMSynchronizationServices\Logging

0 = Minimal Logging
1 = Normal logging (default)
2 = High logging
3 = Verbose logging

For PCNS, there are also four logging levels that are again controlled by adding the EventLogLevel (REG_DWORD) entry to the following registry subkey:

HKEY_LOCAL_MACHINE\System\CurrentControlSet\Services\PCNSSVC\Parameters

0 = Minimal Logging
1 = Normal logging (default)
2 = High logging
3 = Verbose logging

A reboot is required in order for the changes to be applied.

Have fun and check the logs
Chris

Freitag, 4. Oktober 2013

Manually create certificate signing requests

It's been quite a while since my last post due to different reasons. :-)
Today I would like to show you how to manually create a certificate signing request (CSR).

The Internet Information Server (IIS) and many other applications which make use of or require certificates provide wizzards in the administration user interface to request and install certificates.
I would like to explain two different ways how to request a certificate manually. The manual steps are required if web enrollment is not available, the current logged on user or computer has no enroll permissions on a certificate template or the certification authority (CA) is not available (e.g. no Active Directory integrated Enterprise CA or not in the same forest as the leveraging computer)

Method 1 – Use certreq to create a CSR and certreq to issue the certificate

1. Creating an INF file to set the certificate properties

Use Notepad or any other text editor to create the following sample INF file according to your needs. Safe the file as myCSR.inf for example
[Version]
Signature="$Windows NT$"
[NewRequest]
Subject = "CN=MyServer.christianlechner.blogspot.de" ;For a wildcard use "CN=*.christianlechner.blogspot.de" for example
; For an empty subject use the following line instead or remove the Subject line entierely
; Subject =
Exportable = FALSE                  ; Private key is not exportable KeyLength = 2048                    ; Common key sizes: 512, 1024, 2048, 4096, 8192, 16384
KeySpec = 1                         ; AT_KEYEXCHANGE
KeyUsage = 0xA0                     ; Digital Signature, Key Encipherment
MachineKeySet = True                ; The key belongs to the local computer account
ProviderName = "Microsoft RSA SChannel Cryptographic Provider"
ProviderType = 12
SMIME = FALSE
RequestType = CMC
; At least certreq.exe shipping with Windows Vista/Server 2008 is required to interpret the [Strings] and [Extensions] sections below

[Strings]
szOID_SUBJECT_ALT_NAME2 = "2.5.29.17"
szOID_ENHANCED_KEY_USAGE = "2.5.29.37"
szOID_PKIX_KP_SERVER_AUTH = "1.3.6.1.5.5.7.3.1"
szOID_PKIX_KP_CLIENT_AUTH = "1.3.6.1.5.5.7.3.2"

[Extensions]
%szOID_SUBJECT_ALT_NAME2% = "{text}dns=computer1. christianlechner.blogspot.de&dns=computer2. christianlechner.blogspot.de"
%szOID_ENHANCED_KEY_USAGE% = "{text}%szOID_PKIX_KP_SERVER_AUTH%,%szOID_PKIX_KP_CLIENT_AUTH%"
[RequestAttributes]
CertificateTemplate= WebServer
Notes:
If you don’t know the template name or want to specifie it when issueing the certificate, remove the RequestAttributes section.
The specification of the enhanced key usage OID is not explicitly required since the EKU is defined in the certificate template. The OID in the INF file above is for explanatory purposes
You can click on “OK” for the template not found UI from certreq if the client has no access to templates.
You can ignore the unreferenced “[Strings]” section dialog when it appears

2. Useing the INF file when creating the REQ file

The following command-line command will generate key material and turn the INF file into a certificate signing request (CSR) which can then be handed over to the CA to issue the certificate.
certreq –new MyCSR.inf CSR.req
Once the certificate request was created you can verify the request with the following command:
certutil –dump CSR.req

3. Submitting the REQ file to the CA

If the CA is reachable via RPC over the network (computer and CA are member oft he same Active Directory domain and computer or user hast he permissions to enroll a certificate), use the following command to submit the certificate request directly to the CA:
certreq –submit CSR.req
You will get a selection dialog to select the CA from. If the CA is configured to issue certificates based on the template settings, the CA may issue the certificate immediately.
If RPC traffic is not allowed or the CA is not member of the same Active Directory or maybe not a Windows based CA, transfer the certificate request to the CA and perform the above command locally at the CA (if it is a Windows CA otherwise you the respective command on the Linux/Unix based CA).
If the certificate template name was not specified in the certificate request above, you can specify it as part of the submission command:
certreq -attrib "CertificateTemplate:webserver" –submit CSR.req

4. Installing the certificate at the IIS or ISA computer

Once the certificate was issued copy it to the target computer. Run the following command to install the certificate.
certreq –accept ssl.cer
The installation actually puts the certificate into the computer’s personal store. The certificate will be linked to the key material created in step #1 and builds the certificate property. The certificate property stores information such as the friendly name which is not part of a certificate itself.
After performing steps 1 to 4 the certificate will show up in the IIS or any other application and can be bound to the application or a website.

Method 2 – Use the MMC to create a CSR

Open the MMC and add the „Certificates“ snap-in. Open the „User“ or „Computer“ store depending on your required certificate.
Under „Advanced Operations“ select „Create Custom Request“.


Confirm the „Before you Begin“ page by clicking „Next“.













Click „Proceed without enrollment policy“ on the „Select Certificate Enrollment Policy“ page and click „Next“.

Depending on the use case select „CNG key“ or „Legacy key“ on the „Custom request“ page and click „Next“.

Open the „Properties“ window from the „Certificate Information“ page to enter all required certificate properties to the request.

After you’ve entered all required properties (e.g. SubjectName, Organization, Key length, …) finally click „Next“ and save the CSR somewhere.


You can now submitt the CSR according to method 1 or directly via MMC on the CA itself.

Have fun
Chris