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Scripts for signing using KSP library on GitHub

Prerequisites

  • A GitHub repository

  • DigiCert​​®​​ Software Trust Manager credentials

  • DigiCert​​®​​ Software Trust Manager client tools

Client tools

DigiCert​​®​​ Software Trust Manager clients can be downloaded in a package.

Download Client tools

  1. Sign in to DigiCert ONE.

  2. Navigate to DigiCert​​®​​ Software Trust Manager > Resources > Client tool repository.

  3. Select your operating system.

  4. Click the download icon next to DigiCert​​®​​ Software Trust Manager clients.

Register the KSP

To register the KSP, open a command prompt and run:

smksp_registrar.exe register

Verify the KSP

To verify that your KSP is configured properly, and that your client can properly authenticate to the DigiCert​​®​​ Software Trust Manager service, run:

certutil.exe -csp "DigiCert Software Trust Manager KSP" -key -user

Synchronize certificates

For the client tools to access the private keys in the service through the Key Storage Provider (KSP), your certificates must be synchronized to the local certificate store. Only if the certificate is synchronized, the private key remains stored securely in DigiCert​​®​​ Software Trust Manager.

To synchronize your certificates to the local certificate store, open a command prompt and run:

smksp_cert_sync.exe

To view the certificates, open Certificate Manager for the user account used to run the certificate sync utility:

certmgr.msc

If you do not see your certificates in the Certificate Manager, verify that you have opened the correct certificate store. There is a different certificate store for each Windows user account.

Note

All certificates are synched to the user store only. The certificates are not synchronized to the machine store (yet).

Set PATH environment variables

Operating systems use the environment variable called PATH to determine where executable files are stored on your system. Use the PATH environment variable to store the file path to your signing tools to ensure that the CLI can reference these signing tools.

User authentication

Software Trust Manager enforces multifactor authentication for security. To access keypairs, certificates, and sign code, you need to set up two types of credentials: an API token and an authentication certificate.

Create an API token

The API token is an authentication method used to verify you as a user and your permissionsUsers assigned in DigiCert ONE. The API token provides the first factor authentication.

Follow these steps to generate an API token:

  1. Sign in to DigiCert ONE.

  2. Select the profile icon (top-right).

  3. Select Admin Profile.

  4. Scroll down to API Tokens.

  5. Select  Create API token.

    Note

    The API token is only shown once, securely store the API key to use it later.

Create an authentication certificate

The client authentication certificate is an authentication method used to verify you as a user and your permissionsUsers assigned in DigiCert ONE. The client authentication certificate provides the second factor authentication.

Follow these steps to create a client authentication certificate:

  1. Sign in to DigiCert ONE.

  2. Select the profile icon (top-right).

  3. Select Admin Profile.

  4. Scroll down to Authentication certificates.

  5. Select Create authentication certificate.

    Note

    The client authentication certificate password shown after creating an client authentication certificate cannot be accessed again, download the certificate and securely store the password to use it later.

Setup

To use the client tools and connect to DigiCert​​®​​ Software Trust Manager for operations, you must have access to DigiCert​​®​​ Software Trust Manager on DigiCert ONE®. If you do not have access to DigiCert​​®​​ Software Trust Manager, contact an administrator for DigiCert ONE and request access.

Set certificate file in environment variables

  1. Identify your client authentication certificate.

  2. Encode the file to base64. For encoding run command:

    base64 file_name
  3. In GitHub Secrets add a new repository secret with:

    Name = SM_CLIENT_CERT_FILE_B64
    Value = encoded value from base64 file_name
  4. Set dup certificate file for signing:

    - name: Setup Certificate
      run: |
        echo "${{ secrets.SM_CLIENT_CERT_FILE_B64 }}" | base64 --decode > /d/Certificate_pkcs12.p12
      shell: bash

Environment variables setup for GitHub Actions

The client tools need these environment variables to connect with DigiCert​​®​​ Software Trust Manager,.

To integrate environment variables as GitHub secrets:

  1. Access GitHub repository

  2. Select Settings

  3. Select Secrets > Actions

  4. Select New repository secret

The values for these environment variables:

Variable

Description

SM_API_KEY

Provide your API token.

SM_CLIENT_CERT_FILE_B64

The base64 encoded text of certificate downloaded from client authentication certificate setup.

SM_CLIENT_CERT_PASSWORD

Provide your client certificate password.

SM_HOST

Provide your host environment.

SM_CODE_SIGNING_CERT_SHA1_HASH

The certificate fingerprint.

Command to set environment variables:

- name: Set variables
  id: variables
  run: |
    echo "::set-output name=version::${GITHUB_REF#refs/tags/v}"
    echo "SM_HOST=${{ secrets.SM_HOST }}" >> "$GITHUB_ENV"
    echo "SM_API_KEY=${{ secrets.SM_API_KEY }}" >> "$GITHUB_ENV"
    echo "SM_CLIENT_CERT_FILE=D:\\Certificate_pkcs12.p12" >> "$GITHUB_ENV"
    echo "SM_CLIENT_CERT_PASSWORD=${{ secrets.SM_CLIENT_CERT_PASSWORD }}" >> "$GITHUB_ENV"
    echo "C:\Program Files (x86)\Windows Kits\10\App Certification Kit" >> $GITHUB_PATH
    echo "C:\Program Files (x86)\Microsoft SDKs\Windows\v10.0A\bin\NETFX 4.8 Tools" >> $GITHUB_PATH
    echo "C:\Program Files\DigiCert\DigiCert One Signing Manager Tools" >> $GITHUB_PATH
  shell: bash

Tip

The following tool paths are provided above:

  • Software Trust Manager client tools

    C:\Program Files\DigiCert\DigiCert One Signing Manager Tools

  • Signtool.exe

    C:\Program Files (x86)\Windows Kits\10\App Certification Kit

  • Mage.exe

    C:\Program Files (x86)\Microsoft SDKs\Windows\v10.0A\bin\NETFX 4.8 Tools

Client tool setup

Connect the KSP to GitHub actions and verify that it works.

Client control setup

To invoke the client control from GitHub actions

Download and install the smtools-windows-x64.msi using curl command given below:

- name: Setup SSM KSP on windows latest
  run: |
    curl -X GET  https://one.digicert.com/signingmanager/api-ui/v1/releases/smtools-windows-x64.msi/download -H "x-api-key:%SM_API_KEY%" -o smtools-windows-x64.msi
    msiexec /i smtools-windows-x64.msi /quiet /qn
  shell: cmd

Note

“curl” command is used to install the smtools-windows-x64.msi installer and “msiexec” is used to silently install the smtools-windows-x64.msi.

Verify the KSP

To verify the KSP is registered, run:

- name: Register KSP
  run: |
    smksp_registrar.exe list
  shell: cmd

Integration with GitHub actions

Find Signtool and Mage

Command to find signtool:

- name: Find Signtool
  run: |
    dir "C:\Program Files (x86)\Microsoft SDKs\Windows\ " /s /b | findstr /i signtool.exe
  shell: cmd

Command to find Mage:

- name: Find Signtool
  run: |
      dir "C:\Program Files (x86)\Microsoft SDKs\Windows\ " /s /b | findstr /i mage.exe
  shell: cmd

Create keypair and certificate

Create test keypair and certificate

An example for a GitHub actions step to generate a RSA test keypair with certificate:

- name: Generate Test Keypair
  run: |
      smctl keypair generate rsa <Keypair Name> --cert-alias=<Certificate Name> --cert-profile-id=<Certificate Profile ID> --generate-cert=true --key-type=TEST
  shell: cmd

The keypair name and certificate name must be unique, meaning that they cannot exist on the portal already.

To retrieve the certificate profile ID:

  1. Go to DigiCert ONE > DigiCert​​®​​ Software Trust Manager > Certificates > Certificate profiles.

  2. Select a certificate profile to generate the certificate (Profile category must be test).

  3. Identify the Profile ID.

Create production keypair with certificate

An example of a GitHub actions pipeline step to generate an RSA production keypair with certificate:

- name: Generate Production Keypair
  run: |
    smctl keypair generate rsa <Keypair Name> --cert-alias=<Certificate Name> --cert-profile-id=<Certificate Profile ID> --generate-cert=true --key-type=PRODUCTION
  shell: cmd

The parameters are the same as the previous case, but ensure you select a certificate profile that has the profile category as "Production".

Create certificate from an existing keypair

An example of a GitHub actions step to generate a certificate for an existing keypair:

- name: Generate Certificate for Existing Keypair
  run: |
    smctl keypair generate-cert <Keypair ID> --cert-alias=<Certificate Name> --cert-profile-id=<Certificate Profile ID>
  shell: cmd

For this step, the inputs required are a keypair ID, certificate name (which must be unique), and certificate profile ID. You can retrieve the keypair ID in two ways:

  1. Set the environment variables in SMCTL.

  2. Run

    smctl keypair ls
  3. Access DigiCert ONE > DigiCert​​®​​ Software Trust Manager > Keypairs.

  4. Select a keypair.

  5. Identify the keypair ID.

As in the previous use cases, the certificate profile ID used must belong to the correct profile category.

Sign

You can sign with Mage, NuGet, or SignTool.

Sign with Mage

To sign with Mage:

- name: Signing using mage
  run: |
    mage.exe -sign <file_name> -CertHash <hash_or_cert_fingerprint> -a sha256RSA
 shell: cmd

Sign with NuGet

To sign with NuGet:

- name: Signing using nuget
  run: |
    nuget sign <package folder> -Timestamper http://timestamp.digicert.com -outputdirectory <output folder> -Certificate Fingerprint <SHA1 Thumbprint> -HashAlgorithm SHA256 -Verbosity detailed -Overwrite
  shell: cmd

Sign with SignTool

To sign with SignTool:

- name: Signing using signtool
  run: |
    signtool.exe sign /sha1 <certificate thumbprint> /tr http://timestamp.digicert.com /td SHA256 /fd SHA256 <file to be signed>
 shell: cmd

Verify signature

You can verify a signature using Mage, NuGet, or SignTool.

Verify signature with Mage

To verify a signature with Mage:

- name: Mage verify
  run: |
    mage -Verify <Path to signed .application file>
  shell: cmd- name: Mage verify
run: |
mage -Verify <path to signed .application file>
shell: cmd

The only input required here is the path to the signed .application file.

Verify signature with NuGet

To verify a signature with NuGet:

- name: Nuget verify
  run: |
    nuget verify -All <output folder>\*
  shell: cmd- name: Nuget verify
run: |
nuget verify -All <output folder>\*
shell: cmd

The only input required here is the path to the signed folder.

Verify signature with SignTool

To verify a signature with SignTool:

- name: Signtool verify
  run: |
    signtool verify /v /pa <Path to the signed exe/DLL>
  shell: cmd- name: Signtool verify
run: |
signtool verify /v /pa <path to the signed .exe or .dll>
shell: cmd

The only input for this step is the path to the signed .exe or .dll file that needs to be verified.

Sample GitHub actions

KSP Signing using GitHub action

name: 'build and release electron installer'
on:
  push:
    tags:
      - 'v*'
      
jobs:
  release:
    runs-on: ${{ matrix.os }}
    
    strategy:
      matrix:
        os: [windows-latest]
        
    steps:
      - name: Check out Git repository
        uses: actions/checkout@v2

      - name: Install Node.js, NPM and Yarn
        uses: actions/setup-node@v2
        with: 
          node-version: 14
        
      - name: Build/release Electron app
        uses: samuelmeuli/action-electron-builder@v1
        with: 
          github_token: ${{ secrets.github_token }}
          release: ${{ startsWith(github.ref, 'refs/tags/v') }}
          build_script_name: dist

      - name: NuGet Install
        uses: NuGet/setup-nuget@v1.0.5
        with:
          nuget-version: latest

      - name: Setup Certificate
        run: |
          echo "${{ secrets.SM_CLIENT_CERT_FILE_B64 }}" | base64 --decode > /d/Certificate_pkcs12.p12
          cat /d/Certificate_pkcs12.p12
        shell: bash

          
      - name: Set variables
        id: variables
        run: |
          echo "::set-output name=version::${GITHUB_REF#refs/tags/v}"
          echo "SM_HOST=${{ secrets.SM_HOST }}" >> "$GITHUB_ENV"
          echo "SM_API_KEY=${{ secrets.SM_API_KEY }}" >> "$GITHUB_ENV"
          echo "SM_CLIENT_CERT_FILE=D:\\Certificate_pkcs12.p12" >> "$GITHUB_ENV"
          echo "SM_CLIENT_CERT_PASSWORD=${{ secrets.SM_CLIENT_CERT_PASSWORD }}" >> "$GITHUB_ENV"
          echo "C:\Program Files (x86)\Windows Kits\10\App Certification Kit" >> $GITHUB_PATH
          echo "C:\Program Files (x86)\Microsoft SDKs\Windows\v10.0A\bin\NETFX 4.8 Tools" >> $GITHUB_PATH
          echo "C:\Program Files\DigiCert\ DigiCert One Signing Manager Tools" >> $GITHUB_PATH
        shell: bash

      - name: Setup SSM KSP on windows latest
        run: |
          curl -X GET  https://one.digicert.com/signingmanager/api-ui/v1/releases/smtools-windows-x64.msi/download -H "x-api-key:%SM_API_KEY%" -o smtools-windows-x64.msi
          msiexec /i smtools-windows-x64.msi /quiet /qn
          smksp_registrar.exe list
          smctl.exe keypair ls
          C:\Windows\System32\certutil.exe -csp "DigiCert Signing Manager KSP" -key -user
          smksp_cert_sync.exe
        shell: cmd

      - name: Signing using Signtool
        run: |
          signtool.exe sign /sha1 ${{ secrets.SM_CODE_SIGNING_CERT_SHA1_HASH }} /tr http://timestamp.digicert.com /td SHA256 /fd SHA256 "D:\a\github-action-electron\github-action-electron\dist\my-electron-app Setup ${{ steps.variables.outputs.version }}.exe"
          signtool.exe verify /v /pa "D:\a\github-action-electron\github-action-electron\dist\my-electron-app Setup ${{ steps.variables.outputs.version }}.exe"

      - name: Signing using Nuget
        run: |
          copy D:\a\github-action-electron\github-action-electron\UNSIGNED.nupkg D:\a\github-action-electron\github-action-electron\dist\UNSIGNED.nupkg
          nuget sign "D:\a\github-action-electron\github-action-electron\dist\UNSIGNED.nupkg" -Timestamper http://timestamp.digicert.com -outputdirectory "D:\a\github-action-electron\github-action-electron\dist\Signed" -CertificateFingerprint ${{ secrets.SM_CODE_SIGNING_CERT_SHA1_HASH }} -HashAlgorithm SHA256 -Verbosity detailed -Overwrite
          nuget verify -All "D:\a\github-action-electron\github-action-electron\dist\Signed\*"

      - name: Signing using Mage
        run: |
          copy D:\a\github-action-electron\github-action-electron\UNSIGNED2.manifest D:\a\github-action-electron\github-action-electron\dist\UNSIGNED2.manifest
          mage.exe -sign "D:\a\github-action-electron\github-action-electron\dist\UNSIGNED2.manifest" -CertHash ${{ secrets.SM_CODE_SIGNING_CERT_SHA1_HASH }} -a sha256RSA
          mage -Verify "D:\a\github-action-electron\github-action-electron\dist\UNSIGNED2.manifest"

      - name: Upload artifacts
        uses: actions/upload-artifact@v2
        with:
          name: ${{ matrix.os }}
          path: |
            dist

How to run and build the code

  1. Update the version in your project's package.json file ( e.g. 1.2.3)

  2. Commit that change (git commit -am v1.2.3)

  3. Tag your commit (git tag v1.2.3). Make sure your tag name's format is v*.*.*.

    Note

    Your workflow will use this tag to detect when to create a release.

  4. Push your changes to GitHub (git push &amp;&amp; git push --tags)