Using EasyRSA Certificates in 2.x

When upgrading from 1.2.3 to 2.0 the upgrade process will import existing CA certificate(s), and the certificates entered into the boxes for the OpenVPN clients/servers. It will not import the CA key or certificates for remote access clients as those had no reference in the 1.2.3 pfSense® webGUI. If the old EasyRSA docs were followed, these should still be in the old keys folder under /root/easyrsa4pfsense/keys

If that folder is missing and there is no backup, then there is no way to generate new certificates from this CA. If the files are backed up somewhere, locate the backup the files within.

Assuming the files are present, Login to the shell, then run:

# cat /root/easyrsa4pfsense/keys/ca.key
-----BEGIN RSA PRIVATE KEY-----
[...]
-----END RSA PRIVATE KEY-----

That will show the existing CA key. Then from the webGUI, go to System > Cert Manager, find the imported CA, and click fa-pencil to edit. Copy/paste that key (including the BEGIN/END lines into the Key field in the wenGUI. Adjust the descriptive name if desired, it probably has a generic name from the upgrade process. Do not click Save yet.

From the shell, run:

# printf '%d\n' 0x`cat /root/easyrsa4pfsense/keys/serial`

That should return a decimal number, such as 11 - that’s the serial number of the next certificate to make. Copy that number into the webGUI in the Serial field, then click Save. It is important to correct the serial number, otherwise two certificates can end up with the same serial number, which will lead to problems with revocation down the road. Certs are revoked by serial, two certs with the same serial would both be revoked if either one of the two with the same serial is revoked.

Now it is possible to create new certificates on the Certificates tab of the Cert Manager in the webGUI using this CA.

Any certificates for that CA in the webGUI should also show up for use within the Using the OpenVPN Client Export Package. To have the old certificates to show up there, import them from easyrsa also. From the Certificates tab, click fa-plus. Under method, choose Import an existing certificate. Add a descriptive name (like the name of the cert). Now to get that certificate and key, go back to the shell and find the key in /root/easyrsa4pfsense/keys/. For example:

# cd /root/easyrsa4pfsense/keys/
# ls -l tester*
-rw-r--r-- 1 root staff 3739 Feb 3 2010 tester.crt
-rw-r--r-- 1 root staff 688 Feb 3 2010 tester.csr
-rw------- 1 root staff 887 Feb 3 2010 tester.key

Cat the .crt and .key files, copying them into the webGUI box (just the BEGIN/…/END block that includes the encoded version), then click Save.

Repeat that last process for every key to import. It is not required to have the user certificates in the webGUI in order for clients to connect; They need only be there for use with the client export package.