Before you can teach your client to speak TLS, you will need a certificate issued by a trusted certificate authority (CA). If your organization already runs its own CA and you have a private key and certificate for your Requests client, along with your CA's root certificate, you can skip to the next step.
To request a certificate from your CA using the step
CLI, bootstrap your CA with step ca bootstrap
and run the following command (sub the client name for the actual name / DNS name of your Requests client).
$ step ca certificate "myuser" client.crt client.key
Your certificate and private key will be saved in client.crt
and client.key
respectively.
Request a copy of your CA root certificate, which will be used to make sure each application can trust certificates presented by other applications.
$ step ca root ca.crt
Your certificate will be saved in ca.crt
.
Now, we need only to configure our Requests client to make authenticated requests using our certificate and private key. The CA root certificate will be used to verify that the client can trust the certificate presented by the server.
Pass your certificate, private key, and root CA certificate to requests.get()
(or its respective request method) to authenticate your request over TLS.
result = requests.get(
'https://myserver.internal.net:443',
cert=('client.crt', 'client.key'),
verify='ca.crt')
# do something with result...
By default, step-ca
issues certificates with a 24 hour expiration. Short-lived certificates have many benefits but also require that you renew your certificates each day before they expire. How you renew certificates is often dependent on how you deploy your application. See the step-ca
certificate lifecycle management docs for more information.
All documentation content from the Hello mTLS project is licensed under Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International (CC BY 4.0).
Unsubscribe anytime. See our privacy policy.
© 2024 Smallstep Labs, Inc. All rights reserved.