rct(8) Certificate Information Tool rct(8)NAMErct - Displays information (headers) about or size and statistics of a
entitlement, product, or identity certificate used by Red Hat Subscrip‐
tion Manager.
SYNOPSISrct cat-cert [--no-content] [--no-products] /path/to/certificate.pem
rct stat-cert /path/to/certificate.pem rct cat-manifest /path/to/con‐
sumer_export.zip rct dump-manifest [--destination /path] [--force]
/path/to/consumer_export.zip
DESCRIPTION
Red Hat Subscription Manager uses X.509 certificates to identify a reg‐
istered system (identity certificate), the products installed on that
system (product certificates), and the subscriptions attached to the
system (entitlement certificates), including available content reposi‐
tories, products, and support levels. All of the information that Sub‐
scription Manager requires is contained in the body of the certificate.
COMMANDS
stat-cert
Prints the size of the certificate and other details about the
certificate. The precise details depend on the type of certifi‐
cate being checked.
cat-cert
Prints the information that is contained in the certificate
itself, such as the certificate headers, serial numbers, prod‐
ucts, and content sets. Two options, --no-content and --no-prod‐
ucts, can be used to shorten the output to include only header
and descriptive information.
cat-manifest
Prints the information that is contained in the subscription
service manifest. The manifest is an archive of JSON files which
contain all of the subscription information for subscriptions
allocated to the on-premise service.
dump-manifest
Extracts the contents of the manifest archive.
THE STAT-CERT COMMAND
The rct tool is used to gather information about the already-issued
certificates being used by Subscription Manager. The main reason for
that is that certificate sizes, for a number of reasons, impact content
delivery service performance.
For large accounts and organizations, there can be a very large number
of products and content sets available. Older versions of entitlement
certificates (version 1.0) used different (less efficient) DER encod‐
ing, so that large amounts of information results in very large cer‐
tificates. (This is what caused timeouts or crashes when dealing with
some content services.) Newer entitlement certificate versions (version
3.0) use more efficient encoding on large content sets, , resulting in
smaller certificate content sizes and better service performance.
If there are problems with the content service timing out or returning
errors, then the rct stat-cert command can be used to check the size
and version of a given entitlement certificate quickly.
A large number of content sets is anything over 185 total sets. Both
the total number of content sets and the size of the DER encoding in
the certificate could affect performance.
OPTIONS
/path/to/cert.pem
Gives the full path and filename to the PEM certificate for the
given subscription, product, or system. This is required.
EXAMPLES
The statistics for an entitlement certificate show both the DER size
and the number of content sets, among other information:
* Type (entitlement certificate)
* Version (of the certificate style); newer versions will be
3.x, with better performance for handling large content sets
* DER size, which gives the size of the certificate contents
(not the size of the certificate file itself)
* Key size, for the associated key file, in bytes
* The total number of available content sets in the subscription
For example:
[root@server ~]# rct stat-cert /etc/pki/entitlement/2027912482659389239.pem
Type: Entitlement Certificate
Version: 1.0
DER size: 47555b
Subject Key ID size: 553b
Content sets: 100
While the size of the certificate is less of an issue for identity and
product certificates (which are quite small), the stat-cert command can
still be used to view the size and statistics of the certificates.
For a product certificate, the stat-cert command shows:
* Type (product certificate)
* Version (of the certificate style)
* DER size, which gives the size of the certificate contents
(not the size of the certificate file itself)
For example:
[root@server ~]# rct stat-cert /etc/pki/product/69.pem
Type: Product Certificate
Version: 1.0
DER size: 1558b
For an identity certificate:
* Type (identity certificate)
* Version (of the certificate style)
* DER size, which gives the size of the certificate contents
(not the size of the certificate file itself)
* Key size, for the associated key file, in bytes
For example:
[root@server ~]# rct stat-cert /etc/pki/consumer/cert.pem
Type: Identity Certificate
Version: 1.0
DER size: 1488b
Subject Key ID size: 20b
THE CAT-CERT COMMAND
Each certificate contains a complete set of information with all of the
details for whatever element is being identified. That information can
be displayed, in pretty-print form, using the cat-cert command.
OPTIONS
/path/to/cert.pem
Gives the full path and filename to the PEM certificate for the
given subscription, product, or system. This is required.
--no-content
Returns all of the certification information, order information,
and product information, but excludes all of the Content sec‐
tions, which significantly reduced the information printed to
stdout. This is for an entitlement certificate only.
--no-products
Returns all of the certification information, order information,
and content (repository) information, but excludes all of the
Product sections, which significantly reduced the information
printed to stdout. This is for an entitlement certificate only.
/path/to/cert.pem
Gives the full path and filename to the PEM certificate for the
given subscription, product, or system.
OUTPUT
The command returns the most basic information about the certificate --
such as its directory path, its serial number and subject name, and its
validity period (start and end dates) -- in the Certificate section:
* Path -- the filesystem location where the certificate is
installed
* Version -- the certificate format version -- P * Serial -- the
serial number for the certificate
* Start/End Date -- the validity period for the certificate
* Alt Name -- the subject alternative name, which uses the host‐
name of the system rather than the UUID (for identity certifi‐
cates only)
The Subject DN of the certificate is in the Subject section.
For example, for the identity certificate:
[root@server ~]# rct cat-cert /etc/pki/consumer/cert.pem
+-------------------------------------------+
Identity Certificate
+-------------------------------------------+
Certificate:
Path: /etc/pki/consumer/cert.pem
Version: 1.0
Serial: 824613308750035399
Start Date: 2012-11-09 16:20:22+00:00
End Date: 2013-11-09 16:20:22+00:00
Alt Name: DirName:/CN=server.example.com
Subject:
CN: e94bc90e-44a1-4f8c-b6fc-0a3e9d6fac2b
A product certificate contains additional information in a Product sec‐
tion, which defines the information for the specific installed product,
such as its name, product version, and any yum tags used for that prod‐
uct. For example:
[root@server ~]# rct cat-cert /etc/pki/product/69.pem
+-------------------------------------------+
Product Certificate
+-------------------------------------------+
Certificate:
Path: /etc/pki/product/69.pem
Version: 1.0
Serial: 12750047592154746449
Start Date: 2012-10-04 18:45:02+00:00
End Date: 2032-09-29 18:45:02+00:00
Subject:
CN: Red Hat Product ID [b4f7ac9e-b7ed-45fa-9dcc-323beb20e916]
Product:
ID: 69
Name: Red Hat Enterprise Linux Server
Version: 6.4
Arch: x86_64
Tags: rhel-6,rhel-6-server
The most information is contained in the entitlement certficate. Along
with the Certificate and Subject, it also has a Product section that
defines the product group that is covered by the subscription.
Then, it contains an Order section that details everything related to
the purchase of the subscription (such as the contract number, service
level, total quantity, quantities assigned to the system, and other
details on the subscription).
A subscription for a product covers the version purchased and every
previous version of the product. For example, when a subscription is
purchased for Red Hat Enterprise Linux 6.4, the subscription provides
full access to all RHEL 6 repositories, plus access to all RHEL 5
repositories and then other included product content repositories, like
Subscription Asset Manager. Every available content repository is
listed in a Content section that contains the repository name, associ‐
ated tags, its URL, and a notice on whether the yum repository is
enabled by default. For example:
[root@server ~]# rct cat-cert /etc/pki/entitlement/2027912482659389239.pem
+-------------------------------------------+
Entitlement Certificate
+-------------------------------------------+
Certificate:
Path: /etc/pki/entitlement/2027912482659389239.pem
Version: 1.0
Serial: 2027912482659389239
Start Date: 2011-12-31 05:00:00+00:00
End Date: 2012-12-31 04:59:59+00:00
Subject:
CN: 8a99f9843adc8b8f013ae5f9de022b73
Product:
ID: 69
Name: Red Hat Enterprise Linux Server
Version:
Arch: x86_64,ia64,x86
Tags:
Order:
Name: Red Hat Enterprise Linux Server, Premium (8 sockets) (Up to 4 guests)
Number: 2673502
SKU: RH0103708
Contract: 10011052
Account: 5206751
Service Level: Premium
Service Type: L1-L3
Quantity: 100
Quantity Used: 1
Socket Limit: 8
Virt Limit:
Virt Only: False
Subscription:
Stacking ID:
Warning Period: 0
Provides Management: 0
Content:
Type: yum
Name: Red Hat Enterprise Linux 6 Server (RPMs)
Label: rhel-6-server-rpms
Vendor: Red Hat
URL: /content/dist/rhel/server/6/$releasever/$basearch/os
GPG: file:///etc/pki/rpm-gpg/RPM-GPG-KEY-redhat-release
Enabled: True
Expires: 86400
Required Tags: rhel-6-server
THE CAT-MANIFEST COMMAND
A subscription management service is allocated a specific bloc of sub‐
scriptions that are available to an account. This list of subscriptions
is the manifest for the service. The cat-manifest command reads and
prints the details of the manifest, such as the creation date, the sys‐
tem UUID and name, available products, and subscription details.
There are multiple JSON files in the archive, identifying different
aspects of the subscription service and subscription configuration,
such as the general manifest properties, subscription information, con‐
tent and repository information, and product information.
OPTIONS
/path/to/consumer_export.zip
Gives the path and filename (by default, consumer_export.zip)
for the manifest file on the local system. This is required.
EXAMPLES
The command pretty-prints all of the details about the manifest itself
and the allocated subscriptions, products, and content.
[root@server ~]# rct cat-manifest /tmp/consumer_export.zip
+-------------------------------------------+
Manifest
+-------------------------------------------+
General:
Server: candlepin
Server Version: 1.3
Date Created: 13 April 2013
Creator: admin
Consumer:
Name: server.example.com
UUID:
Type: system
Subscriptions:
Name: Red Hat Enterprise Linux
Quantity: 249237
Created: 12/01/2011
Start Date: 01/01/2012
End Date: 01/01/2022
Service Level: Premium
Service Type: Physical
Architectures: x86,x86_64
SKU: SYS0395
Contract: 12345678
Order: 09876543
Account: abcd1234
Entitlement File: /etc/pki/entitlement/2027912482659389239.pem
Certificate File: /etc/pki/product/69.pem
Certificate Version: 3
THE DUMP-MANIFEST COMMAND
A subscription management service is allocated a specific bloc of sub‐
scriptions that are available to an account. This list of subscriptions
is the manifest for the service. The cat-manifest command prints the
contents of the manifest.
OPTIONS
/path/to/consumer_export.zip
Gives the path and filename (by default, consumer_export.zip)
for the manifest file on the local system. This is required.
--destination=PATH
Specifies an export directory to which to extract and save the
contents of the manifest archive. If no destination is given,
then the archive is extracted to the local directory.
--force, -f
Overwrites any existing archive files. If a manifest archive
already exists in the specified location (for example, if the
manifest has already been dumped once), then attempting to dump
the manifest to the same location will fail. Using the --force
option forces the dump operation to complete and overwrites the
previous file.
EXAMPLES
This command simply extracts the manifest files to a given location
(the working directory by default). The manifest itself contains multi‐
ple JSON files, with separate JSON files providing details on the mani‐
fest itself, each individual product, each individual subscription, and
details for the specific, on-premise subscription management service.
For example:
[root@server ~]# rct dump-manifest --destination /export/archives/sam/manifest /tmp/consumer_export.zip
The manifest has been dumped to the /export/archives/sam/manifest directory.
FILES
* Product certificates: /etc/pki/product/*.pem
* Subscription certificates: etc/pki/entitlement/<serial#>.pem
* System identity certificates: /etc/pki/consumer/cert.pem
* The manifest: consumer_export.zip
BUGS
This tool is part of Red Hat Subscription Manager. To file bugs against
this command-line tool, go to <https://bugzilla.redhat.com>, and select
Red Hat > Red Hat Enterprise Linux > subscription-manager.
AUTHORS
Deon Lackey <dlackey@redhat.com>, Michael Stead <mstead@redhat.com>,
and James Bowes <jbowes@redhat.com>. The rct tool was written by James
Bowes.
COPYRIGHT
Copyright (c) 2012 Red Hat, Inc. This is licensed under the GNU General
Public License, version 2 (GPLv2). A copy of this license is available
at http://www.gnu.org/licenses/old-licenses/gpl-2.0.txt.
version 1.3 May 23, 2013 rct(8)