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PKCS 12

In cryptography, PKCS #12 defines an archive file format for storing many cryptography objects as a single file. It is commonly used to bundle a private key with its X.509 certificate or to bundle all the members of a chain of trust.

A PKCS #12 file may be encrypted and signed. The internal storage containers, called "SafeBags", may also be encrypted and signed. A few SafeBags are predefined to store certificates, private keys and CRLs. Another SafeBag is provided to store any other data at individual implementer's choice.

PKCS #12 is one of the family of standards called Public-Key Cryptography Standards (PKCS) published by RSA Laboratories.

The filename extension for PKCS #12 files is <code>.p12</code> or <code>.pfx</code>.

These files can be created, parsed and read out with the OpenSSL <code>pkcs12</code> command.

Relationship to PFX file format

PKCS #12 is the successor to Microsoft's "PFX"; however, the terms "PKCS #12 file" and "PFX file" are sometimes used interchangeably.

The PFX format has been criticized for being one of the most complex cryptographic protocols.

Normal usage

The full PKCS&nbsp;#12 standard is very complex. It enables buckets of complex objects such as PKCS&nbsp;#8 structures, nested deeply. But in practice it is normally used to store just one private key and its associated certificate chain.

PKCS&nbsp;#12 files are usually created using OpenSSL, which only supports a single private key from the command line interface. The Java keytool can be used to create multiple "entries" since Java&nbsp;8, but that may be incompatible with many other systems. As of Java&nbsp;9 (released 2017-09-21), PKCS&nbsp;#12 is the default keystore format.

A simpler, alternative format to PKCS&nbsp;#12 is PEM which just lists the certificates and possibly private keys as Base&nbsp;64 strings in a text file.

GnuTLS's certtool may also be used to create PKCS&nbsp;#12 files including certificates, keys, and CA certificates via --to-p12. However, beware that for interchangeability with other software, if the sources are in PEM Base64 text, then --outder should also be used.

References

External links

  • - PKCS #12: Personal Information Exchange Syntax v1.1
  • Overview about PKCS#12 capabilities, usage, implementations, history and future: