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community.crypto.x509_certificate – Generate and/or check OpenSSL certificates
Note
This plugin is part of the community.crypto collection (version 1.9.6).
You might already have this collection installed if you are using the ansible package. It is not included in ansible-core. To check whether it is installed, run ansible-galaxy collection list.
To install it, use: ansible-galaxy collection install community.crypto.
To use it in a playbook, specify: community.crypto.x509_certificate.
Synopsis
- If both the cryptography and PyOpenSSL libraries are available (and meet the minimum version requirements) cryptography will be preferred as a backend over PyOpenSSL (unless the backend is forced with 
select_crypto_backend). Please note that the PyOpenSSL backend was deprecated in Ansible 2.9 and will be removed in community.crypto 2.0.0. - It implements a notion of provider (ie. 
selfsigned,ownca,acme,assertonly,entrust) for your certificate. - It uses the pyOpenSSL or cryptography python library to interact with OpenSSL.
 - Many properties that can be specified in this module are for validation of an existing or newly generated certificate. The proper place to specify them, if you want to receive a certificate with these properties is a CSR (Certificate Signing Request).
 - Note that this module was called 
openssl_certificatewhen included directly in Ansible up to version 2.9. When moved to the collectioncommunity.crypto, it was renamed to community.crypto.x509_certificate. From Ansible 2.10 on, it can still be used by the old short name (or byansible.builtin.openssl_certificate), which redirects tocommunity.crypto.x509_certificate. When using FQCNs or when using the collections keyword, the new name community.crypto.x509_certificate should be used to avoid a deprecation warning. - Please note that the module regenerates existing certificate if it does not match the module’s options, or if it seems to be corrupt. If you are concerned that this could overwrite your existing certificate, consider using the backup option.
 - The 
assertonlyprovider is intended for use cases where one is only interested in checking properties of a supplied certificate. Please note that this provider has been deprecated in Ansible 2.9 and will be removed in community.crypto 2.0.0. See the examples on how to emulateassertonlyusage with community.crypto.x509_certificate_info, community.crypto.openssl_csr_info, community.crypto.openssl_privatekey_info and ansible.builtin.assert. This also allows more flexible checks than the ones offered by theassertonlyprovider. - The 
owncaprovider is intended for generating an OpenSSL certificate signed with your own CA (Certificate Authority) certificate (self-signed certificate). - This module allows one to (re)generate OpenSSL certificates.
 
Requirements
The below requirements are needed on the host that executes this module.
- PyOpenSSL >= 0.15 or cryptography >= 1.6 (if using 
selfsigned,owncaorassertonlyprovider) - acme-tiny >= 4.0.0 (if using the 
acmeprovider) 
Parameters
| Parameter | Choices/Defaults | Comments | 
|---|---|---|
| acme_accountkey_path
        
        path
         | 
      
        
        The path to the accountkey for the  
       acme provider.
       
        This is only used by the  acme provider.
        | 
     |
| acme_chain
        
        boolean
         | 
      
       
  | 
      
        
        Include the intermediate certificate to the generated certificate
        
       
        This is only used by the  
       acme provider.
       
        Note that this is only available for older versions of  acme-tiny. New versions include the chain automatically, and setting acme_chain to yes results in an error.
        | 
     
| acme_challenge_path
        
        path
         | 
      
        
        The path to the ACME challenge directory that is served on http://<HOST>:80/.well-known/acme-challenge/
        
       
        This is only used by the  acme provider.
        | 
     |
| acme_directory
        
        string
        
       
        added in 1.0.0 of community.crypto
         | 
      Default: 
        "https://acme-v02.api.letsencrypt.org/directory"
         | 
      
        
        The ACME directory to use. You can use any directory that supports the ACME protocol, such as Buypass or Let's Encrypt.
        
       
        Let's Encrypt recommends using their staging server while developing jobs. https://letsencrypt.org/docs/staging-environment/.
         | 
     
| attributes
        
        string
        
       
        added in 2.3 of ansible.builtin
         | 
      
        
        The attributes the resulting file or directory should have.
        
       
        To get supported flags look at the man page for chattr on the target system.
        
       
        This string should contain the attributes in the same order as the one displayed by lsattr.
        
       
        The  
       = operator is assumed as default, otherwise + or - operators need to be included in the string.
       aliases: attr  | 
     |
| backup
        
        boolean
         | 
      
       
  | 
      
        
        Create a backup file including a timestamp so you can get the original certificate back if you overwrote it with a new one by accident.
        
       
        This is not used by the  
       assertonly provider.
       
        This option is deprecated since Ansible 2.9 and will be removed with the  assertonly provider in community.crypto 2.0.0. For alternatives, see the example on replacing assertonly.
        | 
     
| csr_content
        
        string
        
       
        added in 1.0.0 of community.crypto
         | 
      
        
        Content of the Certificate Signing Request (CSR) used to generate this certificate.
        
       
        This is mutually exclusive with csr_path.
         | 
     |
| csr_path
        
        path
         | 
      
        
        Path to the Certificate Signing Request (CSR) used to generate this certificate.
        
       
        This is mutually exclusive with csr_content.
         | 
     |
| entrust_api_client_cert_key_path
        
        path
         | 
      
        
        The path to the private key of the client certificate used to authenticate to the Entrust Certificate Services (ECS) API.
        
       
        This is only used by the  
       entrust provider.
       
        This is required if the provider is  entrust.
        | 
     |
| entrust_api_client_cert_path
        
        path
         | 
      
        
        The path to the client certificate used to authenticate to the Entrust Certificate Services (ECS) API.
        
       
        This is only used by the  
       entrust provider.
       
        This is required if the provider is  entrust.
        | 
     |
| entrust_api_key
        
        string
         | 
      
        
        The key (password) for authentication to the Entrust Certificate Services (ECS) API.
        
       
        This is only used by the  
       entrust provider.
       
        This is required if the provider is  entrust.
        | 
     |
| entrust_api_specification_path
        
        path
         | 
      Default: 
        "https://cloud.entrust.net/EntrustCloud/documentation/cms-api-2.1.0.yaml"
         | 
      
        
        The path to the specification file defining the Entrust Certificate Services (ECS) API configuration.
        
       
        You can use this to keep a local copy of the specification to avoid downloading it every time the module is used.
        
       
        This is only used by the  entrust provider.
        | 
     
| entrust_api_user
        
        string
         | 
      
        
        The username for authentication to the Entrust Certificate Services (ECS) API.
        
       
        This is only used by the  
       entrust provider.
       
        This is required if the provider is  entrust.
        | 
     |
| entrust_cert_type
        
        string
         | 
      
       
  | 
      
        
        Specify the type of certificate requested.
        
       
        This is only used by the  entrust provider.
        | 
     
| entrust_not_after
        
        string
         | 
      Default: 
        "+365d"
         | 
      
        
        The point in time at which the certificate stops being valid.
        
       
        Time can be specified either as relative time or as an absolute timestamp.
        
       
        A valid absolute time format is  
       ASN.1 TIME such as 2019-06-18.
       
        A valid relative time format is  
       [+-]timespec where timespec can be an integer + [w | d | h | m | s], such as +365d or +32w1d2h).
       
        Time will always be interpreted as UTC.
        
       
        Note that only the date (day, month, year) is supported for specifying the expiry date of the issued certificate.
        
       
        The full date-time is adjusted to EST (GMT -5:00) before issuance, which may result in a certificate with an expiration date one day earlier than expected if a relative time is used.
        
       
        The minimum certificate lifetime is 90 days, and maximum is three years.
        
       
        If this value is not specified, the certificate will stop being valid 365 days the date of issue.
        
       
        This is only used by the  entrust provider.
        | 
     
| entrust_requester_email
        
        string
         | 
      
        
        The email of the requester of the certificate (for tracking purposes).
        
       
        This is only used by the  
       entrust provider.
       
        This is required if the provider is  entrust.
        | 
     |
| entrust_requester_name
        
        string
         | 
      
        
        The name of the requester of the certificate (for tracking purposes).
        
       
        This is only used by the  
       entrust provider.
       
        This is required if the provider is  entrust.
        | 
     |
| entrust_requester_phone
        
        string
         | 
      
        
        The phone number of the requester of the certificate (for tracking purposes).
        
       
        This is only used by the  
       entrust provider.
       
        This is required if the provider is  entrust.
        | 
     |
| extended_key_usage
        
        list / elements=string
         | 
      
        
        The extended_key_usage extension field must contain all these values.
        
       
        This is only used by the  
       assertonly provider.
       
        This option is deprecated since Ansible 2.9 and will be removed with the  
       assertonly provider in community.crypto 2.0.0. For alternatives, see the example on replacing assertonly.
       aliases: extendedKeyUsage  | 
     |
| extended_key_usage_strict
        
        boolean
         | 
      
       
  | 
      
        
        If set to  
       yes, the extended_key_usage extension field must contain only these values.
       
        This is only used by the  
       assertonly provider.
       
        This option is deprecated since Ansible 2.9 and will be removed with the  
       assertonly provider in community.crypto 2.0.0. For alternatives, see the example on replacing assertonly.
       aliases: extendedKeyUsage_strict  | 
     
| force
        
        boolean
         | 
      
       
  | 
      
        
        Generate the certificate, even if it already exists.
         | 
     
| group
        
        string
         | 
      
        
        Name of the group that should own the file/directory, as would be fed to chown.
         | 
     |
| has_expired
        
        boolean
         | 
      
       
  | 
      
        
        Checks if the certificate is expired/not expired at the time the module is executed.
        
       
        This is only used by the  
       assertonly provider.
       
        This option is deprecated since Ansible 2.9 and will be removed with the  assertonly provider in community.crypto 2.0.0. For alternatives, see the example on replacing assertonly.
        | 
     
| invalid_at
        
        string
         | 
      
        
        The certificate must be invalid at this point in time.
        
       
        The timestamp is formatted as an ASN.1 TIME.
        
       
        This is only used by the  
       assertonly provider.
       
        This option is deprecated since Ansible 2.9 and will be removed with the  assertonly provider in community.crypto 2.0.0. For alternatives, see the example on replacing assertonly.
        | 
     |
| issuer
        
        dictionary
         | 
      
        
        The key/value pairs that must be present in the issuer name field of the certificate.
        
       
        If you need to specify more than one value with the same key, use a list as value.
        
       
        This is only used by the  
       assertonly provider.
       
        This option is deprecated since Ansible 2.9 and will be removed with the  assertonly provider in community.crypto 2.0.0. For alternatives, see the example on replacing assertonly.
        | 
     |
| issuer_strict
        
        boolean
         | 
      
       
  | 
      
        
        If set to  
       yes, the issuer field must contain only these values.
       
        This is only used by the  
       assertonly provider.
       
        This option is deprecated since Ansible 2.9 and will be removed with the  assertonly provider in community.crypto 2.0.0. For alternatives, see the example on replacing assertonly.
        | 
     
| key_usage
        
        list / elements=string
         | 
      
        
        The key_usage extension field must contain all these values.
        
       
        This is only used by the  
       assertonly provider.
       
        This option is deprecated since Ansible 2.9 and will be removed with the  
       assertonly provider in community.crypto 2.0.0. For alternatives, see the example on replacing assertonly.
       aliases: keyUsage  | 
     |
| key_usage_strict
        
        boolean
         | 
      
       
  | 
      
        
        If set to  
       yes, the key_usage extension field must contain only these values.
       
        This is only used by the  
       assertonly provider.
       
        This option is deprecated since Ansible 2.9 and will be removed with the  
       assertonly provider in community.crypto 2.0.0. For alternatives, see the example on replacing assertonly.
       aliases: keyUsage_strict  | 
     
| mode
        
        raw
         | 
      
        
        The permissions the resulting file or directory should have.
        
       
        For those used to /usr/bin/chmod remember that modes are actually octal numbers. You must either add a leading zero so that Ansible's YAML parser knows it is an octal number (like  
       0644 or 01777) or quote it (like '644' or '1777') so Ansible receives a string and can do its own conversion from string into number.
       
        Giving Ansible a number without following one of these rules will end up with a decimal number which will have unexpected results.
        
       
        As of Ansible 1.8, the mode may be specified as a symbolic mode (for example,  
       u+rwx or u=rw,g=r,o=r).
       
        If  
       mode is not specified and the destination file does not exist, the default umask on the system will be used when setting the mode for the newly created file.
       
        If  
       mode is not specified and the destination file does exist, the mode of the existing file will be used.
       
        Specifying  mode is the best way to ensure files are created with the correct permissions. See CVE-2020-1736 for further details.
        | 
     |
| not_after
        
        string
         | 
      
        
        The certificate must expire at this point in time.
        
       
        The timestamp is formatted as an ASN.1 TIME.
        
       
        This is only used by the  
       assertonly provider.
       
        This option is deprecated since Ansible 2.9 and will be removed with the  
       assertonly provider in community.crypto 2.0.0. For alternatives, see the example on replacing assertonly.
       aliases: notAfter  | 
     |
| not_before
        
        string
         | 
      
        
        The certificate must start to become valid at this point in time.
        
       
        The timestamp is formatted as an ASN.1 TIME.
        
       
        This is only used by the  
       assertonly provider.
       
        This option is deprecated since Ansible 2.9 and will be removed with the  
       assertonly provider in community.crypto 2.0.0. For alternatives, see the example on replacing assertonly.
       aliases: notBefore  | 
     |
| ownca_content
        
        string
        
       
        added in 1.0.0 of community.crypto
         | 
      
        
        Content of the CA (Certificate Authority) certificate.
        
       
        This is only used by the  
       ownca provider.
       
        This is mutually exclusive with ownca_path.
         | 
     |
| ownca_create_authority_key_identifier
        
        boolean
         | 
      
       
  | 
      
        
        Create a Authority Key Identifier from the CA's certificate. If the CSR provided a authority key identifier, it is ignored.
        
       
        The Authority Key Identifier is generated from the CA certificate's Subject Key Identifier, if available. If it is not available, the CA certificate's public key will be used.
        
       
        This is only used by the  
       ownca provider.
       
        Note that this is only supported if the  cryptography backend is used!
        | 
     
| ownca_create_subject_key_identifier
        
        string
         | 
      
       
  | 
      
        
        Whether to create the Subject Key Identifier (SKI) from the public key.
        
       
        A value of  
       create_if_not_provided (default) only creates a SKI when the CSR does not provide one.
       
        A value of  
       always_create always creates a SKI. If the CSR provides one, that one is ignored.
       
        A value of  
       never_create never creates a SKI. If the CSR provides one, that one is used.
       
        This is only used by the  
       ownca provider.
       
        Note that this is only supported if the  cryptography backend is used!
        | 
     
| ownca_digest
        
        string
         | 
      Default: 
        "sha256"
         | 
      
        
        The digest algorithm to be used for the  
       ownca certificate.
       
        This is only used by the  ownca provider.
        | 
     
| ownca_not_after
        
        string
         | 
      Default: 
        "+3650d"
         | 
      
        
        The point in time at which the certificate stops being valid.
        
       
        Time can be specified either as relative time or as absolute timestamp.
        
       
        Time will always be interpreted as UTC.
        
       
        Valid format is  
       [+-]timespec | ASN.1 TIME where timespec can be an integer + [w | d | h | m | s] (e.g. +32w1d2h.
       
        If this value is not specified, the certificate will stop being valid 10 years from now.
        
       
        Note that this value is not used to determine whether an existing certificate should be regenerated.
        
       
        This is only used by the  
       ownca provider.
       
        On macOS 10.15 and onwards, TLS server certificates must have a validity period of 825 days or fewer. Please see https://support.apple.com/en-us/HT210176 for more details.
         | 
     
| ownca_not_before
        
        string
         | 
      Default: 
        "+0s"
         | 
      
        
        The point in time the certificate is valid from.
        
       
        Time can be specified either as relative time or as absolute timestamp.
        
       
        Time will always be interpreted as UTC.
        
       
        Valid format is  
       [+-]timespec | ASN.1 TIME where timespec can be an integer + [w | d | h | m | s] (e.g. +32w1d2h.
       
        If this value is not specified, the certificate will start being valid from now.
        
       
        Note that this value is not used to determine whether an existing certificate should be regenerated.
        
       
        This is only used by the  ownca provider.
        | 
     
| ownca_path
        
        path
         | 
      
        
        Remote absolute path of the CA (Certificate Authority) certificate.
        
       
        This is only used by the  
       ownca provider.
       
        This is mutually exclusive with ownca_content.
         | 
     |
| ownca_privatekey_content
        
        string
        
       
        added in 1.0.0 of community.crypto
         | 
      
        
        Content of the CA (Certificate Authority) private key to use when signing the certificate.
        
       
        This is only used by the  
       ownca provider.
       
        This is mutually exclusive with ownca_privatekey_path.
         | 
     |
| ownca_privatekey_passphrase
        
        string
         | 
      
        
        The passphrase for the ownca_privatekey_path resp. ownca_privatekey_content.
        
       
        This is only used by the  ownca provider.
        | 
     |
| ownca_privatekey_path
        
        path
         | 
      
        
        Path to the CA (Certificate Authority) private key to use when signing the certificate.
        
       
        This is only used by the  
       ownca provider.
       
        This is mutually exclusive with ownca_privatekey_content.
         | 
     |
| ownca_version
        
        integer
         | 
      Default: 
        3
         | 
      
        
        The version of the  
       ownca certificate.
       
        Nowadays it should almost always be  
       3.
       
        This is only used by the  ownca provider.
        | 
     
| owner
        
        string
         | 
      
        
        Name of the user that should own the file/directory, as would be fed to chown.
         | 
     |
| path
        
        path / required
         | 
      
        
        Remote absolute path where the generated certificate file should be created or is already located.
         | 
     |
| privatekey_content
        
        string
        
       
        added in 1.0.0 of community.crypto
         | 
      
        
        Path to the private key to use when signing the certificate.
        
       
        This is mutually exclusive with privatekey_path.
         | 
     |
| privatekey_passphrase
        
        string
         | 
      
        
        The passphrase for the privatekey_path resp. privatekey_content.
        
       
        This is required if the private key is password protected.
         | 
     |
| privatekey_path
        
        path
         | 
      
        
        Path to the private key to use when signing the certificate.
        
       
        This is mutually exclusive with privatekey_content.
         | 
     |
| provider
        
        string
         | 
      
       
  | 
      
        
        Name of the provider to use to generate/retrieve the OpenSSL certificate.
        
       
        The  
       assertonly provider will not generate files and fail if the certificate file is missing.
       
        The  
       assertonly provider has been deprecated in Ansible 2.9 and will be removed in community.crypto 2.0.0. Please see the examples on how to emulate it with community.crypto.x509_certificate_info, community.crypto.openssl_csr_info, community.crypto.openssl_privatekey_info and ansible.builtin.assert.
       
        The  
       entrust provider was added for Ansible 2.9 and requires credentials for the Entrust Certificate Services (ECS) API.
       
        Required if state is  present.
        | 
     
| return_content
        
        boolean
        
       
        added in 1.0.0 of community.crypto
         | 
      
       
  | 
      
        
        If set to  yes, will return the (current or generated) certificate's content as certificate.
        | 
     
| select_crypto_backend
        
        string
         | 
      
       
  | 
      
        
        Determines which crypto backend to use.
        
       
        The default choice is  
       auto, which tries to use cryptography if available, and falls back to pyopenssl.
       
        If set to  
       pyopenssl, will try to use the pyOpenSSL library.
       
        If set to  
       cryptography, will try to use the cryptography library.
       
        Please note that the  pyopenssl backend has been deprecated in Ansible 2.9, and will be removed in community.crypto 2.0.0. From that point on, only the cryptography backend will be available.
        | 
     
| selevel
        
        string
         | 
      
        
        The level part of the SELinux file context.
        
       
        This is the MLS/MCS attribute, sometimes known as the  
       range.
       
        When set to  _default, it will use the level portion of the policy if available.
        | 
     |
| selfsigned_create_subject_key_identifier
        
        string
         | 
      
       
  | 
      
        
        Whether to create the Subject Key Identifier (SKI) from the public key.
        
       
        A value of  
       create_if_not_provided (default) only creates a SKI when the CSR does not provide one.
       
        A value of  
       always_create always creates a SKI. If the CSR provides one, that one is ignored.
       
        A value of  
       never_create never creates a SKI. If the CSR provides one, that one is used.
       
        This is only used by the  
       selfsigned provider.
       
        Note that this is only supported if the  cryptography backend is used!
        | 
     
| selfsigned_digest
        
        string
         | 
      Default: 
        "sha256"
         | 
      
        
        Digest algorithm to be used when self-signing the certificate.
        
       
        This is only used by the  selfsigned provider.
        | 
     
| selfsigned_not_after
        
        string
         | 
      Default: 
        "+3650d"
         | 
      
        
        The point in time at which the certificate stops being valid.
        
       
        Time can be specified either as relative time or as absolute timestamp.
        
       
        Time will always be interpreted as UTC.
        
       
        Valid format is  
       [+-]timespec | ASN.1 TIME where timespec can be an integer + [w | d | h | m | s] (e.g. +32w1d2h.
       
        If this value is not specified, the certificate will stop being valid 10 years from now.
        
       
        Note that this value is not used to determine whether an existing certificate should be regenerated.
        
       
        This is only used by the  
       selfsigned provider.
       
        On macOS 10.15 and onwards, TLS server certificates must have a validity period of 825 days or fewer. Please see https://support.apple.com/en-us/HT210176 for more details.
        
       aliases: selfsigned_notAfter  | 
     
| selfsigned_not_before
        
        string
         | 
      Default: 
        "+0s"
         | 
      
        
        The point in time the certificate is valid from.
        
       
        Time can be specified either as relative time or as absolute timestamp.
        
       
        Time will always be interpreted as UTC.
        
       
        Valid format is  
       [+-]timespec | ASN.1 TIME where timespec can be an integer + [w | d | h | m | s] (e.g. +32w1d2h.
       
        If this value is not specified, the certificate will start being valid from now.
        
       
        Note that this value is not used to determine whether an existing certificate should be regenerated.
        
       
        This is only used by the  
       selfsigned provider.
       aliases: selfsigned_notBefore  | 
     
| selfsigned_version
        
        integer
         | 
      Default: 
        3
         | 
      
        
        Version of the  
       selfsigned certificate.
       
        Nowadays it should almost always be  
       3.
       
        This is only used by the  selfsigned provider.
        | 
     
| serole
        
        string
         | 
      
        
        The role part of the SELinux file context.
        
       
        When set to  _default, it will use the role portion of the policy if available.
        | 
     |
| setype
        
        string
         | 
      
        
        The type part of the SELinux file context.
        
       
        When set to  _default, it will use the type portion of the policy if available.
        | 
     |
| seuser
        
        string
         | 
      
        
        The user part of the SELinux file context.
        
       
        By default it uses the  
       system policy, where applicable.
       
        When set to  _default, it will use the user portion of the policy if available.
        | 
     |
| signature_algorithms
        
        list / elements=string
         | 
      
        
        A list of algorithms that you would accept the certificate to be signed with (e.g. ['sha256WithRSAEncryption', 'sha512WithRSAEncryption']).
        
       
        This is only used by the  
       assertonly provider.
       
        This option is deprecated since Ansible 2.9 and will be removed with the  assertonly provider in community.crypto 2.0.0. For alternatives, see the example on replacing assertonly.
        | 
     |
| state
        
        string
         | 
      
       
  | 
      
        
        Whether the certificate should exist or not, taking action if the state is different from what is stated.
         | 
     
| subject
        
        dictionary
         | 
      
        
        The key/value pairs that must be present in the subject name field of the certificate.
        
       
        If you need to specify more than one value with the same key, use a list as value.
        
       
        This is only used by the  
       assertonly provider.
       
        This option is deprecated since Ansible 2.9 and will be removed with the  assertonly provider in community.crypto 2.0.0. For alternatives, see the example on replacing assertonly.
        | 
     |
| subject_alt_name
        
        list / elements=string
         | 
      
        
        The subject_alt_name extension field must contain these values.
        
       
        This is only used by the  
       assertonly provider.
       
        This option is deprecated since Ansible 2.9 and will be removed with the  
       assertonly provider in community.crypto 2.0.0. For alternatives, see the example on replacing assertonly.
       aliases: subjectAltName  | 
     |
| subject_alt_name_strict
        
        boolean
         | 
      
       
  | 
      
        
        If set to  
       yes, the subject_alt_name extension field must contain only these values.
       
        This is only used by the  
       assertonly provider.
       
        This option is deprecated since Ansible 2.9 and will be removed with the  
       assertonly provider in community.crypto 2.0.0. For alternatives, see the example on replacing assertonly.
       aliases: subjectAltName_strict  | 
     
| subject_strict
        
        boolean
         | 
      
       
  | 
      
        
        If set to  
       yes, the subject field must contain only these values.
       
        This is only used by the  
       assertonly provider.
       
        This option is deprecated since Ansible 2.9 and will be removed with the  assertonly provider in community.crypto 2.0.0. For alternatives, see the example on replacing assertonly.
        | 
     
| unsafe_writes
        
        boolean
        
       
        added in 2.2 of ansible.builtin
         | 
      
       
  | 
      
        
        Influence when to use atomic operation to prevent data corruption or inconsistent reads from the target file.
        
       
        By default this module uses atomic operations to prevent data corruption or inconsistent reads from the target files, but sometimes systems are configured or just broken in ways that prevent this. One example is docker mounted files, which cannot be updated atomically from inside the container and can only be written in an unsafe manner.
        
       
        This option allows Ansible to fall back to unsafe methods of updating files when atomic operations fail (however, it doesn't force Ansible to perform unsafe writes).
        
       
        IMPORTANT! Unsafe writes are subject to race conditions and can lead to data corruption.
         | 
     
| valid_at
        
        string
         | 
      
        
        The certificate must be valid at this point in time.
        
       
        The timestamp is formatted as an ASN.1 TIME.
        
       
        This is only used by the  
       assertonly provider.
       
        This option is deprecated since Ansible 2.9 and will be removed with the  assertonly provider in community.crypto 2.0.0. For alternatives, see the example on replacing assertonly.
        | 
     |
| valid_in
        
        string
         | 
      
        
        The certificate must still be valid at this relative time offset from now.
        
       
        Valid format is  
       [+-]timespec | number_of_seconds where timespec can be an integer + [w | d | h | m | s] (e.g. +32w1d2h.
       
        Note that if using this parameter, this module is NOT idempotent.
        
       
        This is only used by the  
       assertonly provider.
       
        This option is deprecated since Ansible 2.9 and will be removed with the  assertonly provider in community.crypto 2.0.0. For alternatives, see the example on replacing assertonly.
        | 
     |
| version
        
        integer
         | 
      
        
        The version of the certificate.
        
       
        Nowadays it should almost always be 3.
        
       
        This is only used by the  
       assertonly provider.
       
        This option is deprecated since Ansible 2.9 and will be removed with the  assertonly provider in community.crypto 2.0.0. For alternatives, see the example on replacing assertonly.
        | 
     
Notes
Note
- Supports 
check_mode. - All ASN.1 TIME values should be specified following the YYYYMMDDHHMMSSZ pattern.
 - Date specified should be UTC. Minutes and seconds are mandatory.
 - For security reason, when you use 
owncaprovider, you should NOT run community.crypto.x509_certificate on a target machine, but on a dedicated CA machine. It is recommended not to store the CA private key on the target machine. Once signed, the certificate can be moved to the target machine. - For the 
selfsignedprovider, csr_path and csr_content are optional. If not provided, a certificate without any information (Subject, Subject Alternative Names, Key Usage, etc.) is created. 
See Also
See also
- community.crypto.x509_certificate_pipe
 - 
     
The official documentation on the community.crypto.x509_certificate_pipe module.
 - community.crypto.openssl_csr
 - 
     
The official documentation on the community.crypto.openssl_csr module.
 - community.crypto.openssl_csr_pipe
 - 
     
The official documentation on the community.crypto.openssl_csr_pipe module.
 - community.crypto.openssl_dhparam
 - 
     
The official documentation on the community.crypto.openssl_dhparam module.
 - community.crypto.openssl_pkcs12
 - 
     
The official documentation on the community.crypto.openssl_pkcs12 module.
 - community.crypto.openssl_privatekey
 - 
     
The official documentation on the community.crypto.openssl_privatekey module.
 - community.crypto.openssl_privatekey_pipe
 - 
     
The official documentation on the community.crypto.openssl_privatekey_pipe module.
 - community.crypto.openssl_publickey
 - 
     
The official documentation on the community.crypto.openssl_publickey module.
 
Examples
- name: Generate a Self Signed OpenSSL certificate
  community.crypto.x509_certificate:
    path: /etc/ssl/crt/ansible.com.crt
    privatekey_path: /etc/ssl/private/ansible.com.pem
    csr_path: /etc/ssl/csr/ansible.com.csr
    provider: selfsigned
- name: Generate an OpenSSL certificate signed with your own CA certificate
  community.crypto.x509_certificate:
    path: /etc/ssl/crt/ansible.com.crt
    csr_path: /etc/ssl/csr/ansible.com.csr
    ownca_path: /etc/ssl/crt/ansible_CA.crt
    ownca_privatekey_path: /etc/ssl/private/ansible_CA.pem
    provider: ownca
- name: Generate a Let's Encrypt Certificate
  community.crypto.x509_certificate:
    path: /etc/ssl/crt/ansible.com.crt
    csr_path: /etc/ssl/csr/ansible.com.csr
    provider: acme
    acme_accountkey_path: /etc/ssl/private/ansible.com.pem
    acme_challenge_path: /etc/ssl/challenges/ansible.com/
- name: Force (re-)generate a new Let's Encrypt Certificate
  community.crypto.x509_certificate:
    path: /etc/ssl/crt/ansible.com.crt
    csr_path: /etc/ssl/csr/ansible.com.csr
    provider: acme
    acme_accountkey_path: /etc/ssl/private/ansible.com.pem
    acme_challenge_path: /etc/ssl/challenges/ansible.com/
    force: yes
- name: Generate an Entrust certificate via the Entrust Certificate Services (ECS) API
  community.crypto.x509_certificate:
    path: /etc/ssl/crt/ansible.com.crt
    csr_path: /etc/ssl/csr/ansible.com.csr
    provider: entrust
    entrust_requester_name: Jo Doe
    entrust_requester_email: jdoe@ansible.com
    entrust_requester_phone: 555-555-5555
    entrust_cert_type: STANDARD_SSL
    entrust_api_user: apiusername
    entrust_api_key: a^lv*32!cd9LnT
    entrust_api_client_cert_path: /etc/ssl/entrust/ecs-client.crt
    entrust_api_client_cert_key_path: /etc/ssl/entrust/ecs-key.crt
    entrust_api_specification_path: /etc/ssl/entrust/api-docs/cms-api-2.1.0.yaml
# The following example shows one assertonly usage using all existing options for
# assertonly, and shows how to emulate the behavior with the x509_certificate_info,
# openssl_csr_info, openssl_privatekey_info and assert modules:
- name: Usage of assertonly with all existing options
  community.crypto.x509_certificate:
    provider: assertonly
    path: /etc/ssl/crt/ansible.com.crt
    csr_path: /etc/ssl/csr/ansible.com.csr
    privatekey_path: /etc/ssl/csr/ansible.com.key
    signature_algorithms:
      - sha256WithRSAEncryption
      - sha512WithRSAEncryption
    subject:
      commonName: ansible.com
    subject_strict: yes
    issuer:
      commonName: ansible.com
    issuer_strict: yes
    has_expired: no
    version: 3
    key_usage:
      - Data Encipherment
    key_usage_strict: yes
    extended_key_usage:
      - DVCS
    extended_key_usage_strict: yes
    subject_alt_name:
      - dns:ansible.com
    subject_alt_name_strict: yes
    not_before: 20190331202428Z
    not_after: 20190413202428Z
    valid_at: "+1d10h"
    invalid_at: 20200331202428Z
    valid_in: 10  # in ten seconds
- name: Get certificate information
  community.crypto.x509_certificate_info:
    path: /etc/ssl/crt/ansible.com.crt
    # for valid_at, invalid_at and valid_in
    valid_at:
      one_day_ten_hours: "+1d10h"
      fixed_timestamp: 20200331202428Z
      ten_seconds: "+10"
  register: result
- name: Get CSR information
  community.crypto.openssl_csr_info:
    # Verifies that the CSR signature is valid; module will fail if not
    path: /etc/ssl/csr/ansible.com.csr
  register: result_csr
- name: Get private key information
  community.crypto.openssl_privatekey_info:
    path: /etc/ssl/csr/ansible.com.key
  register: result_privatekey
- assert:
    that:
      # When private key is specified for assertonly, this will be checked:
      - result.public_key == result_privatekey.public_key
      # When CSR is specified for assertonly, this will be checked:
      - result.public_key == result_csr.public_key
      - result.subject_ordered == result_csr.subject_ordered
      - result.extensions_by_oid == result_csr.extensions_by_oid
      # signature_algorithms check
      - "result.signature_algorithm == 'sha256WithRSAEncryption' or result.signature_algorithm == 'sha512WithRSAEncryption'"
      # subject and subject_strict
      - "result.subject.commonName == 'ansible.com'"
      - "result.subject | length == 1"  # the number must be the number of entries you check for
      # issuer and issuer_strict
      - "result.issuer.commonName == 'ansible.com'"
      - "result.issuer | length == 1"  # the number must be the number of entries you check for
      # has_expired
      - not result.expired
      # version
      - result.version == 3
      # key_usage and key_usage_strict
      - "'Data Encipherment' in result.key_usage"
      - "result.key_usage | length == 1"  # the number must be the number of entries you check for
      # extended_key_usage and extended_key_usage_strict
      - "'DVCS' in result.extended_key_usage"
      - "result.extended_key_usage | length == 1"  # the number must be the number of entries you check for
      # subject_alt_name and subject_alt_name_strict
      - "'dns:ansible.com' in result.subject_alt_name"
      - "result.subject_alt_name | length == 1"  # the number must be the number of entries you check for
      # not_before and not_after
      - "result.not_before == '20190331202428Z'"
      - "result.not_after == '20190413202428Z'"
      # valid_at, invalid_at and valid_in
      - "result.valid_at.one_day_ten_hours"  # for valid_at
      - "not result.valid_at.fixed_timestamp"  # for invalid_at
      - "result.valid_at.ten_seconds"  # for valid_in
# Examples for some checks one could use the assertonly provider for:
# (Please note that assertonly has been deprecated!)
# How to use the assertonly provider to implement and trigger your own custom certificate generation workflow:
- name: Check if a certificate is currently still valid, ignoring failures
  community.crypto.x509_certificate:
    path: /etc/ssl/crt/example.com.crt
    provider: assertonly
    has_expired: no
  ignore_errors: yes
  register: validity_check
- name: Run custom task(s) to get a new, valid certificate in case the initial check failed
  command: superspecialSSL recreate /etc/ssl/crt/example.com.crt
  when: validity_check.failed
- name: Check the new certificate again for validity with the same parameters, this time failing the play if it is still invalid
  community.crypto.x509_certificate:
    path: /etc/ssl/crt/example.com.crt
    provider: assertonly
    has_expired: no
  when: validity_check.failed
# Some other checks that assertonly could be used for:
- name: Verify that an existing certificate was issued by the Let's Encrypt CA and is currently still valid
  community.crypto.x509_certificate:
    path: /etc/ssl/crt/example.com.crt
    provider: assertonly
    issuer:
      O: Let's Encrypt
    has_expired: no
- name: Ensure that a certificate uses a modern signature algorithm (no SHA1, MD5 or DSA)
  community.crypto.x509_certificate:
    path: /etc/ssl/crt/example.com.crt
    provider: assertonly
    signature_algorithms:
      - sha224WithRSAEncryption
      - sha256WithRSAEncryption
      - sha384WithRSAEncryption
      - sha512WithRSAEncryption
      - sha224WithECDSAEncryption
      - sha256WithECDSAEncryption
      - sha384WithECDSAEncryption
      - sha512WithECDSAEncryption
- name: Ensure that the existing certificate belongs to the specified private key
  community.crypto.x509_certificate:
    path: /etc/ssl/crt/example.com.crt
    privatekey_path: /etc/ssl/private/example.com.pem
    provider: assertonly
- name: Ensure that the existing certificate is still valid at the winter solstice 2017
  community.crypto.x509_certificate:
    path: /etc/ssl/crt/example.com.crt
    provider: assertonly
    valid_at: 20171221162800Z
- name: Ensure that the existing certificate is still valid 2 weeks (1209600 seconds) from now
  community.crypto.x509_certificate:
    path: /etc/ssl/crt/example.com.crt
    provider: assertonly
    valid_in: 1209600
- name: Ensure that the existing certificate is only used for digital signatures and encrypting other keys
  community.crypto.x509_certificate:
    path: /etc/ssl/crt/example.com.crt
    provider: assertonly
    key_usage:
      - digitalSignature
      - keyEncipherment
    key_usage_strict: true
- name: Ensure that the existing certificate can be used for client authentication
  community.crypto.x509_certificate:
    path: /etc/ssl/crt/example.com.crt
    provider: assertonly
    extended_key_usage:
      - clientAuth
- name: Ensure that the existing certificate can only be used for client authentication and time stamping
  community.crypto.x509_certificate:
    path: /etc/ssl/crt/example.com.crt
    provider: assertonly
    extended_key_usage:
      - clientAuth
      - 1.3.6.1.5.5.7.3.8
    extended_key_usage_strict: true
- name: Ensure that the existing certificate has a certain domain in its subjectAltName
  community.crypto.x509_certificate:
    path: /etc/ssl/crt/example.com.crt
    provider: assertonly
    subject_alt_name:
      - www.example.com
      - test.example.com
  Return Values
Common return values are documented here, the following are the fields unique to this module:
| Key | Returned | Description | 
|---|---|---|
| backup_file
        
        string
         | 
      changed and if backup is yes | 
      
        
        Name of backup file created.
         Sample:
        
       
        /path/to/www.ansible.com.crt.2019-03-09@11:22~
         | 
     
| certificate
        
        string
        
       
        added in 1.0.0 of community.crypto
         | 
      if state is present and return_content is yes | 
      
        
        The (current or generated) certificate's content.
          | 
     
| filename
        
        string
         | 
      changed or success | 
        
        Path to the generated certificate.
         Sample:
        
       
        /etc/ssl/crt/www.ansible.com.crt
         | 
     
Authors
- Yanis Guenane (@Spredzy)
 - Markus Teufelberger (@MarkusTeufelberger)
 
© 2012–2018 Michael DeHaan
© 2018–2021 Red Hat, Inc.
Licensed under the GNU General Public License version 3.
 https://docs.ansible.com/ansible/latest/collections/community/crypto/x509_certificate_module.html