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Version: v1.13.x LTS

Configuring Zowe certificates

Configuring Zowe certificates

A keystore directory is used by Zowe to hold the certificate used for encrypting communication between Zowe clients and the Zowe z/OS servers. It also holds the truststore used to hold public keys of any servers that Zowe trusts. When Zowe is launched, the instance directory configuration file instance.env specifies the location of the keystore directory. See Configure instance directory.

If you have already created a keystore directory from a previous release of Version 1.8 or later, then you may reuse the existing keystore directory with newer version of Zowe.

You can use the existing certificate signed by an external certificate authority (CA) for HTTPS ports in the API Mediation Layer and the Zowe Application Framework, or else you can let the Zowe configuration script to generate a self-signed certificate by the local API Mediation CA.

If you let the Zowe configuration generate a self-signed certificate, the certificates should be imported into your browser to avoid untrusted network traffic challenges. See Import the local CA certificate to your browser. If you do not import the certificates into your browser when you access a Zowe web page, you may be challenged that the web page cannot be trusted and, depending on the browser you are using, have to add an exception to proceed to the web page. Some browser versions may not accept the Zowe certificate because it is self-signed and the signing authority is not recognized as a trusted source. Manually importing the certificate into your browser makes it a trusted source and the challenges will no longer occur.

If you have an existing server certificate that is signed by an external CA, then you use this for the Zowe certificate. This could be a CA managed by the IT department of your company, which has already ensured that any certificates signed by that CA are trusted by browsers in your company because they have included their company's CA in their company's browsers' truststore. This will avoid the need to manually import the local CA into each client machine's browsers.

If you want to avoid the need to have each browser trust the CA that has signed the Zowe certificate, you can use a public certificate authority such as Symantec, Comodo, or GoDaddy to create a certificate. These certificates are trusted by all browsers and most REST API clients. However, this option involves a manual process of requesting a certificate and may incur a cost payable to the publicly trusted CA.

We recommend that you start with the local API Mediation Layer CA for an initial evaluation.

You can use the <ROOT_DIR>/bin/zowe-setup-certificates.sh script in the Zowe runtime directory to configure the certificates with the set of defined environment variables. The environment variables act as parameters for the certificate configuration are held in the file <ROOT_DIR>/bin/zowe-setup-certificates.env.

Generate certificate with the default values#

The script reads the default variable values that are provided in the <ROOT_DIR>/bin/zowe-setup-certificates.env file and generates the certificate signed by the local API Mediation CA and keystores in the /global/zowe/keystore location. To set up certificates with the default environment variables, ensure that you run the following script in the Zowe runtime directory:

<ROOT_DIR>/bin/zowe-setup-certificates.sh

generates the keystore in /global/zowe/keystore. On many z/OS installations access to this location will be restricted to priveledged users so this step should be done by a system programmer with site knowledge for where the certificate should be stored in a way that the public key can be read but private key access is controlled.

Generate certificate with the custom values#

We recommend that you review all the parameters in the zowe-setup-certificates.env file and customize the values for variables to meet your requirements. For example, set your preferred location to generate certificates and keystores.

Follow the procedure to customize the values for variables in the zowe-setup-certificates.env file:

  1. Copy the bin/zowe-setup-certificates.env file from the read-only location to a new <your_directory>/zowe-setup-certificates.env location.
  2. Customize the values for the variables based on the descriptions that are provided in the zowe-setup-certificates.env file.
  3. Execute the following command with the customized environment file:
     bin/zowe-setup-certificates.sh –p <your_directory>/zowe-setup-certificates.env [-l <log_directory>]
    where <your_directory> specifies the location of your customized environment file and <log-directory> is an optional parameter that overrides the default log output directory of /global/zowe/logs, if it is writable, or ~/zowe/logs.

The keystore and certificates are generated based on the customized values in the bin/zowe-setup-certificates.env file.

The zowe-setup-certificates.sh command also generates zowe-certificates.env file in the KEYSTORE_DIRECTORY directory. This file is used in the Zowe instance configuration step, see Creating and configuring the Zowe instance directory.

The following example shows how you can configure zowe-setup-certificates.env file to use the existing certificates:

  1. Update the value of EXTERNAL_CERTIFICATE. The value needs to point to a keystore in PKCS12 format that contains the certificate with its private key. The file needs to be transferred as a binary to the z/OS system.

  2. Update the value of KEYSTORE_PASSWORD. The value is a password to the PKCS12 keystore specified in the EXTERNAL_CERTIFICATE variable.

  3. Update the value of EXTERNAL_CERTIFICATE_ALIAS to the alias of the server certificate in the keystore.

    Note: If you do not know the certificate alias, run the following command where externalCertificate.p12 is a value of EXTERNAL_CERTIFICATE in the zowe-setup-certificates.env file.

    keytool -list -keystore externalCertificate.p12 -storepass password -storetype pkcs12 -v

    Expected output:

    Keystore type: PKCS12Keystore provider: SUNYour keystore contains 1 entryAlias name: apimlCreation date: Oct 9, 2019Entry type: PrivateKeyEntryCertificate chain length: 3...

    In this case, the alias can be found in Alias name: apiml. Therefore, set EXTERNAL_CERTIFICATE_ALIAS=apiml.

  4. Update the value of EXTERNAL_CERTIFICATE_AUTHORITIES to the path of the public certificate of the certificate authority that has signed the certificate. You can add additional certificate authorities separated by spaces (specify the complete value in quotes). This can be used for certificate authorities that have signed the certificates of the services that you want to access via the API Mediation Layer.

  5. (Optional) If you have trouble getting the certificates and you want only to evaluate Zowe, you can switch off the certificate validation by setting VERIFY_CERTIFICATES=false. The HTTPS will still be used but the API Mediation Layer will not validate any certificate.

    Important! Switching off certificate evaluation is a non-secure setup.

Following is the part of zowe-setup-certificates.env file snippet that uses existing certificates:

# Should APIML verify certificates of services - true/falseVERIFY_CERTIFICATES=true# optional - Path to a PKCS12 keystore with a server certificate for APIMLEXTERNAL_CERTIFICATE=/path/to/keystore.p12# optional - Alias of the certificate in the keystoreEXTERNAL_CERTIFICATE_ALIAS=servercert# optional - Public certificates of trusted CAsEXTERNAL_CERTIFICATE_AUTHORITIES="/path/to/cacert_1.cer /path/to/cacert_2.cer"# Select a password that is used to secure EXTERNAL_CERTIFICATE keystore and # that will be also used to secure newly generated keystores for API MediationKEYSTORE_PASSWORD=mypass

You may encounter the following message:

apiml_cm.sh --action trust-zosmf has failed. See $LOG_FILE for more detailsERROR: z/OSMF is not trusted by the API Mediation Layer. Make sure ZOWE_ZOSMF_HOST and ZOWE_ZOSMF_PORT variables define the desired z/OSMF instance.ZOWE_ZOSMF_HOST=${ZOWE_ZOSMF_HOST}   ZOWE_ZOSMF_PORT=${ZOWE_ZOSMF_PORT}You can also specify z/OSMF certificate explicitly in the ZOSMF_CERTIFICATE environmental variable in the zowe-setup-certificates.env file.

This error has to be resolved before you can proceed with the next installation step.

Notes:

  • On many z/OS systems, the certificate for z/OSMF is not signed by a trusted CA and is a self-signed certificate by the z/OS system programmer who configured z/OSMF. If that is the case, then Zowe itself will not trust the z/OSMF certificate and any function dependent on z/OSMF will not operate correctly. To ensure that Zowe trusts a z/OSMF self-signed certificate, you must use the value VERIFY_CERTIFICATES=false in the zowe-setup-certificates.env file. This is also required if the certificate is from a recognized CA but for a different host name, which can occur when a trusted certificate is copied from one source and reused within a z/OS installation for different servers other than that it was originally created for.

Using web tokens for SSO on ZLUX and ZSS#

Users must create a PKCS#11 token before continuing. This can be done through the USS utility, "gskkyman".

Creating a PKCS#11 Token#

Ensure that the SO.TOKEN_NAME profile exists in CRYPTOZ, and that the user who will be creating tokens has either UPDATE or CONTROL access.

  1. Define profile: "RDEFINE CRYPTOZ SO.TOKEN_NAME"

  2. Add user with UPDATE access: "PERMIT SO.** ACCESS(UPDATE) CLASS(CRYPTOZ) ID(USERID)"

  3. Ensure profile was created: "RLIST CRYPTOZ *"

  4. Activate class with new profile:

    • "SETROPTS RACLIST(CRYPTOZ)"

    • "SETROPTS CLASSACT(CRYPTOZ)"

A user should now be able to use "gskkyman" to create a token.

Accessing token#

Ensure USER.TOKEN_NAME profile exists in CRYPTOZ:

  1. Define profile: "RDEFINE CRYPTOZ USER.TOKEN_NAME"

  2. Add user with READ access: "PERMIT USER.TOKEN_NAME ACCESS(UPDATE) CLASS(CRYPTOZ) ID(USERID)"

  3. Ensure profile was created: "RLIST CRYPTOZ *"

  4. Activate class with new profile:

    • "SETROPTS RACLIST(CRYPTOZ)"

    • "SETROPTS CLASSACT(CRYPTOZ)"

Configure zowe-setup-certifcates.env using the following parameters. Both are required to enable SSO.

  • PKCS#11 token name for SSO. Must already exist.

    PKCS11_TOKEN_NAME=<newly created token name>

  • PKCS#11 token label for SSO. Must not already exist.

    PKCS11_TOKEN_LABEL=<unique label>

Enabling SSO#

  1. Run zowe-setup-certificates.sh.

    • If you are upgrading from an older of version of Zowe that has the apiml configured: "rerun zowe-setup-certificates.sh"

    • If upgrading, point the zowe instance to the newly generated keystore, or overwrite the previous one.

  2. In the ZSS server configuration, enable SSO and input your token name/label:


"agent": {
  //host is for zlux to know, not zss
  "host": "localhost",
  "http": {
   "ipAddresses": ["0.0.0.0"],
   "port": 0000
  },
  "jwt": {
   "enabled": true,
   "fallback": false,
   "key": {
​    "token": "TOKEN.NAME",
​    "label": "KEY_NAME"
   }
  },
 },

Hints and tips#

Learn about some hints and tips that you might find useful when you create certificates.

You create the certificates by running the script zowe-setup-certificates.sh. You do not need to rerun the script after the first time you install Zowe, unless instructed otherwise by SMP/E HOLDDATA or the release notes for that release.

The creation of the certificates is controlled by the zowe-setup-certificates.env file, and you should have placed a copy of that file in your instance directory INSTANCE_DIR.

  1. Keystore

    In your copy of the zowe-setup-certificates.env file, specify the location where you want the zowe-setup-certificates.sh script to place the keys it generates.

    KEYSTORE_DIRECTORY=/my/zowe/instance/keystore

    By default, a keystore can be shared by all instances, which is also recommended. The default location is /global/zowe/keystore. You can use a different shared location if you prefer. The Zowe instance uses the keystore that you specify in instance.env in your instance directory INSTANCE_DIR. This can be the shared location or you can create another keystore in a different location for that instance and use that one instead. A single, shared keystore is recommended.

  2. Hostname and IP address

    You specify the hostname and IP address with the following keywords in the zowe-setup-certificates.env file.

    HOSTNAME= IPADDRESS=

    The certificates require the value of HOSTNAME to be an alphabetic hostname. Numeric hostnames such as an IP address are not allowed.

    The zowe-setup-certificates.sh script attempts to discover the IP address and hostname of your system if you leave these unconfigured in zowe-setup-certificates.env.

    On systems with their own internal IP domain, the hostname might not resolve to the external IP address. This happens on ZD&T ADCD-derived systems, where the hostname is usually S0W1.DAL-EBIS.IHOST.COM which resolves to 10.1.1.2. When the script cannot determine the hostname or the external IP address, it will ask you to enter the IP address manually during the dialog. If you have not specified a value for HOSTNAME in zowe-setup-certificates.env, then the script will use the given IP address as the hostname. This will fail, because certificates cannot have a numeric hostname.

    Therefore, you must specify an alphabetic hostname such as the following one on ZD&T systems before you run the script zowe-setup-certificates.sh.

    HOSTNAME=S0W1.DAL-EBIS.IHOST.COM 

    The values of HOSTNAME and IPADDRESS that the script discovered are appended to the zowe-setup-certificates.env file unless they were already set in that file or as shell environment variables before you ran the script.