(PHP 4 >= 4.2.0, PHP 5, PHP 7, PHP 8)
openssl_csr_sign — Sign a CSR with another certificate (or itself) and generate a certificate
$csr,$ca_certificate,$private_key,$days,$options = null,$serial = 0,$serial_hex = nullopenssl_csr_sign() generates an x509 certificate from the given CSR.
Note: You need to have a valid openssl.cnf installed for this function to operate correctly. See the notes under the installation section for more information.
csrA CSR previously generated by openssl_csr_new(). It can also be the path to a PEM encoded CSR when specified as file://path/to/csr or an exported string generated by openssl_csr_export().
ca_certificate
       The generated certificate will be signed by ca_certificate.
       If ca_certificate is null, the generated certificate
       will be a self-signed certificate.
      
private_key
       private_key is the private key that corresponds to
       ca_certificate.
      
days
       days specifies the length of time for which the
       generated certificate will be valid, in days.
      
options
       You can finetune the CSR signing by options.
       See openssl_csr_new() for more information about
       options.
      
serialAn optional the serial number of issued certificate. If not specified it will default to 0.
serial_hex
       An optional hexadecimal string representing the serial number of the
       issued certificate. If set, it takes precedence over the
       serial parameter value. If not specified or set
       to null, the serial parameter value is used
       instead.
      
   Returns an OpenSSLCertificate on success, false on failure.
  
| Version | Description | 
|---|---|
| 8.4.0 | 
       The serial_hex parameter is added.
       | 
     
| 8.0.0 | 
       On success, this function returns an OpenSSLCertificate instance now;
       previously, a resource of type OpenSSL X.509 was returned.
       | 
     
| 8.0.0 | 
       csr accepts an OpenSSLCertificateSigningRequest instance now;
       previously, a resource of type OpenSSL X.509 CSR was accepted.
       | 
     
| 8.0.0 | 
       ca_certificate accepts an OpenSSLCertificate instance now;
       previously, a resource of type OpenSSL X.509 was accepted.
       | 
     
| 8.0.0 | 
       private_key accepts an OpenSSLAsymmetricKey
       or OpenSSLCertificate instance now;
       previously, a resource of type OpenSSL key or OpenSSL X.509
       was accepted.
       | 
     
Example #1 openssl_csr_sign() example - signing a CSR (how to implement your own CA)
<?php
// Let's assume that this script is set to receive a CSR that has
// been pasted into a textarea from another page
$csrdata = $_POST["CSR"];
// We will sign the request using our own "certificate authority"
// certificate.  You can use any certificate to sign another, but
// the process is worthless unless the signing certificate is trusted
// by the software/users that will deal with the newly signed certificate
// We need our CA cert and its private key
$cacert = "file://path/to/ca.crt";
$privkey = array("file://path/to/ca.key", "your_ca_key_passphrase");
$usercert = openssl_csr_sign($csrdata, $cacert, $privkey, 365, array('digest_alg'=>'sha256') );
// Now display the generated certificate so that the user can
// copy and paste it into their local configuration (such as a file
// to hold the certificate for their SSL server)
openssl_x509_export($usercert, $certout);
echo $certout;
// Show any errors that occurred here
while (($e = openssl_error_string()) !== false) {
    echo $e . "\n";
}
?>